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December 2007

December 05, 2007

Criticizing The Critics

04_brantleysorkin_lgl_3 New York Magazine wonders why Ben Brantley of the NYTimes was so hard on The Farnsworth Invention:

Yikes, what did Aaron Sorkin ever do to Ben Brantley? The Times critic rips Sorkin's play, The Farnsworth Invention, a new one today with a review so patronizing it seems as though it was written by Ratatouille's Anton Ego. In part this condescending tone is thanks to Brantley's initial comparison of the play to "a classroom presentation on a seven-figure budget":

It's the kind of review that seems perfectly calibrated to infuriate its subject: It refuses to take Sorkin seriously, pats him on his head, and sends him on his way, chastened. Now, we haven't seen the show — one estimable colleague called it "not bad!" and claimed it proved that Aaron Sorkin is a pretty good writer if he just gives himself time, unlike on Studio 60, to do a second draft — but we can't help but think this review might be overkill.

Steve On Broadway Tallies Up The Results

Link: Steve On Broadway (SOB): Did Critics Enjoy Sorkin's Invention?.

Frankly, as much as I enjoyed the first act, I felt very cheated by the second, which clearly should have been labeled "The Sorkin Invention." Newsday's Linda Winer is right to point out that there are plenty of people questioning Sorkin's conceit in adding a contrived confrontation between Farnsworth and Sarnoff when it admittedly never happened. She's also right to question where all the outrage was when Frost/Nixon used a similarly fictitious 11 o'clock device to propel its story (she clearly wasn't reading my review in which I said, "[S]uch flagrant abuse of the facts borders on an abrogation of artistic license.").

December 04, 2007

This Just In:

More reviews that slipped through the net earlier today:

New York Press (Stan Friedman):  Sometimes showing off (“Music is what Mathmatics does on a Saturday night”), sometimes using his familiar ironic understatement (“You’re going to want to not screw this up”), Sorkin delivers what his established fans and critics have come to expect: a showcase of his own formidable talent.

NY Daily News (Joe Dziemianowicz):  Scenes play out like brief vignettes from a History Channel biopic (the story was originally intended for the big screen) without stirring emotions. No wonder music accompanies several scenes, as in a film, to tug the heart... Sorkin has been ridiculed for distorting facts, but he admits to taking liberties with his characters. "I just made that last scene up," Sarnoff confesses at one point... Dramatic license is one thing. But a play about the invention of television that fails to blaze in living color is another.

Newsday (Linda Winer): Sorkin sprinkles anachronistic profanities as liberally as he makes up fiction about real people's lives. Farnsworth historians are already incensed about big and small inaccuracies. See thefarnsworthinvention.com for specifics. I appreciate the concern. I just wish someone had cared half as much about the world-altering distortions in last season's hit, "Frost/Nixon," alas, soon to be a major motion picture.

Review Summary, "Tony" Prospects

Farnsworth_2 The Envelope - a column at LATimes.com that handicaps the prospects for various awards like the Oscars and the Tonys, offers up this summary of the reviews:

Tonys 2008: 'The Farnsworth Invention' lacks originality

TV and movie scribe Aaron Sorkin's return to Broadway 18 years after triumphing with the military courtroom drama "A Few Good Men" was met with a collective critical shrug. Reviews for the strike-delayed opening of "The Farnsworth Invention" — a historical drama about the birth of television — range from bad to mediocre, albeit with one notable exception. This hoped-for awards contender in a busy season of play premieres may find itself forgotten, if not gone, come Tony time next June.

NBC "Today" Show

Sarnoff's spawn covers The Farnsworth Invention:

Who was the father of TV?
Who was the father of TV?

With commercials, of course. Pretty much a puff-piece, but damn that "West Wing" theme still stirs the soul....

NPR Coverage

Aaron Sorkin Gives 'Farnsworth Invention' Its Due
by Jeff Lunden
Listen Now

The Paper of Record: Damning with Faint Praise

New York Times Theater Critic Ben Brantley tries really hard to find things to like about The Farnsworth Invention.  And mostly fails:

This information-crammed, surface-skimming biodrama about the creators of television suggests nothing so much as a classroom presentation on a seven-figure budget.

The show certainly deserves high marks for all those traits that exacting schoolteachers hold dear: conciseness, legibility, correct use of topic sentences, evidence in defense of two sides of an argument and colorful examples to support the main thesis.

“The Farnsworth Invention” ... is packed with the stuff of high drama: corporate espionage, the death of a child, the Wall Street crash, village-burning Cossacks, even the sinking of the Titanic ... and a slew of those eureka moments you associate with easy-reading biographies about scientific discoveries.

And yet you’re likely to leave “The Farnsworth Invention” feeling that you have just watched an animated Wikipedia entry, fleshed out with the sort of anecdotal scenes that figure in “re-enactments” on E! channel documentaries and true-crime shows.

An animated Wikipedia entry? We could only wish. At least, if it were a Wikipedia entry, somebody could go in and correct the historical transgressions.

The Reviews Are In

The reviews of The Farnsworth Invention are pouring in almost by the hour now.  Here are links to the most recent, and a "money quote" from each one:


The Chicago Tribune (Chris Jones): Boy, this is a jumpy piece of writing. It feels like the writer is worried the audience might change the channel. That's not entirely a bad thing. As fans of Sorkin's TV shows know well, the internal psyche of Sorkin is a very stimulating place in which to dwell for a couple of hours.. And in this case he certainly knows how to make a dry scientific quest into a provocative piece of theater.

The Philadelphia Enquirer (Howard Shapiro): The problem with The Farnsworth Invention, the new and engrossing play that opened on Broadway last night, is not theater. As for theatricality, this story about a battle between RCA and the man who invented television is a magnetizing gem, moving about the stage almost as if it were dance. The problem with The Farnsworth Invention is fact.

Bloomberg.com (Jeremy Gerard):  Those actors are stellar, beginning with Jimmi Simpson in the star-making title role. Simpson perfectly captures Farnsworth's exuberant creativity and reckless detachment. He's matched by Hank Azaria's ingratiating Sarnoff, a shark of a captain of industry.

New York Post (Clive Barnes): Sorkin has gotten some - possibly a lot - of his facts wrong. Following an apparently undisputed feature about Farnsworth in The Post last week, Sorkin's producers are now calling this "a memory play."

The Globe and Mail (Simon Houpt): Sorkin originally saw this Jazz Age tale as a feature film, but you can see why he finally determined it worked best in the theatre: It depends, in his telling, on a dual - and sometimes duelling - narrative, with each of the men telling the other's life story. It's an odd approach for a writer who has made his name on famously sharp dialogue, but Hank Azaria, all pinstriped gruff city slickness, makes Sarnoff an engaging raconteur. And Broadway newcomer Jimmi Simpson, who awaits a Tony nomination next May, brings a heartland vulnerability to Farnsworth.

Chicago Sun Times (Hedy Weiss): A firecracker of a play in a fittingly snap, crackle and pop production under the direction of Des McAnuff, the drama has among its many virtues the ability to make you think at the same time that it breaks your heart.

Theater Mania.com (Brian Scott Lipton): The Farnsworth Invention marks Sorkin's first return to the Great White Way in 18 years (since A Few Good Men), and you instantly realize how much his decided gifts for razor-sharp dialogue and incisive characterizations have been missed on the stage. Which isn't to say that The Farnsworth Invention is exactly a well-made play -- or historically accurate.

Reuters (Frank Sheck): Aaron Sorkin's "The Farnsworth Invention," about the bitter conflicts surrounding the invention of television, contains both the flaws and the virtues that have been so long evident in his work for the same medium. Intelligent and featuring plenty of witty dialogue, it also suffers from occasional smugness and a tendency toward clunky dramaturgy that detracts from its overall impact.

Financial Times (Brian Lemon): The dialogue, meanwhile, gives mostly the appearance of panache: the biggest laugh comes late in the evening from a recycled joke about oral sex. For my taste, Farnsworth relies too heavily on narration; by the time Farnsworth and Sarnoff meet face-to-face I was so grateful for the dramatisation that I didn't mind finding out that Sorkin had invented their encounter.

Newark Star Ledger (Michael Sommers): While the two-hour drama's rapid flow of many scenes is based on history, Sorkin frankly plays loose with some facts. Relating these events, Farnsworth and Sarnoff accuse each other of unreliability or confess to their own. "I just made that last scene up," says Sarnoff, acknowledging he never actually met Farnsworth face to face.

Steve on Broadway (sob): Making matters worse, in the Second Act, Sorkin resorts to sheer melodrama bordering on pure fiction. It's a pity Sorkin chooses to veer so far from reality in the climactic dust-up between Farnsworth and Sarnoff. It's an exposive scene to be sure, but the moment is ruined by an 11 o'clock admission that what we were to believe constitutes a first attempt at reality TV is instead as bogus as a Jerry Springer episode.

December 03, 2007

Somebody Gets It

Namely Roma Torre, writing for NY1: Top Stories.

"The Farnsworth Invention" Does Some Inventing Of Its Own

Aaron Sorkin's new play "The Farnsworth Invention" is something of a hybrid – a cross between theatre and docudrama – and while we're given the impression this is a mostly factual telling about the invention of television, it seems Sorkin took quite a bit of dramatic license for this work.

That's disturbing considering that it's rendered as an historical account. Despite some outstanding performances, “The Farnsworth Invention” disappoints on two fronts. As history, at least according to Farnsworth's sons and biographer, it's dishonest; and as a play, it's more concerned with history than drama.

Des McAnuff does a fine job keeping the action fluid which could easily have bogged down amid the 19 actors on stage. At best, it's a strong draft in which Sorkin attempted to lay out the facts on his way to shaping what could be a great drama. But picking and choosing facts in a play that purports to tell the true story is a problem. That aside, “The Farnsworth Invention” would still need more show and less tell.

Oh Dear: AP says 'Invention' "fails"

Uh Oh.  If this AP ARTS REVIEW  is any indication, "The Farnsworth Invention" has a lot more to worry about than a few historical inacuracies:

Farnsworth and Sarnoff never met in real life, but they do in Sorkin's play. It's here where the evening finally springs to dramatic life. It may have been a fictional encounter but the moment crackles with a theatricality missing from the rest of this disappointing production.

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