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Theatre Review: ‘The Assembled Parties’

BY ADAM FELDMAN, Time Out New York

Richard Greenberg’s elegantly moving The Assembled Parties is somewhere between a slice of life and a slice of mille-feuille. Unfolding in a palatial Upper West Side flat, first in 1980 and later in 2000, the play is a Jewish family drama by way of The New York Review of Books. Characters in Greenberg’s word-besotted world mix Yiddishisms with terms like aleatory, ambrosial and artesian—just to skim the A-list—and drop names like Louis Auchincloss and Mary Wollstonecraft. (A ruby-red necklace is described as a “rutilated, asterized treasure.”) The theatrical nature of this style is more or less explicit: “You would love the apartment, Mom,” says a young visitor, Jeff (the yeomanly Shamos), in a flustered phone call to his mother. “It’s like the sets of those plays you love. With the ‘breezy dialogue.’ ” A brisk draft of intelligence blows straight through the script, tempering moments of sentiment with astringency and surprise.

In Lynne Meadow’s lovely Manhattan Theatre Club staging, the first act is a whirl of quips and overlapping scenes—Santo Loquasto’s ingenious set spins the stage from room to room—and the second is ominously still, shadowed by past and future death. At the center of both is Julie, played with feathery otherworldliness by Jessica Hecht in one of the year’s most absorbing performances. Enchantingly agreeable, Julie is always smoothing things over. (“A cheerful nature is an utterly ruthless thing,” she says with iron-butterfly aplomb. “I’m the most ruthless woman you’ll ever meet.”) In this regard she differs from her grudge-happy sister-in-law, Faye (the incisive Light), who is lodged in wars of attrition with her angry mother and lumpish daughter (a funny, original Lauren Blumenfeld). Greenberg treats both women lovingly as he leads them through a shifting maze of hard truth and sometimes beneficent deception, and a pair of speeches in Act II show us, with gentle irony, how these women have changed. Julie’s beautiful reverie about appreciating things, inspired by her mother’s passion for dressmaking, is the highlight of the night; like the character, and indeed the rest of The Assembled Parties, it is gracefully built to endure.

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