William Shatner on Broadway: What did the critics think?
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William Shatnerâs career sometimes seems as bizarre as the actor himself. The seemingly perma-tanned actor who originated the role of Captain Kirk, spawning legions of Trekkers and âStar Trekâ spinoffs, has a Shakespearean stage background, won an Emmy for his portrayal of a morally loose lawyer in âThe Practiceâ and attacked overpriced hotels as the Priceline Negotiator.
The actor, whoâs wed four times, has shared hundreds of onscreen kisses and has been killed 19 times (most recently he died in a fiery tourist bus explosion in a Priceline ad). He delivers many of his screen roles and personal interviews with his signature staccato pauses, all questioning where the act ends and Shatner begins.
The 80-year-old boldly returned to Broadway for the first time in half a century, and this time heâs flying solo. âShatnerâs World: We All Just Live in Itâ opened Thursday for a brief run at the Music Box Theatre ahead of a monthlong, 15-city U.S. tour that includes a stop at the L.A.âs Pantages Theatre March 10.
Shatnerâs show takes audiences on a almost two-hour voyage through his life and career, splitting the time between self and self-parody.
The first reviews from New York were mixed -- some critics enjoyed the short journey into Shatnerâs galaxy while others were turned off by a world made for one.
Time Out New Yorkâs David Cote praised the actorâs performance: âShatner is genteel, funny and an amusing storytellerâ and even though he kept the âStar Trekâ talk to a minimum, âyou can bet that Trekkies will flock to the show like Tribbles on a starship bridge.â
A less enthused Joe Dziemianowicz of the New York Daily News wrote that âWorldâ felt like âan extended sales pitch for Shatner as an iconâ and the show lacked âstructure, flow or overarching theme during its 90 minutes, so it meanders. Like my attention.â He wrote that overall, âShatnerâs Worldâ was a show only âdie-hard Trekkiesâ could love, âothers, not so much.â The Hollywood Reporterâs Frank Scheck had a different take on the Trekkers, writing that while being a fan is almost certainly a prerequisite, âthe octogenarian actor ⌠is such an engagingly hammy and funny raconteur that only the most curmudgeonly will begrudge him this celebration of his life and career.â
Charles Isherwood of the New York Times wrote the show proved adequate in terms of self-effacing humor and career chronology: âDespite the absurdly (joshingly?) self-aggrandizing title, Mr. Shatner shows a welcome tendency to poke fun at himselfâŚ.â Adding that, âone comes away from âShatnerâs Worldâ ⌠with a thorough grounding in virtually all phases of Mr. Shatnerâs career.â
Entertainment Weeklyâs Darren Franich also had a harsh review, writing that while âundeniably fun,â the âmost telling moments of the show come when the lights dim, and the onstage video screen plays Shatnerâs greatest hitsâ with Shatner watching Shatner. âHeâs his own best audience. Itâs Shatnerâs show: Weâre just living through it.â
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--Jamie Wetherbe