This section contains 443 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “Hare's Breadth,” in New York, December 4, 1995, pp. 134, 136.
In the following review, Simon praises the direction, writing, and acting in Racing Demon.
Lincoln Center Theater finally has a winner in Racing Demon. If the late, unlamented Sacrilege showed us how not to write a controversial play about church and religion, David Hare’s Shavian spellbinder is an exemplary how-to. For this internecine combat of contrasting Christianities in the arena of the Church of England is as riveting as a boxing match and as intellectually stimulating as an Oxford Union debate. Also theater so damned good that Hare in the hereafter will be consigned to hell, where—as we hear—conversation is infinitely livelier than in the other place. There are four artfully interwoven problems: What to do about a clergyman whose socialist leanings and religious doubts make him a potential liability? What to do about another ecclesiastic, whom...
This section contains 443 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |