Images: 
Total Rating: 
**1/4
Previews: 
April 2, 2011
Opened: 
April 21, 2011
Ended: 
July 24, 2011
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
Sonia Friedman Productions Ltd., Scott Rudin, Stuart Thompson, Roger Berlind, Royal Court Theatre, Beverly Bartner/Alice Tulchin, Dede Harris/Rupert Gavin, Broadway Across America, Jon B. Platt, 1001 Nights/Stephanie P. McClelland, Carole L. Haber/Richard Willis, Jacki Barlia Florin/Adam Blanshay.
Theater Type: 
Broadway
Theater: 
Music Box Theater
Theater Address: 
239 West 45th Street
Phone: 
212-239-6200
Website: 
jerusalembroadway.com
Running Time: 
3 hrs, 15 min
Genre: 
Comedy-Drama
Author: 
Jez Butterworth
Director: 
Ian Rickson
Review: 

Here are my notes taken while watching the Broadway play Jerusalem by Jez Butterworth, directed by Ian Rickson: We start with a fairy princess singing, and then we are hit with a lot of noise and are introduced to the epitome of slob perfectly, repulsively played by Mark Rylance and his amusing bunch of degenerates with working-class English accents, plus a demented professor (Alan David).

The play is in the new Broadway style: the lowest level of garbage-mouth language. This is another anthropological study of a lower species in their strange repulsive activities - English "hail fellows" (not very "well met") in a drug or alcohol haze. Words are lost in unfamiliar slang. These people are not sinking - they are sunk. Why are we all assembled here to watch these degenerates, with whom we would never want to spend time? I must admit that Rylance debauches really well, and does a great limp (his character was formerly a stunt rider).

ACT 2: A barbarian celebration ceremony with rag-tag costume accoutrements including a dance performance and a tall tale. He calls his band "educationally subnormal outcasts," and he is right. There is an interesting interaction by Rylance with his ex-wife that has the semblance of a play, but it soon slips back into Looney Tunes. Costumes and set are creatively designed by Ultz, and there is great lighting by Mimi Jordan Sherin.

ACT 3: Stoned on acid. Is it interesting? Sure. Parts of it are fascinating. So is the lizard house at the zoo or the monkey house -- as long as I can be an observer and not a participant. Rylance's character, Rooster, has a film over his eyes - all is distorted. There is a promise at the beginning that Rooster has to vacate his house trailer in the woods where he deals drugs, and we wind downhill to the next day's deadline, with a closing by the fairy princess. There are a couple of moments of magical power, and a dance with the May Queen. An end ritual calls up ancestors.

This show is enough to drive an alcoholic off the wagon -- you truly need a drink by the end. It finishes with the strangest bows I've ever seen in a theater: nobody cracked a smile. The play is over. The bows are for us to acknowledge the actors, and it's usually a grand interaction. Nothing. Perhaps they were still in character - but without cavorting, I don't think so.

Cast: 
Mark Rylance (Rooster), Mackenzie Crook (Ginger), John Gallagher, Jr. (Lee), Max Baker (Wesley), Geraldine Hughes (Dawn), Molly Ranson (Pea), Alan David, Aimee-Ffion Edwards, Danny Kirrane (Davey), Charlotte Mills (Tanya), Sarah Moyle, Harvey Robinson, Barry Sloane (Troy), Aiden Eyrick/Mark Page (Marky).
Technical: 
Set/Cost: Ultz & Mimi Jordan Sherin; Light: Mimi Jordan Sherin; Sound: Ian Dickinson (Autograph); Music: Stephen Warbeck.
Other Critics: 
DAVESGONEBY Dave Lefkowitz 4/11 -
Critic: 
Richmond Shepard
Date Reviewed: 
May 2011