Images: 
Total Rating: 
***1/2
Opened: 
July 21, 2022
Ended: 
October 30, 2022
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
Daryl Roth in association with Victoria Lang, Ryan Bogner and Tracey McFarland of Broadway & Beyond Theatricals, Jane Sherman, and in association with UK Productions, and Flying Entertainment Ltd/Kilmanjaro Group Ltd
Theater Type: 
Broadway
Theater: 
Hayes Theater
Theater Address: 
240 West 44 Street
Phone: 
212-239-6200
Website: 
thekiterunnerbroadway.com
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 30 min
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Matthew Spangler adapting Khaled Hosseini
Director: 
Giles Croft
Choreographer: 
Laura Stanczyk
Review: 

Sometimes, a gripping story with universal relevance sells big. Such was the case of “The Kite Runner,” Khaled Hossein’s 2003 semi-autobiographical novel which was turned into a movie, a graphic novel, an audio tape, and a new Broadway play. Topping the New York Times Bestseller list for over two years - thanks to countless book clubs across the country - it took the reading public by storm.

Written in first person, “The Kite Runner” was translated into 42 languages and published in 38 countries, selling more than 12 million copies worldwide.

The stage version of The Kite Runner is currently running on Broadway at the Hayes Theater in NYC though Monday, October 30, 2022. Based on the novel and adapted by Matthew Spangler, the play in two acts and 17 scenes spans three decades and two continents. With lots of twists and turns, it begins with Amir (Amir Arison), the narrator of the story, who never leaves the stage during the play’s two and a half hours, looking back on his life. As Spangler notes in the play’s program, intending to ease the audience into this prodigious history-laden story, the play “is about a father and a son; two best friends, a husband and a wife; immigration, the relative peace of the 1970s Afghanistan, global politics, class and ethnicity, and much more. More pointedly, above all else, this epic-scaled drama is “a story of guilt and redemption.”

Though the characters in the story are fictional, many of the larger events (and no doubt some of the smaller ones too) depicted in the book are real, such as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the rise of the Taliban, and the annual kite-fighting tournament.

That’s when the boys battle kites by covering the strings in broken glass. When a string is cut, the losing kite flies loose, and the boys called the kite runners chase the kite across the city until it falls. The last fallen kite is the trophy of honor.

The play, presented in non-chronological scenes, begins with Amir confessing to the audience, with a hint of what’s to come, that he is still in pain from a childhood event that happened decades earlier in which he selfishly turned his back on his best friend Hassan (Eric Sirakian).

“I became what I am today at the age of twelve, on a frigid overcast day in the winter of 1975,” he tells us. “I remember the precise moment, crouching behind a crumbling mud wall, peeking into the alley near the frozen creek. That was a long time ago, but it is wrong what they say about the past. I’ve learned about how you can bury it. Because the past claws its way out. Looking back now, I’ve realized I have been peeking into that deserted alley for the last twenty-six years.”

Thus starts Amir’s journey which transports us from Kabul, to Pakistan, to San Francisco, and eventually to San Jose, California. Along the way, with some actors playing dual roles, we meet a cornucopia of characters, all played by actors of Middle Eastern and South Asian descent. In a flurry of location changes, we visit an orphanage, a U.S Embassy, a trek over the mountains, the home of a major Taliban leader, witness a rape scene, hear about murders committed, sudden illnesses, spend time at a flea market, and attend a wedding. In short, life in its fullness.

Cameos apart, and there are a great many, the major players in this story, addition to Amir, are his single father Baba (Faran Tahir), Ali (Evan Zes) the household’s servant of forty years, and Ali’s son Hassan (Eric Sirakian making a stunning Broadway debut) both members of the oppressed and harassed Hazara minority group; and Rahim Khan (Dariush Kashani) Baba’s best friend and chief encourager of Amir’s writing, Assef (Amir Malaklou), Amir’s bullying nemesis, Amir’s wife Soraya (Azita Ghanizada), who he meets at a flea market in San Jose California, and her father General Taheri (Houshang Touzie).

Housing the play, as minimally as possible so as to let the story alone do all of the heavy lifting, is the scenic genius of designer Barney George. Aside from a chair and a table or two are a pair of towering sails, mostly out of sight, that are flown in at times to indicate a change of location. The projections of William Simpson are also used to indicate various locations. On stage, sitting on a mat throughout the play, adding a comforting touch, is Salar Nader’s Tambla-playing, augmented by the cast playing Tibetan singing bowls and percussion instruments which serve to build tension during the kite-flying scenes.

For those theatergoers who crave an all-around extraordinarily unique theatrical experience, one that will be long remembered, The Kite Runner is a must-see, one-of-a-kind, not-to-be-missed event.

Cast: 
Salar Nader (Tambla Artist), Amir Arison (Amir), Dariush Kashani (Rahim Khan/Soldier #2/Dr. Schneider/Omar Faisal), Eric Sirakian (Hassan/Sohrab), Evan Zes (Ali/Farid), Faran Tahir (Baba), Amir Malaklou (Assef), Danish Farooqui (Wali/Guard/Pakistani Doctor), Beejan Land (Kamal/Zaman/Husband/Radio Announcer), Christine Mirzayan (Pomegranate Seller/Wife/Andrews), Joe Joseph (Merchant/Russian Soldier #1), Houshang Touzie (General Taheri), Azita Ghanizada (Soraya)
Technical: 
Set/Costumes: Barney George. Lighting: Charles Balfour, Sound: Drew Baumohl. Projections: William Simpson. Music: Johnathan Girling.
Critic: 
Edward Rubin
Date Reviewed: 
October 2022