Images: 
Total Rating: 
***1/2
Previews: 
April 1, 2024
Opened: 
April 21, 2024
Ended: 
open run (as of 5/24)
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
ATG Productions, Underbelly, Gavin Kalin Productions, Hunter Arnold, Smith & Brant Theatricals and Wessex Grove; Co-Produced by Julie Boardman, Tom Smedes, Peter Stern, Heather Shields, Caiola Productions, Kate Cannova, Adam Blanshay Productions & Nicolas Talar, Aleri Entertainment, Alex Levy Productions, Bunny Rabbit Productions, D'Angora Padgett Productions, Cyrene Esposito, David Treatman, Eddie Redmayne, The Array IV, Bad Robot Live, BlueJay Productions, Grace Street Creative Group, Iocane Productions, Jim Kierstead, Marco Santarelli, Tokyo Broadcasting System Television, George Waud, Yonge Street Theatricals, Federman Koenigsberg Productions / Sara Beth Zivitz, Tina Marie Casamento / Jennifer Johns, M. Kilburg Reedy / Tilman Kemmler, Greenspan Proffer / Kat Kit 4, Patty Baker / Matthew Christopher Pietras, Broadway Strategic Return Fund / Red Mountain Theater Company, Evan Coles / The Cohn Sisters, Nolan Doran / Fakston Productions, Epic Theatricals / Jeffrey Grove, Jessica Goldman Foung / Andrew Paradis, William Frisbie / Tilted, Marguerite Steed Hoffman / Willette & Manny Klausner, Vasi Laurence / Stephen C Byrd, Brian & Dayna Lee / City Cowboy Productions, Maybe This Time / 3D Productions, Nothing Ventured Productions / Theatre Producers of Color, Perfectly Marvelous / Catherine Schreiber & Co, Second Act / Freedom Theatricals, SSP Holdings / Todd & Bronwyn Bradley, Two Ladies / Nicole Eisenberg, Ilana Woldenberg / W Stage Productions, The Wolf Pack / Burnt Umber Productions and The Shubert Organization.
Theater Type: 
Broadway
Theater: 
August Wilson Theater
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Book: Joe Masteroff adapting John Van Druten play and Christopher Isherwood stories. Lyrics: Fred Ebb. Music: John Kander.
Director: 
Rebecca Frecknall
Choreographer: 
Julia Cheng
Review: 

Cabaret is a difficult show, especially considering what's going on in the world, and our country in particular. It takes place in a carnival atmosphere, at first silly and jolly; the audience gets some real laughs, and the extreme vulgarity just helps to convince us that this has nothing to do with us, not really. But the cabaret turns into a nightmare, and we're all stuck in it.

Eddie Redmayne is an actor who can do anything. I first saw him in a play called Red. I had interviewed his co-star, Alfred Molina, a brilliant actor with tremendous personal appeal. But then, something strange happened. I found I couldn't take my eyes off the young, redheaded boy who was just sitting there, listening. He was so completely present. I looked around the theater and saw that several other audience members were just a captivated as I. Since then, I've made a point of following his career, which has been stellar.  Here, even in the ridiculous clown costume, complete with tiny hat, he brings something unique to the Emcee. There's an undercurrent of menace. When he sings a "romantic" song to a gorilla, he's tender, pleading for understanding. The audience laughs at the ridiculous spectacle, right up to the end of the song, when he mentions that the gorilla is Jewish. Suddenly, this show isn't so funny anymore. 

Gayle Rankin does an admirable job as Sally Bowles. This role has sunk many an actress. Jill Haworth, originally in the part, was excoriated by New York critics. Sally must go from being silly, jolly, to being a wreck of a woman.

I have no harsh words for the actor who inhabits Clifford Bradford (Ato Blankson-Wood). My question is about "color-blind" casting in this particular play. A very crucial message is about the horror of bigotry in a society, and how it begins poisoning everyone. Would a Black man ever be treated so casually? No.

A big surprise and a subsequent roar from the audience goes to Bebe Neuwirth. Who knew that this chic, composed actress was hiding a tiger of a woman in the form of the frumpy spinster Fraulein Schneider? "What Would You Do?" rocks us to our core. What are we doing as so much of our society seems to be going down the tubes? Can we turn our backs as college students hurl Anti-Semitic jabs at Jewish students, who are made to feel unsafe? 

Yes, in Cabaret we can see a society sinking into the nadir of fascism, but will we be able to save ourselves?

Cast: 
Eddie Redmayne
Critic: 
Michall Jeffers
Date Reviewed: 
May 2024