Los Angeles Times

Critic's Notebook: Star turns that serve the Broadway play — Elaine May, Daniel Radcliffe and Janet McTeer show how it's done

NEW YORK - When it comes to playwriting, Broadway has a supply problem. Although the new generation of American dramatists is blazingly talented, the great majority of these writers prefer the creative flexibility of more intimate stages.

New dramas that can fill Broadway's grand proscenium houses aren't rolling off the assembly line. But there's never any shortage of brilliant actors. And the right talent can sometimes turn the middling and the middlebrow into must-see theater.

On Broadway this fall, three respectable plays that pose no danger of becoming modern classics are given a boost by the marquee names drawing in the crowds. Celebrity casting isn't the secret of success. No one could describe Elaine May in "The Waverly Gallery," Daniel Radcliffe in "The Lifespan of a Fact" or Janet McTeer in "Bernhardt/Hamlet" as Hollywood carpetbaggers prestige-hunting between movie gigs.

Broadway needs the 86-year-old May, a sui generis legend, more than she needs Broadway. Radcliffe, his fortune made as the film face of Harry Potter, seems

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times8 min readAmerican Government
Inside The Far-right Plan To Use Civil Rights Law To Disrupt The 2024 Election
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — At a diner just off the freeway north of Sacramento, a mostly white crowd listened intently as it learned how to “save America” by leaning on the same laws that enshrined the rights of Black voters 60 years ago. Over mugs of coff
Los Angeles Times7 min read
California Climbers Train For Mount Everest From The Comfort Of Their Own Beds
TRUCKEE, Calif. — Graham Cooper sleeps with his head in a bag. Not just any bag. This one has a hose attached to a motor that slowly lowers the oxygen level to mimic, as faithfully as possible, the agonies of fitful sleep at extreme altitude: headac
Los Angeles Times3 min read
Commentary: I Once Lived In My Car And Can’t Fathom Criminalizing Homelessness
I’ve been homeless. Twice. I faced a dilemma in those situations that more than 650,000 Americans experience on any given day: “Where am I going to sleep tonight?” The legal battles over criminalizing homelessness seem completely disconnected from th

Related Books & Audiobooks