* Home

* Photos

* Interviews

* Videos

* Reviews

* Giveaways

* Jobs

The Apiary

Comedy and Beyond * Home

* Photos

* Interviews

* Videos

* Reviews

* Giveaways

* Jobs

Top * Home

* Photos

* Interviews

* Videos

* Reviews

* Giveaways

* Jobs

Advertisement

Advertise on the NYC BlogAds Network.

Contact theapiary@gmail.com

About * About Us

Meta Syndicate this site (XML)

Archives

Site built and designed by Bathrobewarrior.com

Logo designed by Tim Bierbaum

Total Nonstop News * Darrell Hammond Fresh Airs It Out | NPR

* Seth Herzog Trapped! In an Elevator | NYMag

* New Album From Andre du Bouchet | iTunes

* The 2011 New York Musical Improv Festival - November 1st - 6th

* 2011 Friars Club Comedy Film Festival Runs October 12th - 16th

More Search Video of the Day Eleven Heads on 11/11 | Koren Ensemble

Fanatical About

Entries in Nicole Shabtai (1)

Monday Nov 15 2010 Citizen Rothstein @ UCBT - 11.12.10

Monday, November 15, 2010 at 2:42PM Nicole Shabtai in "Citizen Rothstein" | Photo: Melissa Gomez

By: Lucas Hazlett

Earlier this year, legendary theater scribe and executive producer, David Mamet sent a memo to the writing staff of the since-canceled television show "The Unit" wherein he proffered advice on how to avoid writing bad drama that bores audiences.

Among the list was the simple idea that "anytime two characters are talking about a third, the scene is a crock of shit." Well, it isn't often that maxims of this power are challenged, let alone successfully. In the one-woman show Citizen Rothstein, the audience is treated to six different characters talking about a "third" and never once is shit-crocked.

The brain child of writer/performer Nicole Shabtai and director Caitlin Tegart, Citizen Rothstein is a 30-minute character study centered around Ava Rothstein, a privileged 13-year-old girl who is days away from a highly-publicized Bat Mitzvah promising to be the social event of the season.

Though we never actually see Ava, we learn about her through a gauntlet of troubled friends, family and personal employees who shape the context of her adolescent life. From Ava's mentally-broken rabbi, whose reluctance to perform the ceremony parodies the opening moments of Apocalypse Now, to Real Housewife Jill Zarin desperately fishing for an invite via incessant Facebook videos, Shabtai and Tegart delicately navigate Ava from a spoiled brat to troubled youth to fetishized fashion accessory, creating an engaging tableau evoking the screwball pictures of George Kukor and Woody Allen's Jewish neuroticism.

Citizen Rothstein has all the elements one expects from a good show, namely, big characters with clearly defined behavioral quirks and strong points-of-view, but because of the compelling narrative around which the piece is wrapped, it never feels like anything other than theater.

It is a comedic-drama that explores the tragedy of characters who are ridiculously overwhelmed with the absurd pressures they're facing in life, in this case, being rich on the Upper East Side. And because Shabtai delights in the struggles of her characters, who are essentially hapless victims of circumstance, the audience takes delight in both laughing at and commiserating with the affected. It's an incredible testament to a writer/performer who I don't see requiring any memos from the desk of David Mamet any time soon.

* THE PLUG: Don't miss Nicole Shabtai in "Citizen Rothstein," happening WEDS, NOV 24 @ 8PM at The UCBT-NY | $5

-- Lucas Hazlett is a comedy geek who improvises with anyone he can.

keithhuang | Post a Comment tagged Caitlin Tegart , Citizen Rothstein , Nicole Shabtai , UCBT-NY in Show Recap Copyright © 2011, [theapiary.org]. All rights reserved.