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Robin Williams to star in 'Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo' on Broadway

October 21, 2010 |  2:47 pm

Williams Call it daredevil casting, a shameless box-office ploy or the producers' implicit acknowledgement that they have a tough sell on their hands.

Thursday's announcement that funnyman Robin Williams will star in the Broadway production of "Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo" will no doubt cause a good deal of headscratching for those who saw the dark and violent war drama when it ran in Los Angeles at the Mark Taper Forum and Kirk Douglas Theatre.

"Bengal Tiger," written by Rajiv Joseph, is scheduled to open on March 31 at a still undetermined Broadway theater. Moises Kaufman, who directed the L.A. productions, will return to stage the New York version.

The production will mark Williams' Broadway debut as an actor. (He previously appeared on Broadway in a comedy show that had a limited run in 2002.) The actor is expected to play the title role of the tiger, a mangy captive of a Baghdad zoo who serves as the anthropomorphic narrator of the war drama. Kevin Tighe played him in Los Angeles.

Hardly family-friendly fare, "Bengal Tiger" is grim, bleak and tragic, though certain scenes have a perverse sense of humor.The play follows the intersecting stories of two American soldiers, two sons of Saddam Hussein and several other characters caught up in the current Iraq war.

"Bengal Tiger" had its world premiere in 2009 at the Kirk Douglas in Culver City. The following season, the production transferred to the Mark Taper Forum, with the same creative team. The play was a finalist for last year's Pulitzer Prize for drama, but lost out to the musical "Next to Normal."

Based in New York, Joseph has had his plays produced at a number of off-off-Broadway theaters as well as regional theaters. This is his first play to reach Broadway.

Times theater critic Charles McNulty wrote in his original review of the play that "I’m tempted to call it the most original drama written so far about the Iraq war."

-- David Ng

Photo: Robin Williams. Credit: Ken Hively / Los Angeles Times

RECENT AND RELATED:

Review: 'Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo' at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

Theater review: 'Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo' at the Mark Taper Forum

Playwrights on Writing: Rajiv Joseph

Playwright Rajiv Joseph takes on Iraq, existentialism and one big cat

 


 
Comments () | Archives (2)

McNulty is wrong. George Packer's "Betrayed" had far greater intelligence, empathy, and depth - to say nothing of being based on Packer's years of original reporting for the New Yorker. I found "Bengal"'s characters to be little more than stock figures about whom it was difficult to care beyond the surface of their obvious straw-man tragedy. Were it not for Moisés Kaufman's involvement, "Bengal" likely would (and should) have sank much sooner. Blah.

I'm almost positive he did Waiting For Godot once upon a time with Steve Martin.

The man is a good actor when he puts himself into it. He was sincerely creepy in One Hour Photo and was quite good in The World According to Garp. (although the producers mangled the book). This guy graduated from Julliard School, has an Academy Award and people are scratching their heads over this announcement?

Ehh. The life of an actor who does stand up comedy.


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