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One of the city’s most important not-for-profit companies, Manhattan Theatre Club spent decades as an Off Broadway outfit before moving into the 622-seat Samuel J. Friedman Theater in 2003. But it still maintains a 299-seat pied-à-terre at New York City Center, where it presents some of its best material–such as Lynn Nottage’s 2009 Pulitzer Prize winner, Ruined. Sign up for the free 30 Under 30 Club to get tickets at both theaters for $30.
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Theater review by Adam Feldman
When people talk about physical theater, they usually mean the kind of shows that prioritize movement over text, with elements of mime and dance. The Monsters is physical in a different way. Its two characters are mixed up in the world of mixed martial arts: Big (Okieriete Onaodowan) is a champion MMA combatant who, pushing 40, is nearing his professional expiration date; Lil (Aigner Mizzelle) is his estranged half-sister, a decade or so younger, whom he finds himself training for a career of her own. When they work out together or act out matches, the actors throw their whole bodies into action, and in the intimate confines of Manhattan Theatre Club’s Stage II, everyone gets a cageside seat.
The Monsters| Photograph: Courtesy T. Charles Erickson
Writer-director Ngozi Anyanwu stages these sequences with thrilling immediacy, aided by choreographer Rickey Tripp and fight director Gerry Rodriguez. (Veteran bantamweight competitor Sijara Eubanks is the production’s MMA consultant.) But Big and Lil’s sparring outside the ring is, in a quieter way, just as compelling. He is stoic and intensely guarded, but she keeps jabbing at him until she can get through his defenses. In flashbacks, they play younger versions of themselves: The adolescent Lil is spoiling for battle, but gives up high-school wrestling because boys keep trying to pin her in the wrong ways; obversely, Big is gentler than he will become, but people pick fights with him so often—he...
Drama
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