Berkeley Rep Blog

Category archive: Our shows

Let Me Down Easy's moment at Grace

posted by Karen McKevitt on Wed, Jul 13, 2011
in Our shows

Anna Deavere Smith's Let Me Down Easy concluded its amazing regular run last weekend (the encore performances start up August 11 on our intimate Thrust Stage), and we had some community leaders in the audience: the Very Reverend Dr. Jane Shaw (Dean of Grace Cathedral), as well as the former Dean Alan Jones.

Dr. Shaw found the show so inspiring that she even preached about it the next morning, comparing Anna Deavere Smith's process to that of a parable: neither tells you exactly what to think or what the "right" answer is. 

Says Dr. Shaw: "Anna Deavere Smith does not tell us what to think about the healthcare system; she gives us stories to startle us into thinking in new ways about it -- and thus about life and health and death. Through our experience of the play, she prompts us to think and feel differently, as all good art does, about something we thought we already knew."

She goes on to say, "I related not simply to one of Anna Deavere Smith’s twenty characters in the play last night; I found myself finding parts of each of them understand-able, and parts of each of them strange, in ways that prompted me to think anew about health, living, dying. It was in that way that the play changed me, and will go on changing me." 

We're really thrilled that discussions of the issues raised in Let Me Down Easy are taking place outside the Theatre--out in our communities. If you've had similar discussions in your community, let us know!

 

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Get your Rita fix

posted by Karen McKevitt on Mon, Jun 27, 2011
in Our shows

Rita Moreno: Life Without Makeup debuts in September, but this new stage show isn't Rita's only current project. She's also starring in the new TV show Happily Divorced, playing Fran Drescher's mother. So, if you can't wait until September to get your Rita fix, check out the TV show page and this LA Times article

Happily-divorced
Rita Moreno (center) in Happily Divorced.

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Announcing the encore presentation of Let Me Down Easy

posted by Karen McKevitt on Wed, Jun 22, 2011
in News , Our shows

Hot off the press!

Anna Deavere Smith -- already one of the most popular performers in Berkeley Rep history -- is coming back! Let Me Down Easy will close on July 10, and re-open on August 10.

Get in on Let Me Down Easy for the first time -- or again -- and this time see it on our intimate Thrust Stage! This final encore presentation is only 4 weeks. Let Me Down Easy must close for the final time on September 4.

Check out the new video trailer (1 minute), watch Anna introduce the show (3 minutes), or discover the show, the buzz, and more. Then reserve your seats!

Join us in the courtyard one hour before most performances of the encore presentation for a free tequila tasting with Berkeley’s own award-winning Tres Agaves Tequila!

  

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Anna's interviews

posted by Karen McKevitt on Mon, Jun 20, 2011
in News , Our shows

Let Me Down Easy is a hit with audiences with many sold-out performances. Still, Anna Deavere Smith isn’t slowing down, giving several interviews a week. And we want to share the recent ones with you! Here’s a particularly wonderful TV interview conducted by Dave Iverson for KQED’s This Week in Northern California. She also did interviews for more public radio shows, including NPR’s Forum and NPR’s California Report. And here’s more for CBS’ Bay Sunday and KPFA’s Cover to Cover.

Intrigued? Reserve your seats for Let Me Down Easy!

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Drink to your health

posted by Karen McKevitt on Tue, Jun 14, 2011
in Our shows

Lmdecocktail-mr-6645 A couple of weeks before each Berkeley Rep show opens, the members of the marketing team unleash their inner mixologists to concoct that show's specialty drink. We consider the play's themes -- or "flavor," if you will -- as well as any references to drinks. Three Sisters nearly depleted our vodka reserves, and Fanta made an appearance at our concessions counter courtesy of Ruined.

So, how to approach Let Me Down Easy, with its themes of spirituality and health care? Smoothies came to mind and were quickly dismissed. But visions of cucumber, lemon, and lime slices danced in our heads, and we came up with the Lemon-Mint Spa Spritzer:

Revitalize your body and spirit with this refreshing virgin blend of lemon, mint, and sparkling water. $5. Add gin -- detox can wait! $8.

Now on sale at our concessions counter throughout the run of Anna Deavere Smith's Let Me Down Easy.

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Anna Deavere Smith's books on sale

posted by Karen McKevitt on Wed, Jun 8, 2011
in Our shows

Supplement your Let Me Down Easy experience with the following books by Anna Deavere Smith, now on sale in our gift shop. Come early to the performance and check 'em out!

Talktome Fires in the Mirror: Anna Deavere Smith's award-winning breakout show is based on interviews with people who experienced or observed New York's Crown Heights racial riots in 1991.

Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992: The Tony Award-nominated Twilight: Los Angeles is based on scores of interviews with victims, witnesses, adversaries, and others of the violent aftermath of the Rodney King trial and verdict.

Letters to a Young Artist: In this series of letters addressed to a fictitious young artist, Anna Deavere Smith offers practical advice (dealing with stage fright, how to audition) and addresses issues of the spirit, such feeling disappointed.

Talk to Me: Listening Between the Lines: Anna Deavere Smith talks about her philosophy of acting and observations about Washington, DC. The book also includes outtakes from House Arrest.

House Arrest and Piano: Two Plays: In House Arrest, Anna Deavere Smith examines the relationship between American presidents and those that observe them (both in and out of the press). Piano follows the lines of race, sex, and exploitation in a prosperous Cuban household on the eve of the Spanish-American War. 

 

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What audiences say about Let Me Down Easy

posted by Karen McKevitt on Tue, Jun 7, 2011
in Our shows

Patronmail-lmde 
Anna Deavere Smith's Let Me Down Easy has been playing a little over a week to packed houses -- and tickets are still selling fast. The critics are raving about the show, but we wanted to hear from our audience members too --and share their comments with you. Here are some select raves:

Her beautiful illuminations of people's responses to suffering and death have stayed with me all day. Much to think about.

As a retired home care and hospice nurse, I could definitely relate to her work and the issues in health care today.

Outstanding, and we usually don't like one person shows.

Read the entire post

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Critics are in awe of "Let Me Down Easy"

posted by Karen McKevitt on Fri, Jun 3, 2011
in Our shows

Berkeley_Rep_ADSmith3_lr The reviews are in, and the critics are in awe of Anna Deavere Smith in Let Me Down Easy. If you're thinking of checking out this astounding show, don't wait too long, because the tickets are selling fast. No kidding, on a daily basis, it's selling as much as Green Day's American Idiot, and it absolutely has to close on July 10. But here's a tip: today we released a bunch of seats for the June 10 performance. Buy tickets here.

In the meantime, here are some choice excerpts from the reviews:

 

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE:

Littleman-sm

The little man is out of his chair. That’s three shows in a row!

 

 

  • Tour de force
  • "Let Me Down Easy," Smith's extraordinary solo about our bodies and our challenged health care system, opened Wednesday as a fortuitous substitute for Rita Moreno's postponed one-woman show. This is Smith at the top of her unique documentary theater form, in writing, performance and timeliness. As she did in her landmark 1990s "riot" plays - "Fires in the Mirror" (about the Crown Heights riots in Brooklyn) and "Twilight: Los Angeles" - Smith picks a topic, conducts numerous interviews and weaves excerpts from a dozen or more into a compelling, multifaceted dramatic exploration.
  • The result is pure theatrical gold and something more - a topic of vital interest looked at from so many different angles that it can't help but advance the conversation. Director Leonard Foglia's sleek stagings on Ricardo Hernandez's multi-mirrored set enhance the impact
  • Smith segues so smoothly that she's metamorphosed into the next character well before she puts on his or her jacket, sweater, scarf or specs. Almost every segment is a gem, whether it's Armstrong, fire-dancer Streb or sportswriter Sally Jenkins on how and why athletes push their bodies to extremes, or cancer patients Richards and film critic Joel Siegel peppering end-of-life insights with acerbic humor. Doctors and patients discuss long-term and personal aspects of the health-care crisis. Clerics ruminate on the spiritual side.
  • They should also be grateful that they're being brought to life by the remarkable Anna Deavere Smith
  • In one moving scene, a South African orphanage director recounts a child's death. In another, a hug takes on profound meaning. Dr. Kiersta Kurtz-Burke's searing account of poor patients left stranded in post-Katrina New Orleans is as unforgettable as it is shameful. Smith doesn't push any one viewpoint. She embodies a multiplicity of ideas and experiences so skillfully that we can't help but feel eager to continue the discussion.

SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS / BAY AREA NEWS GROUP:

  • Now the trailblazer returns to Berkeley Rep with "Let Me Down Easy," a gritty dissection of life and death and health care in America that melds interviews with more than 300 people on three continents into a mind-blowing 105-minute, one-woman show. While some actors lose their laser-sharp edge after taking TV gigs, Smith ("Nurse Jackie," "The West Wing") remains at the top of her craft. As rigorous about her methodology as ever, she captures her subjects verbatim. Her sensitivity to the quirks of speech and the twitches of posture remains dazzling as she shape-shifts from doctors and nurses to cowboys and Buddhist monks. If anything she drills down into the psychology of her characters (and her audience) deeper than before. Certainly the Pulitzer nominee raises the bar for herself in terms of distilling complex ideas, from the politics of class to the relationship between death and culture, into tiny little vignettes that resonate with a universe of nuance. Smith invites us to attend a town hall of one where she channels a chorus of 20 voices that seem to speak for us all. Smartly directed by Leonard Foglia, "Let Me Down Easy" fully surpasses expectations in its regional premiere at the Rep, where it runs through July 10.
  • The actress-playwright adroitly wrestles with not just the fragility of life, how we are all dancing with death each day we're alive, but also our deep-seated sense of denial about it. That blind spot keeps us from grasping with the messy reality of things, such as the way class impacts health care.
  • So many of the scenes here are heart-tugging, but the portrait of end-of-life care in an orphanage in South Africa where small children regularly succumb to AIDS is powerful enough to beg tears. It's tempting to lose yourself in the catharsis of that time and place, but Smith has other plans, forging ahead toward a curiously restorative ending. Along the way, the quick-change artist goes from one character to another so seamlessly that you scarcely realize she has etched 20 different characters. Some of the people are famous (Lance Armstrong, Ann Richards), but the most unforgettable passages are the everyday folks.
  • by the end of the evening the echoes of all their voices ring in our ears. It's that chorus that throws us back relentlessly on ourselves, forcing us not only to consider our own mortality, which is tough enough, but also to carve out some sense of peace about it, which is revelatory.

SF THEATER BLOG:

  • We have followed Anna Deavere Smith for years, always in awe of her prodigious talent and ability to not only get into character but tug at the heart. In her new one-woman show "Let Me Down Easy," although the content and central themes are complicated, the heart has not skipped a beat.
  • We see famous people like Lance Armstrong, Lauren Hutton and Governor Ann Richards, plus others whose stories are even more compelling, including a tear-inducing representation of Smith's own Aunt Lorraine Coleman, a painfully honest reflection by Doctor Kiersta Kurtz-Burke who was an attending physician at New Orleans's Charity Hospital during Hurricane Katrina, and a fascinating journey into motivation from heavyweight boxer Michael Bentt who spent three days in a coma after being knocked cold.
  • If the show has a fault, it is that Smith occasionally brings us so vividly into the lives of her characters, that we want very much to see them again.

THEATER DOGS:

  • Anna Deavere Smith: Easy to love
  • Anna Deavere Smith returning after a too-long absence from Bay Area stages. More than any of these other solo performers, Smith raises the form to a fine art. She has the instincts and drive of a journalist, the performance style of a skilled thespian and the soul of a poet striving for grace. 
  • Let Me Down Easy fascinates, compels and ultimately moves us as Smith gives voice to bodies and minds involved in life-and-death struggles. 
  • Let Me Down Easy meanders mindfully through a seemingly unrelated assortment of people as it builds a portrait of a nation at odds with dying and a medical system and government ill equipped to deal with the truly ill (especially if the ailing are poor). Politics certainly plays a big part in many of the monologues, but this is a show more about the heart and mind, which is why it’s ultimately so moving. You leave the theater feeling nourished and provoked. 
  • the most powerful words come from ordinary people like the doctor at a charity hospital in New Orleans that was practically ignored after the Hurricane Katrina disaster knocked out its power and water. We also hear from a woman in a South African orphanage where AIDS devastates her young charges, and it’s heartbreaking. When Smith becomes former Texas Governor Ann Richards, the stage practically explodes with energy. Though battling cancer, Richards is (not unlike Smith) a force of nature
  • That people represented in the play – like Richards and Siegel – are no longer on the planet only makes their presence and their words and Smith’s evocation of them all the more potent.
  • For a work of art that deals so matter-of-factly with death, Let Me Down Easy, with its treasures of grace, is remarkably uplifting.

BERKELEYSIDE:

  • Anna Deavere Smith astonishes in ‘Let Me Down Easy’
  • bold and interesting
  • From her spot-on impersonation of Lance Armstrong, whose body is so kinetic it can’t stay still, to pretending to be the bed-ridden, cancer-stricken film critic Joel Siegel, to her poignant portrayal of Kiersta Kurtz-Burke, an intern who was shocked by the way her superiors at Charity Hospital in New Orleans treated Katrina victims, Smith is mesmerizing in her ability to channel the words and quirks of her characters.
  • a heart-wrenching portrait of our  attitudes toward our bodies, their strengths and weaknesses, and our feelings about death.
  • Their words and stories are interesting, but the real star is Smith. Her ability to capture the nuances of each of the characters is remarkable. She has Lance Armstrong lifting his left leg numerous times to scratch his thigh. She nails Ann Richards’ Texas accent and irreverent attitude about her cancer, and her appreciation for her medical team. She becomes them, and her transcendence is so captivating that the audience wouldn’t dare to avert their eyes, even for a minute.

STARK INSIDER:

  • Anna Deavere Smith’s (The West Wing) eagerly awaited return to the Bay Area stage last night in Berkeley flat out rocked. Let Me Down Easy, a one-woman show based on 320 interviews conducted across three continents, stuns with its riveting exploration of human strength, life and death, and body politic.
  • After the two-hour performance, as we made our way through the Roda lobby, and with the raucous standing-O still ringing, I turned to doe-eyed Loni and whispered, “wow!” – chalk me up, I’m a believer…
  • Many of these people are well known, but the manner in which they are revealed here on stage — channeled so convincingly through Anna Deavere Smith — makes this a uniquely remarkable theatrical experience.
  • The star, of course, is Anna Deavere Smith. Her impressions are spectacularly thorough. Nuances — Lance Armstrong itching his thigh, or Lauren Hutton’s glamorous, laissez-faire body language — are a strong point, as are the many accents. These are not caricatures. Instead we’re seeing these people — some living, some dead — fully realized before our very eyes. By the time we visit with former Texas Governor Ann Richards (“Poor George. He can’t help it. He was born with a silver foot in his mouth.”) I was subsumed: we we’re experiencing a once-in-a-lifetime journey into some of the most fascinating lives on the planet.
  • On this evening, Anna Deavere Smith did anything but leave us in the dark. It was as if a giant crack of lightning crushed the Berkeley sky: “THIS is why LIVE theater MATTERS!

EXAMINER.COM:

  • This solo show on Berkeley Rep’s big stage is a masterpiece of stagecraft.
  • She masterfully uses the whole stage with technical adjuncts to present a variety of characters ranging from a Harvard minister to a Texas governor.
  • Her facial motility, amplified by projections, makes her story poignant and personal.

Photo of Anna Deavere Smith by Mary Ellen Mark.

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Anna on KQED

posted by Karen McKevitt on Thu, Jun 2, 2011
in Our shows

Anna Deavere Smith gave an amazing opening night performance to an adoring audience last night -- and she still found time to give two interviews on KQED.

Yesterday, she spoke with Cy Musiker about the health-care system, and today she "appeared" on Forum with Michael Krasny.

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Read another interview with Anna

posted by Karen McKevitt on Fri, May 27, 2011
in Our shows

Hot on the heels of yesterday's Chronicle interview, the Contra Costa Times publishes its interview with Anna Deavere Smith. If you think that when you've read one, you've read them all, think again! Karen D'Souza asks some insightful questions about her artistic process as well, and also about the health-care debate. Read on!

Anna Deavere Smith's Let Me Down Easy starts tomorrow! Get more info.

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