Photo Gallery Update with pics of Randy Harrison
I added a little more than 2000 new pics of Randy to the photo gallery…
Read MoreA bunch of reviews for Red!
There’s a lot of official reviews for Red. Here are some excerpts and links to them :)
Read MoreRed: fan review!
Read More“Bob and Randy worked so incredibly well together. At times I was totally captured by Bob’s performance and totally forgot about Randy, and then two minutes later, Randy would steal all my attention from Bob. What a couple of powerful stage actors! “
Screencaps of Randy from John Bathke’s Red video interview
1868 screencaps from the interview have been added to the gallery…
Read MoreNew pic of Randy Harrison
Thanks to Predec2 @ LJ for giving the permission to post her pic of Randy…
Read MoreStunning in RED
Read MoreSo even though I already have my tickets for a performance later in the month and for closing weekend, the lure of discount tickets was too hard for me to resist. I HAD to go see RED!
“Red” Opens at George Street Playhouse
Read MoreThe George Street Playhouse’s latest production, the Tony Award winning “Red” is a look into growing old, the rise of the new, the play between a master and his apprentice, and the balance of power between the two.
Portrait of the artist as a curmudgeon
Read MoreAs terrific as Ari is, he’s wonderfully matched by Randy Harrison as the young artist who first comes to assist Rothko and then ultimately criticizes and challenges him. Actually, Ken is the more compelling role, because the character takes a longer journey. Ostensibly, Rothko barely changes. Ari shows that Rothko won’t let his veneer of superiority crack, even when he knows he’s losing an argument. Harrison, on the other hand, makes us all remember our own first days on a job, when we desperately tried to make a good impression. The accomplished actor shows the paradox any new employee faces in those early days: If you stay silent, you could appear stupid, but if you speak up, you might say the wrong thing.
Review: “RED” @ The George Street Playhouse
Read MoreHarrison goes from being cowed by the older artist to valiantly standing up for himself, calling his mentor a “solipsistic bully,” pretentious, “trying hard to be significant” and whose Seagram’s murals are “a monumental act of self delusion”! You almost want to cheer for the young man at that point.
