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It's Only a Play

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Written by
  
Original language
  
English

First performance
  
November 1982

Genre
  
Comedy

Date premiered
  
November 1982

Setting
  
A home in Manhattan

Playwright
  
Terrence McNally

Place premiered
  
New York City

It's Only a Play httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcomoriginalsd0

Characters
  
Julia BudderPeter AustinJames WickerVirginia NoyesFrank FingerIra DrewGus P. HeadEmma

Subject
  
Waiting for reviews of a new Broadway play

Similar
  
Terrence McNally plays, Comedies

Spotlight on it s only a play hit terrence mcnally broadway comedy about opening night


It's Only a Play is a play by Terrence McNally. The play originally opened Off-Off-Broadway in 1982. It was revived Off-Broadway in 1986, and on Broadway in 2014. The plot concerns a party where a producer, playwright, director, actors and their friends eagerly wait for the opening night reviews of their Broadway play.

Contents

Review of it s only a play


Productions

It's Only a Play was revised from an unsuccessful 1978 play entitled Broadway, Broadway. The new retitled version was first produced Off-Off-Broadway by Manhattan Punch Line at the Actors and Directors Theatre, in November 1982. Paul Benedict directed, with a cast that included Francis Cuka as Julia Budder, Richard Leighton as James Wicker, Paul Guilfoyle as Frank Finger, Ken Kliban as Ira Drew and Harriet Rogers as Emma.

The play was revived Off-Broadway by the Manhattan Theatre Club at its New York City Center Stage 1, with previews starting December 17, 1985 and running from January 11, 1986 to January 26, 1986. Directed by John Tillinger, the cast featured Christine Baranski (Julia Budder), Paul Benedict (Ira Drew), Mark Blum (Peter Austin), James Coco (James Wicker), David Garrison (Frank Finger), Joanna Gleason (Virginia Noyes) and Florence Stanley (Emma). John Tillinger was nominated for the 1986 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Director of a Play.

A revised version was produced by the Center Theatre Group/Ahmanson at the Doolittle Theatre, Los Angeles, California in April 1992. John Tillinger directed, with a cast that featured Eileen Brennan (Virginia Noyes), Sean O'Bryan (Gus, a waiter), Charles Nelson Reilly (James Wicker), David Hyde Pierce (Frank Finger), Dana Ivey (Julia Budder), Paul Benedict (Ira Drew), Zeljko Ivanek (Peter Austin) and Doris Roberts (Emma).

It's Only a Play began its Broadway run at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre on August 28, 2014 in previews and officially opened on October 9, 2014. McNally rewrote the play again to bring the setting to the current day..It was originally scheduled for a limited 18-week engagement, through January 4, 2015 that was later extended to June 7, 2015. Jack O'Brien directed, with a cast that starred Nathan Lane as James Wicker and Matthew Broderick as Peter Austin. Also featured in the cast were Megan Mullally as Julia Budder, Stockard Channing as Virginia Noyes, F. Murray Abraham as Ira Drew, Rupert Grint as Frank Finger, and Micah Stock as Gus. In November 2014, it was announced that the play would extend its run through January 18, 2015 at the Schoenfeld, and then transfer to the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre in a run from January 23, 2015 to March 29, 2015. Martin Short replaced Lane in the role of James Wicker as of January 7, 2015. Additionally, Katie Finneran and Maulik Pancholy replaced Mullally and Grint.

On January 29, 2015, it was announced that the play would further extend its run until June 7, 2015. Nathan Lane returned to the cast on March 31, 2015 (after the play he was in, The Iceman Cometh, ended). Additionally, T.R. Knight joined the cast as Frank Finger on March 31, 2015.

On December 17, 2014, it was announced that the play had recouped its "$3.9 million capitalization". Variety noted the "consistent strength of the show’s box office" and called it a "megaseller".

Background

The play was originally called Broadway, Broadway and had closed during tryouts in Philadelphia in 1978. Geraldine Page and James Coco were in the Philadelphia cast, and the play was set to open on Broadway at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre. However, the Philadelphia reviews were negative and the Broadway opening was cancelled. In 1984, McNally said that after Broadway, Broadway closed he was no longer confident, but finally realized that having a show close is not the worst thing that could happen. For the Broadway run the play was rewritten to bring the story and references up to 2014. The role of Emma was cut and replaced by Gus, an aspiring actor employed as the party's butler.

Plot

A wealthy first-time Broadway producer, Julia Budder, is throwing an opening night party for The Golden Egg at her luxurious Manhattan home. The playwright Peter Austin, the director, the actors, along with assorted friends and hangers-on (including a critic) nervously wait for the late-night reviews printed in the newspapers. Meanwhile, they gossip and throw out the names of the celebrities who are in attendance. Virginia Noyes, the star of the show, is taking drugs. James Wicker, an old friend of the playwright, is now a successful TV actor who turned down the lead in the play, and is relieved and secretly thrilled about the bad reviews that arrive. And, although Ira Drew is a theater critic, he is very critical of the theater because he has no talent to actually participate, despite his secretly writing plays. Not discouraged by the bad reviews for The Golden Egg, the assembled parties eagerly make plans for their next play, which they know will be a hit.

Cast of characters

  • Julia Budder, a first-time producer of the Broadway play The Golden Egg
  • Peter Austin, the nervous playwright
  • James Wicker, "an egotistical but insecure comic actor who passed up a chance to star in the play for a television series—which has since been cancelled"
  • Virginia Noyes, dissolute, aging star of the play; she wears an ankle monitor and drinks and snorts cocaine throughout
  • Frank Finger, the young, egomaniacal, "genius" British director
  • Ira Drew, insecure theater critic
  • Emma, a no-nonsense taxi driver (dropped from the 2014 revival)
  • Gus, who checks the coats and hats but has aspirations for a Broadway career
  • Critical reception

    John Simon, in his review of the 1982 Off-Off-Broadway production for New York Magazine called the play "truly amusing", while noting that the play is missing "the interaction of characters on a plot as well as confrontational level."

    Michael Kuchwara, in his review of the 1986 Off-Broadway production for the Associated Press, called the play a "maliciously funny diatribe about the desperate and demented business of producing a play on Broadway."

    References

    It's Only a Play Wikipedia