From the Donmar Warehouse in London - which brought you Frost/Nixon, Mary Stuart and this season's Hamlet with Jude Law - comes the thrilling new American play, Red. This critically acclaimed, 90-minute drama comes direct from a sold-out run in London, starring two-time Tony Award nominee Alfred Molina and breakthrough British star Eddie Redmayne.
Master American expressionist Mark Rothko has just landed the biggest commission in the history of modern art. But when his young assistant gains the confidence to challenge him, Rothko faces the agonizing possibility that his crowning achievement could also become his undoing. Raw and provocative, with ground-breaking performances, Red is a searing portrait of an artist's ambition and vulnerability as he tries to create a definitive work for an extraordinary setting.
Written by Academy Award nominee John Logan (The Aviator, Gladiator) and directed by Olivier winner and Tony Award nominee Michael Grandage (Frost/Nixon, Hamlet), Red is an award-winning production coming direct to Broadway, offering a moving and compelling account of an artist's struggle for integrity amidst fame and self-doubt.
Red' may be all talk and no action -- but what talk! Scribe John Logan sends American abstract impressionist painter Mark Rothko into battle with his demons in this electrifying play of ideas, and the artist's howls are pure music. Alfred Molina is majestic as Rothko, defying the future he reads in the face of Eddie Redmayne, who holds his own as Rothko's young assistant. Although Michael Grandage's muscular production was trucked in from the Donmar Warehouse, where it preemed last year and was nommed for three Olivier Awards, the show feels as if it's come home to Broadway.
Adopting an impeccable American accent, Molina is absolutely superb as the Russia-born Rothko, anchoring the proceedings with a ferocious intensity that never wavers. In a role that at first seems underwritten, Redmayne shines as well, especially late in the play, when his character dares to confront his employer about the hypocrisy of creating his works for an environment in which people will barely even bother to look at them.
2010 | Broadway |
Original Broadway Production Broadway |
2018 | West End |
Michael Grandage Company Revival West End |
Year | Ceremony | Category | Nominee |
---|---|---|---|
2010 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Actor in a Play | Redmayne |
2010 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Actor in a Play | Alfred Molina |
2010 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Director of a Play | Michael Grandage |
2010 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Lighting Design | Neil Austin |
2010 | Drama Desk Awards | Outstanding Set Design | Christopher Oram |
2010 | Drama League Awards | Distinguished Performance Award | Alred Molina |
2010 | Drama League Awards | Distinguished Production of a Play | 0 |
2010 | Outer Critics Circle Awards | John Gassner Playwriting Award | John Logan |
2010 | Theatre World Awards | Performance | Eddie Redmayne |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Direction of a Play | Michael Grandage |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Lighting Design of a Play | Neil Austin |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play | Eddie Redmayne |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play | Alfred Molina |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Play | Stephanie P. McClelland/Hageman-Rosenthal |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Play | Neal Street Productions/Matthew Byam Shaw |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Play | Fox Theatricals |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Play | Ruth Hendel/Barbara Whitman |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Play | The Donmar Warehouse |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Play | Arielle Tepper Madover |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Play | John Logan |
2010 | Tony Awards | Best Scenic Design of a Play | Christopher Oram |
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