Total Rating: 
****
Opened: 
October 10, 1995
Ended: 
Open run
Country: 
USA
State: 
Massachusetts
City: 
Boston
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Charles Playhouse
Theater Address: 
74 Warrenton Street
Running Time: 
2 hrs
Genre: 
Avant-garde Comedy
Author: 
Matt Goldman, Phil Stanton & Chris Wink
Review: 

In Tubes, Blue Man Group offers a frenetic clown show, exploring competition, conformity and technology with an anti-intellectualism that pooh-poohs art criticism even as it invites analysis. It's mask work—three blue, bald, silent heads with the timing of the Russian clowns. Their understated mime looks effortless, but there's careful analysis behind it. If you don't dig one element of their work, you'll dig another. They lunge at the information superhighway with metaphors on screen, and make audience members feel like Alice at the mad tea party. Their favorite target is modern art: they toss balls of paint into each other's mouths, spit it onto canvas, and display the Pollockesque results next to their expressionless faces with hesitant pride. An innocent audience member is made into a human paint brush offstage, while we watch the event on video.

The electronics theme, in fact, is strong, as we decide whether the event or its video is more interesting. We're primed before the show with electronic billboards (the kind with moving words) that have us singing "Happy Birthday" before anyone comes on stage. Smart. As American theater becomes increasingly a patchwork of conventions, we would all do well to open with an indication of what to expect tonight. But Blue Man relies too much on vomit humor - they should leave that stuff to Beavis and Butthead. And some of the statements are hardly cutting edge. Nonetheless, Tubes is welcome, the current manifestation of an eternal cultural voice reminding us that art is merde. There's even toilet paper hung over our heads, just to drive home the metaphor.

Technical: 
Set: David Gallo, Lauren Helpern; Lighting: Matthew McCarthy; Video: Caryl Glaab, Dennis Diamond.
Critic: 
Steve Capra
Date Reviewed: 
October 1995