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Theater: The Massive Revelations Of 'Red Dog Howls' Outshine Its Cha

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  • Theater: The Massive Revelations Of 'Red Dog Howls' Outshine Its Cha

    THE MASSIVE REVELATIONS OF 'RED DOG HOWLS' OUTSHINE ITS CHARACTERS
    By Wayne Hoffman

    Capital New York
    Sept 26 2012

    The trio of characters in Red Dog Howls, on now at the New York
    Theater Workshop are, to put it mildly, having a rough time.

    Michael is mourning his recently deceased father and trying to piece
    together an incomplete family history based on clues he left behind.

    Michael's wife Gabriella is enduring a difficult pregnancy without
    much help from her preoccupied husband. And Rose, the old woman who
    might be able to help both Michael and Gabriella, is trapped in an
    emotional hell where she relives her life's most painful moments on
    an endless loop in her tortured mind.

    It feels less than generous, given the characters' dire straits, to
    say anything unkind about them. But Red Dog Howls, while earnest and
    thoughtful and well performed, disappoints dramatically, and doesn't
    do its characters justice.

    As Rose, a 91-year-old Armenian grandmother who makes a mean pilaf
    and arm wrestles like a champ, Kathleen Chalfant brings her always
    impressive talents to the stage. (She's lived with the role for years,
    since she played Rose in the play's first reading back in 2007 at New
    World Stages.) She knows the truth about Michael's mysterious family
    tree, but she fears (probably correctly) that revealing it to him
    too quickly might destroy them both. So instead the facts are doled
    out in tiny, heavily accented doses over the course of many visits
    to her apartment.

    The secrets she reveals range from the small to the enormous-from your
    grandfather wasn't really your grandfather to millions of Armenians
    were murdered by the Turks in 1915-as the scope of the play vacillates
    between a family drama and the history of the Armenian genocide. But
    the minor revelations come off as predictable, mechanically paced
    bits of earnest drama, while the major revelations seem jarring and
    melodramatic.

    And these revelations must carry the whole 90-minute, intermissionless
    play, since Michael and Gabriella are too thinly drawn to be compelling
    on their own; Alfredo Narciso has a charismatic presence, but there's
    not enough material to flesh out his role as the enigmatic Michael,
    while gets Red Dog Howls' only (quite welcome) funny lines as Gabriella
    but is reduced to a minor character for the second half of the play.

    Playwright Alexander Dinelaris tries to use a small-scale story to
    tell the larger tale of Armenian suffering. But emotionally, the play
    doesn't survive such a split: Michael and Gabriella's chapter is too
    tepid to propel the narrative, while Rose's seems far too profound
    and sprawling to be squeezed into such a small dramatic frame.

    'Red Dog Howls' is showing through October 14 at New York Theater
    Workshop, 79 E. 4th St. Tickets are $65. Call 212-279-4200. All photos
    ŠJoan Marcus

    http://www.capitalnewyork.com/article/culture/2012/09/6537542/massive-revelations-red-dog-howls-outshine-its-characters?culture-bucket-headline

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