On
Broadway | The Pillowman
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- (Booth Theater - 2004-2005 season)
Child abuse, murder, mutilation - it's a
veritable, verbal horror story. It's the Brothers Grimm under the
cold, creepy, macabre influence of Charles Addams, Charles Manson and
Kafka. Intrigued and repelled? So is the audience.
The play opens in a jail cell. Police officers Tupolski (Jeff Goldblum)
and Ariel (Zeljko Ivanek) are interrogating Katurian K. Katurian
(Billy Crudup), a hapless writer, about his connection to several
child-murders that have occurred in the area. Apparently, Katurian's
crime is having written grisly, gruesome short stories that have,
seemingly, inspired copy-cat killings. Questioning turns to bullying
and evolves into torture. In a nearby cell, Katurian's mentally
impaired brother Michal (Michael Stuhlbarg) is also being
interrogated. His screams reverberate.
Weaving Katurian's brutally descriptive, violent
stories-within-stories, playwright Martin McDonough ("The Beauty
Queen of Leenane") toys with moral ambiguity, launching an
emotional roller-coaster ride. His darkly sinister fantasy is
imaginatively staged by director John Crowley, who cleverly builds on
Scott Pask's production design. But the static confinement of the
claustrophobic sets becomes tedious and the routine dialogue is often
trite, even boring.
What keeps the audience riveted are the mesmerizing
performances. Billy Crudup is intense, bewildered and indignant,
battered by his past, and heart-tugging Michael Stuhlberg evokes true
pathos. Their scenes together are amazing. And the good cop/bad cop
play effectively off each other: Jeff Goldblum's sinister, droll
stillness contrasts with Zeljko Ivanek's explosive temper.
Eerily haunting and deeply disturbing, "The Pillowman" is
tough, thought-provoking theater.
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