Images: 
Total Rating: 
***1/2
Opened: 
March 28, 2022
Ended: 
June 26, 2022
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Theater Type: 
Broadway
Theater: 
Hudson Theater
Theater Address: 
141 West 44 Street
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 45 min
Genre: 
Comedy (3 related one-acts)
Author: 
Neil Simon
Review: 

Two new Broadway productions offer boatloads of entertainment but skirt around serious examination of their subjects. That’s perfectly okay; neither Plaza Suite, Neil Simon’s 1968 trio of comic one-acts set in the titular hotel, nor MJ, the jukebox-bio musical of Michael Jackson, are meant to be anything more than a lighthearted night out. Yet both hint ever so slightly at the darker issues lurking just beneath their jolly surfaces. 

Plaza Suite premiered on Broadway starring George C. Scott and Maureen Stapleton with Mike Nichols at the helm as the 1960s were ending. Simon was the king of comedy, and Nichols was the king of directors. This was Simon’s first sort-of attempt at something deeper than a frothy yuck fest for the tired-businessman crowd and fodder for the following year’s summer stock schedule. The clever premise was three different playlets set in the same suite with the same leading actors playing the trio of lead couples. The difference was in the first act, “Visitor from Mamaroneck.” Sam and Karen Nash are staying at the hotel while their house is being painted. It’s their anniversary and Karen contrives to stay in the same suite as on their honeymoon. After jokes about Karen mixing up the dates and the room number and gags about Sam obsessing over his weight and age, Simon gradually reveals their marriage is on the rocks and does not unite them happily by the curtain.

 The second two pieces are more typical Simon sketches with a pompous movie producer seducing his star-hungry high-school sweetheart (“Visitor from Hollywood”) and the parents of a reluctant bride desperately attempting to pry her out of the bathroom just before the wedding (“Visitor from Forest Hills”).

In this current revival (at the Hudson Theater), basically an excuse for Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker to have some onstage fun together, the latter two gems hold up magnificently, but the first semi-serious scene falls flat. Though their ages are correct for the roles of a disconnected, disillusioned pair, Broderick and Parker look and act like Ferris Bueller and Carrie Bradshaw, their famous alter egos, playing late-middle aged dress-up. They seem uncomfortable in Jane Greenwood’s dowdy costumes and in their own skin. The crisis in their marriage—Sam is having a midlife fling with his secretary—comes across as not very important, and the comic-relief gags about suburban concerns aren’t very funny. It also doesn’t help that the script calls for Broderick to be svelte and Parker to be pudgy when they are physically the opposite. Fortunately, John Lee Beatty’s set is luxuriously appropriate throughout.

After intermission, though, the comic chemistry clicks, and John Benjamin Hickey’s perfectly-timed staging delivers the right bubbly fizz to send Simon’s neatly constructed sketches—and the audience—into the comic stratosphere. As the “swinging” movie mogul, Broderick is hilariously self-confident as he plots to maneuver his former girlfriend into his bedroom. Watch as he shoves scripts, newspapers, and even his lunch plates under the bed for a quicker tumble, then saunters to answer the door to admit Parker, who perfectly conveys the jittery conflicted emotions of a New Jersey housewife dying to be taken advantage of but simultaneously scared to death. Greenwood’s outfits now make comic points and help reveal character. The climactic dance into the boudoir is beautifully handled as Broderick drops movie star names and Parker eats them up with a spoon, allowing herself to boogie down temptation’s path.

The final outing is dizzyingly riotous with Broderick getting crazier as each attack on the solid bathroom door is thwarted until finally he winds up crawling on an outside ledge while being attacked by pigeons. Parker reacts with horror and precision as her stockings shred and her dignity wilts. The couple play off each other brilliantly, bringing the curtain down on a laugh riot. Two outta three ain’t bad.

Miscellaneous: 
This review was first published in Theaterlife.com and CulturalDaily.com, 3/22.
Critic: 
David Sheward
Date Reviewed: 
March 2022