Perhaps The New York Times go-to-the-circus critic, Alexis Soloski, took far too seriously the goings on at the current show, which costumes and links circus acts to Gotham’s “Hometown Playground” — tourists sites, iconic signage, fashions, et all. For she quibbles with the imagery as being out of date – such as poodles in Ziegfeld costumes. It strikes me as charming.
“The acts are given vague tie-ins to the five boroughs. An acrobat performs an upside-down routine dressed as a construction worker. Upside down they don’t cat call ... The poodles, all shelter rescues, arrive in a checkered cab.”
I assume they should have been Lyfted in. So does this mean it is okay to use only dogs from rescue shelters in circuses? How weaselly hypocritical a justification, woke! woke!
Any critic who goes to a circus these days expecting high-grade integration of theme or story is best advised to park their brains at the door, and let their do hearts do the watching.
Strangest of all, Soloski takes issue with a slack e wire act, writing, “However challenging, is no substitute for a high one – or very slightly out of date.’
That is the stupidest thing I have ever read in a circus review.
“Big Apple Circus’s exercise in nostalgia feels paler than the real city just beyond the tent.”
Still, our vacillating reviewer wraps on a feel good note: “Sometimes messy, sometime thrilling ... the show is a fine diversion for a fall afternoon.”
Which pales in comparison to the story's headline: "An underwhelming exercise in nostalgia."
Other reviews? I find only one, in DC Theater --- a rave. Frankly, it looks like a lot of fun to me, mixed imagery included.
Don’t be surprised if the Gray Lady spins out another annual accolade: “A New York Times Lazy Critic’s Pick!”
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