Theater Review (NYC): The Play About the Naked Guy

Part of: StageMage

David Bell's breezy, witty, colorful comedy The Play About the Naked Guy cleverly sends up Off- and Off-Off-Broadway and takes a hilarious poke at the gay nightclub scene as well. If that leads you to imagine a lot of in-jokes and self-referential gags, you're right, but don't let that deter you from seeing this delicious confection.

Gay or straight, backstage insider or casual playgoer, you'll come out in a jolly mood. The one-liners and flashy bits zip rapidly by, but if you miss one, six even better ones are on the way.Eddie: Pleasure doing business with you, Mrs. Anderson.Mrs. Anderson: Those were my husband's final words.The plot may be a little Swiss Cheesy, but no matter. The Integrity Players are in dire straits: down to three company members, they can't draw an audience to their "lesser known classics," but Artistic Director Dan (Jason Schuchman) refuses to compromise his principles and do anything more commercial.

nakedguy3Dan and his wife Amanda (Stacy Mayer) have a baby on the way, and no money to raise it unless they give up their artistic dream and cave in to Amanda's overbearing mother (the hilariously regal Ellen Reilly), who's about to withdraw her funding of the failing company.Harold (Wayne Henry), Integrity's third remaining member, is an actor with great talent but a sad personal life. His loneliness leads him to a club where he meets the Bialystock-like Eddie Russini (Christopher Borg), a producer who's grown rich on gimmicky, gay-themed stage shows like "Naked Boys Running Around Naked"

With his two preening minions in tow (the screechingly funny Christopher Sloan and Chad Austin), and a haughty porn star (Dan Amboyer) ready to take the lead role that would otherwise have been Harold's, Eddie may just be the struggling Integrity Players' saviour - but at what cost?nakedguy1Kit: I have a new master! And his name is Uta Hagen!With a lot of help from director Tom Wojtunik and a fine cast and crew, Bell has created an entertainment that's sweet-natured and smart, very funny with just the needed touches of touchingness.

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Co-Executive Editor of Blogcritics and lead editor of the Culture section. As a writer he contributes most often to Culture, where he reviews NYC theater; he also covers interesting music releases and writes a semi-regular review round-up of independent albums. …

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