Ottawa Citizen

ADAPTING TO THE TIMES

Streaming services satisfy self-isolating theatre buffs

- JIM BURKE

As we hunker down enduring a medieval-style quarantine, it’s at least something of a blessing that 21st-century technology means home entertainm­ent has never been so ubiquitous. But if you’re one of those people whose life, living and mental well-being depends on live theatre, you’re perhaps starting to feel in need of a little spiritual succour after binging on all those series. Here, then, is a guide to what two of the main streaming services have to offer in the way of theatre-adjacent content.

NETFLIX

FROST/NIXON

Peter Morgan’s 2006 play was a fascinatin­g portrayal of the almost gladiatori­al clash between British TV personalit­y David Frost and the disgraced, post-Watergate Richard Nixon. Ron Howard’s 2008 film version reunited the leads from the stage production, Michael Sheen playing Frost and Frank Langella as Nixon. It’s a valuable celluloid record of Langella’s superb, Tony Award-winning performanc­e and a timely exploratio­n of a morally bankrupt POTUS doing his dark damnedest to control the media narrative.

AMERICAN SON

Director Kenny Leon gathered together the cast from his Broadway production of Christophe­r Demos-Brown’s intense Black Lives Matter drama for this Netflix original. It’s about a couple stuck in a police station awaiting news of their missing mixed-race son, who may have been involved in an altercatio­n with police during a routine traffic stop. The dialogue is overwrough­t and at times absurdly on-the-nose, as if cut-and-pasted from newspaper editorials on each side of the political divide. But it’s instructiv­e of how Broadway sometimes engages with the burning issues of the day. Kerry Washington certainly gives it her all as the anguished mother.

MAMMA MIA!

No need to feel guilty for craving frothy, feel-good entertainm­ent right now, and it doesn’t come much frothier than this. Phyllida Lloyd’s screen adaptation of Catherine Johnson’s Broadway smash features scores of ABBA songs “sung” by the likes of Meryl Streep, Pierce Brosnan and Colin Firth. The sun-soaked scenery of its idyllic Greek island setting helps lift the mood, as long as you don’t spend too much time brooding over the contrast with your four walls. If you have caught the live show, you’ll know that initial resistance to its weapons-grade optimism quickly proves futile.

UNA

David Harrower’s gruelling two-hander Blackbird is a kind of post-Lolita morality play about a middle manager being confronted by the woman he abused when she was a preteen. Harrower’s screenplay alters the title, opens up the story from its original setting in a drab factory office and adds a couple of subplots. The claustroph­obic, ticking-timebomb power of the original is thus dissipated, but this remains an effective story, thanks largely to performanc­es from Rooney Mara and Ben Mendelsohn.

SHREK: THE MUSICAL

A slightly different offering in that this isn’t an adaptation of a film, but a filmed Broadway adaptation of a film. (Keeping up?) Brian d’Arcy James, one of the crusading journalist­s in Spotlight, plays the bad-tempered ogre, but as fine as he is, the show is stolen by Christophe­r Sieber as the Napoleon-size Lord Farquaad.

(Sieber plays the part on his knees, with pretend legs sewn onto his pants.) David Lindsay-Abaire, the Pulitzer-winning writer behind Good People and Rabbit Hole, wrote the book and lyrics, while the score is from Jeanine Tesori, the Tony-winning composer of Fun Home.

CRAVE

THE NORMAL HEART

One of many 1980s dramas that directly addressed the growing AIDS crisis, Larry Kramer’s play was an unapologet­ically enraged condemnati­on of government inaction and homophobia, as well as a tragic and heartbreak­ing love story. This superbly acted 2014 television version features a powerhouse performanc­e from Mark Ruffalo, no doubt channellin­g his own zeal for political activism. Worth watching as well is Mike Nichols’s similarly themed but stylistica­lly different version of Tony Kushner’s Angels in America, also available on Crave.

ROMEO + JULIET

There are surprising­ly few Shakespear­e adaptation­s available on the major streaming services, but the unfading popularity of Baz Luhrmann’s 1996 film — not to mention the (in hindsight) prestige casting of Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes — has earned it a slot on Crave. If you’re in need of more Shakespear­e, try Kenneth Branagh’s film of As You Like

It, as well as his portrayal of the man himself in All Is True, both of which are available on Crave.

KILLER JOE

William Friedkin had already adapted Tracy Letts’s play Bug for the big screen before turning to the playwright’s blistering noir thriller Killer Joe in 2011. Aptly enough for the legendary director of The Exorcist, the title character is a demonic hit man, memorably played by Matthew McConaughe­y. It also features a terrific performanc­e from the underrated Gina Gershon as the scheming stepmom. Be warned: a climactic moment with a piece of fried chicken showed Friedkin had lost none of his power to shock, nor to disgust.

INCENDIES

Wajdi Mouawad’s remarkable modern Greek tragedy, which ranges from an unnamed Middle Eastern country to Montreal, made for a riveting cinematic treatment. This was surprising, given the distinctiv­ely theatrical nature of the original. Thankfully, Denis Villeneuve was at the helm — the 2010 adaptation hastened his developmen­t as a Hollywood heavy hitter — and the result is a powerful, visually striking film which just about retains the credibilit­y of the play’s Oedipal twists and turns.

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? There’s no question we can use some frothy entertainm­ent right now, and it doesn’t get much frothier than the ABBA extravagan­za Mamma Mia!, starring Meryl Streep.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES There’s no question we can use some frothy entertainm­ent right now, and it doesn’t get much frothier than the ABBA extravagan­za Mamma Mia!, starring Meryl Streep.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada