Michele Lowe's The Smell of the Kill, a zippy but glib dark comedy about three upscale wives debating whether to let their annoying husbands freeze to death in a meat locker, gets two important things right. First, the characters are strongly thought out and, except for a predictable last-minute switcheroo by the most domesticated of the trio (Claudia Shear), stay true to their backgrounds and motivations. Second, the fast-paced-to-the- point-of-shrill production boasts three able actresses, most notably Jessica Stone, whose Goldie Hawnlike goofiness grabs some big laughs. But try as this raucous but only sometimes really funny comedy might to be a feminist rallying cry or cautionary tale, it's just a little too broad and too easy, with its femmes more psychotic than sympathetic. It's also more of a situation/comic argument than a play, but to Lowe's credit, just enough of a situation to hold the stage for its 80 intermissionless minutes.
Images:
Previews:
March 5, 2002
Opened:
March 26, 2002
Ended:
April 28, 2002
Country:
USA
State:
New York
City:
New York
Company/Producers:
Elizabeth I. McCann, Nelle Nugent, Milton & Tamar Maltz, USA Ostar Theatricals. PSM: David Hyslop. GM: Roy Gabay.
Theater Type:
Broadway
Theater:
Helen Hayes Theater
Theater Address:
240 West 44th Street
Running Time:
90 min
Genre:
Dark Comedy
Director:
Christopher Ashley
Review:
Cast:
Lisa Emery, Claudia Shear, Jessica Stone. Voices: Patrick Garner & Mark Lotito
Technical:
Set: David Gallo; Costumes: David C. Woolard; Lighting: Kenneth Posner; Sound: Dan Moses Schreier; Fight Dir: Rick Sordelet; Casting: Johnson-Liff Associates; Press: Boneau/Bryan-Brown; Tech Sup: Larry Morley.
Other Critics:
NY TIMES Bruce Weber - / PERFORMING ARTS INSIDER Richmond Shepard -
Critic:
David Lefkowitz
Date Reviewed:
March 2002