Autoren-Bilder

Stephen Karam

Autor von The Humans (Revised TCG Edition)

7 Werke 219 Mitglieder 7 Rezensionen

Werke von Stephen Karam

The Humans (Revised TCG Edition) (2015) 114 Exemplare
Speech & Debate (2008) 44 Exemplare
Sons of the Prophet (2012) 35 Exemplare
Columbinus (A Play) (2007) 12 Exemplare
The Seagull [2018 film] (2018) — Screenwriter — 11 Exemplare
The Humans 2 Exemplare
Emma 1 Exemplar

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Geburtsort
Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA
Ausbildung
Brown University

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Overall this is a very moderate production of 'The Seagull'. It was not only made in America, it feels like it, and has no Chekhovian or Russian atmosphere despite repeated references to Moscow. The beginning is unclear as to who is who, mostly because the pace is too fast. Things improve a bit during the second half. Saoirse Ronan is probably the best of the cast, conveying youthful ardour well. But it is a disappointment.
 
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ponsonby | Jan 14, 2022 |
I've read this before, and I'll probably read this again - the changes that were made for the UK production were slight but great. Reading this play just brings me back to working in the lil Black Box theater where it started back in 2007. I was so in love with this play and the characters and how sharp and smart it all was. Working the house staff for this show was my first job in New York, and I sat in that theater probably 30-40 times, never once getting sick of it. It inspired me.

While reading this, I remember every line reading and can hear it in my head. This play brings back the best memories for me.… (mehr)
 
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Katie_Roscher | 1 weitere Rezension | Jan 18, 2019 |
4.5 Stars – The Written Play, 5 Stars – The Play in a Production

Per New York Times, Stephen Karam’s works are “…often noted about loss - of love, of health, of innocence - and the messy, haphazard, necessary ways we get on with our lives afterward. He isn't big on happy endings, but several of his play offer at least some hope that human connection and resilience will help the characters through. And if that fails, they'll probably find some other way to keep going." ‘The Humans’ fall squarely within this feeling.

The Blake family’s younger daughter, Brigid, and her boyfriend, Richard, newly moved into their old but roomy apartment in Chinatown, New York, and are hosting Thanksgiving dinner for the family. Father - Erik, Mother - Deirdre, Grandma - Momo, and older sister - Aimee arrive for the feast. With a two-floor stage of creaky floors, thin walls, and appliances that go bump in the night, it’s the perfect setting for hidden angst (financial worries, lack of career, different values), frustrations (loss of love, pending job loss), ghost of the past (9/11 tragedy), and new mistakes (spoiler, won’t say this one) to surface. The characters are deeply flawed and real. There are so many layers that I can type several pages, but it’s better if you read it and/or see it. I will say, the most powerful was Momo’s dementia. Her mental absence more than her physical presence spoke volumes on the potential journey that we face.

I was extremely pleased with the production at the Seattle Repertoire Theatre that I continued onto reading the play. The produced play is powerful, the physicality of overlapping conversations, the haunting setting, and Momo, wow, Momo’s dementia outburst was shockingly painful. In a rare exception to ‘the book is better’, the written text, though provided nuance, lacked the strength of the produced work. There is less stage directions as I have read in other plays. It’s closer to a script with a focus on the unspoken words included in brackets. It’s not necessarily lacking, but it does leave more to interpret for the reader and/or production manager.

Least favorite character: Brigid – portrait of a grown-up whiny brat

See the show, read the book. Accept how messed up life truly is; go forth and embrace it!

Below is a letter that Momo wrote the girls four years prior, when she knows she will be losing her mental capacity.
“‘Dear Aimee and Brigid, I was clumsy around you both today and felt confused. I couldn’t remember your names and felt bad about that. It’s strange slowly becoming someone I don’t know. But while I am still here, I want to say: Don’t worry about me once I drift off for good. I’m not scared. If anything, I wish I could’ve known that most of the stuff I did spend my life worrying about wasn’t so bad. Maybe it’s because this disease has me forgetting the worst stuff, but right now I’m feeling nothing about this life was worth getting so worked up about. Not even dancing at weddings.’
The Blakes smile. They have inside understanding of this remark.
‘Dancing at weddings always scared the crap out of me, but now it doesn’t seem like such a big deal. This is taking me forever to type. Consider this my fond farewell. Erin go brah. Dance more than I did. Drink less than I did. Go to church. Be good to everyone you love. I love you more than you’ll ever know.’”
… (mehr)
½
1 abstimmen
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varwenea | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 16, 2017 |
I wish I had liked it more. The dialogue cast a spell, but ultimately this was thin. Reminded me of Albee when he falls short.
 
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Nobodaddy26 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 17, 2017 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
7
Mitglieder
219
Beliebtheit
#102,099
Bewertung
3.8
Rezensionen
7
ISBNs
19

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