CurtainUp
CurtainUp

The Internet Theater Magazine of Reviews, Features, Annotated Listings
HOME PAGE

SITE GUIDE

SEARCH


REVIEWS

REVIEW ARCHIVES

ADVERTISING AT CURTAINUP

FEATURES

NEWS
Etcetera and
Short Term Listings


LISTINGS
Broadway
Off-Broadway

NYC Restaurants

BOOKS and CDs

OTHER PLACES
Berkshires
London
California
New Jersey
DC
Philadelphia
Elsewhere

QUOTES

On TKTS

PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS

LETTERS TO EDITOR

FILM

LINKS

MISCELLANEOUS
Free Updates
Masthead
Writing for Us

A CurtainUp New Jersey Review
Proof
Share

"Crazy people don't sit around wondering if they're nuts." —Robert
Proof
Kristen Bush and Jessica Dickey
David Auburn's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Proof cleverly filters an impassioned human drama through a world of higher mathematics. The setting is the decaying back porch of a faculty home on the campus of a Chicago University.

Besides the worn-out furniture and fixtures a special bit of visual embroidery serves as the frame of Eugene Lee's evocative set on which are scribbled oodles of mathematical equations. It's both apt and whimsical.

But there is nothing whimsical about the three principal characters who are mathematicians, or about the fourth, an outsider only in the sense of comparable scholarship. Although their dedication to their field of study is observed, it is secondary to the resolve of a parent-child relationship, a blossoming romance and the mystery that surrounds the authorship of a revolutionary mathematical formula.

Although some plays with academic and scientific subjects like Michael Frayn's Copenhagen are able to dazzle us with the precise and particular words of its science, Auburn's play is easily accessible through the grace of ordinary words. That's not to say that its extraordinary deployment of dual realities doesn't stretch our perceptions. Director Emily Mann has agreeably addressed the duality of the reality with precision and empathy, but most impressively by making the right impact through her very fine cast.

I'm so pleased to see Kristen Bush, who made a terrific impression last season as the sole woman among men in the Roundabout Theatre's The Common Pursuit. She is even better in Proof, this time bravely battling inner demons as the 25 year-old Catherine, the daughter of Robert, a brilliant mathematician and teacher.

Having inherited her father's intelligence and intense love of math, Catherine's promising scholastic career is just taking off when she makes the life-altering decision to leave college to be his sole caregiver, as he loses a battle with mental deterioration. It isn't easy for Catherine to cope with her father who has come to believe that aliens are communicating with him through the Dewey Decimal numbers in library books.

For a while it looks like the bespectacled, slovenly dressed, rude, and aggressively anti-social Catherine is also straddling the fine line between genius and madness. For her that means keeping a tentative grip on what has happened and what is now happening in the wake of her father Robert's (Michael Siberry) prolonged dementia and subsequent death. It's an emotional roller coaster ride for her as well as for the audience. Her distress is not only exacerbated by being suddenly left rudderless without her father who was her closest friend and mentor, but also by the arrival of her sister from New York City with whom she has had a difficult relationship.

The play is marvelously empowered by the presence of Broadway veteran Siberry (Enemy of the People Man and Boy) whose performance is palpable with flashes of genius and glimpses of geriatric failings. Also no stranger to the McCarter stage (Candida Uncle Vanya), he punctuates the scenes he is in with the obsessively dotty dedication of a man consumed by his love of math, i.e. you can't take your eyes off of him.

When Hal (Michael Braun), a post graduate mathematician gets permission from Catherine to browse through the more than one-hundred notebooks left by the idealized professor, he also discovers something special about Catherine. Her otherwise barbed responses, basic distrust and suspicions, as well as her general state of depression, appear as fixedly unstable as the dilapidated old house. Hal's aggressive investigation into the vast and disorganized mathematical material contained in the professor's notebooks is tempered by his cautious but persistent interest in Catherine.

Perhaps it seems insignificant, but Braun, who was part of the extraordinary Broadway cast of War Horse and featured in the Bridge Project's productions of The Winter's Tale and The Cherry Orchard, is not your cookie-cutter leading man. But he almost immediately displays the boyish virility that will ignite a romantic spark in Catherine.

Even before the somewhat expected intellectual and emotional catharsis that comes to Catherine with Hal's intervention there is a revelation at the end of Act I that (although it is dramatically manipulative) will undoubtedly startle you. That is, if you haven't seen the play before, including a production at the George Street Playhouse in 2003 where it was originally developed before heading to Broadway (See Elyse Sommer's reviews of the New York production).

Things begin to bristle when Catherine's questionably mercenary stock-analyst sister Claire (Jessica Dickey) returns home for their father's funeral. By giving Clair a slightly grating edge, the very attractive Dickey gives us an amusing side to unnerving normalcy as she tries to persuade Catherine to close down the house and move into the city under her watchful eye . . . or check into the "bughouse." She is slow to grasp the idea that Catherine's attachment to the home has as much to do with the lingering (and literal to Catherine) presence of Robert, as it is to her emotional and intellectual tie to her father.

As the play proceeds, Auburn correlates the past and future and the scholarly relationship between father and daughter, so deftly, humorously and poignantly that one quickly buys into the assumption that time is, indeed, relative and relatively mysterious. Digging in her heels, however, doesn't keep Catherine from falling into the arms of the ardent Hal, whose seduction is as artfully maneuvered, as is his aggressive investigation. Throughout this generously witty and intellectually stimulating play, we are inclined to think about motives, sincerity, career choices, love, and truth, and a few other things that good plays should make us think about. Isn't that enough Proof?

Proof
By David Auburn
Directed by Emily Mann

Cast: Michael Siberry (Robert), Kristen Bush (Catherine), Michael Braun (Hal), Jessica Dickey (Claire)
Set Design: Eugene Lee
Costume Design: Jennifer von Mayrhauser
Lighting Design: Stephen Strawbridge
Sound Design: Mark Bennett
Running Time: 2 hours 15 minutes including intermission
Berlind Theatre at the McCarter Theatre Center, 91 University Place, Princeton, NJ
(609) 258 - 2787
Tickets ($75.00 top) Performances: Tues, Wed, Thurs. eves at 7:30 pm; Fri. and Sat. Eves at 8 pm; Sat. mats at 3 pm; Sun. Mats at 2 pm.
From 09/06/13 Opened 09/12/13 Ends 10/06/13
Review by Simon Saltzman based on performance 09/12/13
Subscribe to our FREE email updates with a note from editor Elyse Sommer about additions to the website -- with main page hot links to the latest features posted at our numerous locations. To subscribe, E-mail: esommer@curtainup.comesommer@curtainup.com
put SUBSCRIBE CURTAINUP EMAIL UPDATE in the subject line and your full name and email address in the body of the message -- if you can spare a minute, tell us how you came to CurtainUp and from what part of the country.


For a feed to reviews and features as they are posted add http://curtainupnewlinks.blogspot.com to your reader
Curtainup at Facebook . . . Curtainup at Twitter


REVIEW FEEDBACK
Highlight one of the responses below and click "copy" or"CTRL+C"
  • I agree with the review of Proof
  • I disagree with the review of Proof
  • The review made me eager to see Proof
Click on the address link E-mail: esommer@curtainup.com
Paste the highlighted text into the subject line (CTRL+ V):

>Feel free to add detailed comments in the body of the email and state if you'd like your comments published in our letters section. . .also the names and emails of any friends to whom you'd like us to forward a copy of this review.

You can also contact us at Curtainup at Facebook or Curtainup at Twitter
Book Of Mormon MP4 Book of Mormon -CD
Our review of the show

Slings & Arrows  cover of  new Blu-Ray cover
Slings & Arrows-the complete set

You don't have to be a Shakespeare aficionado to love all 21 episodes of this hilarious and moving Canadian TV series about a fictional Shakespeare Company

amazon



©Copyright 2013, Elyse Sommer.
Information from this site may not be reproduced in print or online without specific permission from esommer@curtainup.com