West End Theatre (in the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew)

  • Theater | Performing arts space
  • Upper West Side
  • price 2 of 4
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Time Out says

Located on the second floor of a Methodist church, this community theater is home for several resident companies, including David Parker and the Bang Group and Frog & Peach Theatre Company.

Details

Address
263 W 86th St
New York
10024
Cross street:
between Broadway and West End Ave, second floor
Transport:
Subway: 1 to 86th St
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What’s on

Are the Bennet Girls Ok?

4 out of 5 stars
Theater review by Raven SnookA modernized, female-forward reinvention of a 200-year-old protofeminist classic may sound like a bonnet on a bonnet. But Emily Breeze's Are the Bennet Girls Ok?, an irreverent riff on Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, is a delight. Many of Austen’s plot points are more or less preserved, but the novel’s sense and sensibility are reframed: Using period dress and patriarchal rules but contemporary, profanity-laden dialogue, Breeze’s perceptive version celebrates sisterly, not romantic, love.The play kicks off with a blazing monologue by Mrs. Bennet (a hilariously high-strung Zuzanna Szadkowski), who is desperate to marry off at least some of her five daughters to save the family from financial ruin. The nubile and obedient Jane (Shayvawn Webster) seems like her best bet, but the blunt and headstrong Lizzie (Elyse Steingold) racks up unexpected proposals. Underage flirt Lydia (Caroline Grogan) is the likeliest to get in trouble; sensitive, botany-loving wallflower Mary (standout Masha Breeze, the playwright's sister) and horse girl Kitty (Violeta Picayo) seem like spinsters in waiting. Are the Bennet Girls Ok? | Photograph: Courtesy Ari Espay Though much of the girls’ alternately empathetic and uproarious chatter is sparked by the men in their lives, we encounter those men only rarely. All are played by a single actor, Edoardo Benzoni, who brilliantly delineates each character: four suitors—deer-in-headlights Darcy, awkward Collins, douchey...
  • Comedy

The Yellow Wallpaper

Susannah Millonzi performs a solo version of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s classic 1892 short story about a woman in the throes of postpartum depression whose madness only deepens when she is imprisoned alone in a shabby room as an ill-advised rest cure. Millonzi created the piece with director by Caitlin Morley; their production, which debuted upstate earlier this fall, now arrives in NYC under the aegis of Bedlam. 
  • Drama
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