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Venice

  • Theater, Drama
  1. Photograph: Joan Marcus
    Photograph: Joan MarcusVenice
  2. Photograph: Joan Marcus
    Photograph: Joan MarcusVenice
  3. Photograph: Joan Marcus
    Photograph: Joan MarcusVenice
  4. Photograph: Joan Marcus
    Photograph: Joan MarcusVenice
  5. Photograph: Joan Marcus
    Photograph: Joan MarcusVenice
  6. Photograph: Joan Marcus
    Photograph: Joan MarcusVenice
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Time Out says

Venice. Public Theater (Off Broadway). Book by Eric Rosen. Music by Matt Sax. Lyrics by Sax and Rosen. Director: Rosen. With ensemble cast. Running time: 2hrs 30mins. One intermission.

Venice: synopsis

Citizens rich and poor, including a pair of young lovers, try to unite their fractured city in a dystopian-future musical by Eric Rosen and Matt Sax, presented by the Public Lab.

Venice: theater review

The Public Lab is entitled to experiments gone wrong, but Venice is a Frankenstein monster of unusual ungainliness. Stitched from lifeless parts, this dystopian hip-hop Shakespeare musical is a bleakly preposterous mess. Imagine Urinetown played straight, for pseudomythic melodrama instead of comedy. Graft on plot points from Othello willy-nilly, and put it through a blender of sloppy rhymes; then picture a cast of musical-theater people performing it with the fervent seriousness of Smash’s Hit List. That’s this show, more or less, and it’s truly a trial. (Venice is two-and-a-half hours long. Had I not been reviewing it, I’d have bolted after five minutes.)

Cocreated by Eric Rosen and Matt Sax (who also plays the rapping narrator), Venice is set in a world where elites are walled off after a terrorist attack, while the others are oppressed by a vague, villainous corporation. Can a wedding between two popular figures—childhood friends Willow (Jennifer Damiano) and Venice (Haaz Sleiman), both looking pretty and vacant—unite their torn city? Or will Venice’s diabolical half brother (Leslie Odom Jr.) kill everyone first, through his quite implausible plots? The better performers, such as Uzo Aduba as Venice’s martyred mother and Angela Polk as a pop star oozing Nicki Minaj–ery, provide some relief in small roles, as does Chase Brock’s spiky choreography, well danced by the urgent ensemble. But Venice is so sketchy and portentous—it suggests the daydreaming of teenagers who’ve seen too much lousy sci-fi, and nothing else—that it can only be scoffed at. Whatever it is, this cannot be the future.—Theater review by Adam Feldman

Follow Adam Feldman on Twitter: @FeldmanAdam

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Details

Event website:
publictheater.org
Address:
Contact:
212-967-7555
Price:
$15, after June 23 $45
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