Synopsis In the dead of winter, at his wealthy friends' luxury Long Beach Island apartment, Charlie has hit rock bottom on his 35th birthday. Away from the rest of the world, this perfect escape is interrupted by a motley parade of misfits who show up and change his plans. A hired beauty, a fireman, and an eccentric British real estate agent desperately trying to stay in the country all suddenly find themselves tangled together in a beach house where the mood is anything but sunny, while Charlie just wishes they'd leave and let him get on with it.
Who would have thought that Zach Braff, Emmy nominated darling of American prime-time television and Grammy winning auteur of indie hit Garden State, would ever be standing on a stage in Glasgow? With his scrubs off and his serious face on, Braff's debut, All New People, is a quietly charming and shockingly funny addition to the new season.
Misery hates company. Alone and at the brink of suicide, Charlie weathers an emotional storm in Long Island beach house. Another winter in a summer town. Enter a zany Brit, a $15,000 prostitute and a fireman with a bag of cocaine, reshaping this tale of loneliness and self-accusation into one of community and solidarity.
Superlatives fail when describing Zach Braff. Receptive, responsive and ravishing, Braff's performance as suicidal mystery man Charlie spans the emotional spectrum. Exploding with impassioned frustration and collapsing with hopelessness, Braff's portrayal is sincere and heartfelt, even if the script allows him little room to mellow.
Eve Myles is wonderful as English emigre Emma. Storming around Alexander Dodge's beautifully designed beach-house set like Edina Monsoon after three pitchers of Long Island Iced Tea, her performance is witty and breezy. Susannah Fielding's turn as Prada prostitute Kim, too, is perfectly pitched, as is Paul Hilton's questionable fireman Myron.
And yet, despite the strength of the cast, All New People struggles to maintain the arresting integrity which it so masterfully captures in its opening scene. Its flits between farce and tragicomedy, clashing characters of varying depths and trying too hard to tie a story with no easy answers up with a great big Hollywood bow.
Nonetheless, Braff has written an enjoyable and playful piece, bolstered by a remarkable cast and an at times hilarious script. Whether or not it will stand the test of time without Braff's name on the marquee is altogether less certain.
Braff's performance is nuanced and heartfelt...he dances gracefully with his cast...showing us a kind of
depth only briefly glimpsed in previous performances.
The humor is great fun. The pathos of the lives being lived moving and even gripping. I had a wonderful night. - Tavie
27 Feb 12
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Cheap, witless and mediocre, a poorly executed American sit-com on stage.
The only reason to see this play is if you’re a scrubs fan who wants to see JD in Person. I think that showed by the nature of the patrons, I have never been to another theatre performance were more people have turned up late and/or sat in the wrong seat or clapped as loud for such poor entertainment.
- Greg
25 Feb 12
I found the play a perfect blend of comedy and pathos. Much like Scrubs laugh out loud funny yet still has moments that make you gasp. Excellently written and cast, Eve Myles puts in a stunning performance. Braff too is absolutely excellent. Some parts are admittedly slightly contrived and of course Braff is the main attraction but well worth going to see. - Ross
17 Feb 12
SENSATIONALLY FUNNY???? I shudder to think what this reviewer would consider dire? clearly the audience attracted to see Braff giving'live' performance. terrible contrived performances. they must think scottish audience are morons given the reviews and ratings. - disappointed
17 Feb 12
unstructured nonsense. unnecessary bad language and smut detracted further from flimsy story. waste of money. also why on earth do theatres continue to sell food in noisy wrappings which idiots unwrap without regard for the disturbance to other patrons? - sorry I went
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