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Eastern Standard
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Eastern Standard is a play by Richard Greenberg. Set in 1987, it focuses on , , the and scandals, , and urban malaise.


Plot
In the first act, very successful but disenchanted architect Stephen Wheeler is lunching with his best friend from their days at Dartmouth College, rising gay artist Drew Paley, in a trendy restaurant on the Upper East Side of . Seated at the adjoining table are Wall Street investment counselor Phoebe Kidde and her television producer brother Peter, who has just revealed he has AIDS to her. When boisterous homeless woman May Logan enters the restaurant and creates a scene, the four diners and their frazzled waitress Ellen find themselves thrown together, and they eventually strike up an unlikely alliance.

In the second act, six months have elapsed, and the are spending the weekend at Stephen's summer house in . Stephen and Phoebe find they share a mutual attraction, while Peter, unprepared to discuss his recent diagnosis, is trying to discourage Drew's amorous advances. Representing the lower class are Ellen and May, whose presence forces everyone to reexamine their lives and reevaluate their priorities.


Productions
The play's premiere production was at the Seattle Repertory Theatre in May 1988. Directed by , the cast included as Stephen, as Drew, as Phoebe, as Peter, as Ellen, and Marjorie Nelson as May. Eastern Standard at Google Books

The Manhattan Theatre Club presented the play at the New York City Center, opening on October 27, 1988, and closing on December 4, 1988. Again directed by Michael Engler, the cast included as Stephen, as Drew, Patricia Clarkson as Phoebe, as Peter, as Ellen, and as May. " Eastern Standard Off-Broadway" lortel.org, accessed December 16, 2016

A critical success, the production transferred to at the John Golden Theatre, where it began previews on December 19, 1988 and officially opened on January 5, 1989. It closed on March 25 after 92 performances. Both Baker and Frechette won the Theatre World Award, and Frechette won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play and was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play.

Eastern Standard was the first of Greenberg's plays to run on Broadway. The New York Times noted that the play "was ensconsed on Broadway... after successful engagements at the Seattle Repertory and Manhattan Theatre Club."Klein, Alvin. "Forging a Glib Style, With Flair", The New York Times, February 5, 1989, p.LI13, The play had six sold-out weeks off-Broadway.Hubbard, Kim. "A New, Young Playwright Risks Success for His Art" People Magazine, February 13, 1989


Critical reception
In his review in The New York Times, said the playwright "captures the romantic sophistication of the most sublime comedies ever made in this country: those produced by Hollywood from the middle of the until the waning days of World War II. Mr. Greenberg's characters have youth, brains, money and classy professions. Their last names . . . are redolent of 's Park Avenue; their fresh good looks and bubbly voices recall Katharine Hepburn and . And like , the heiress who adopts a tramp in My Man Godfrey, or , the Hollywood director who goes underground as a hobo in Sullivan's Travels, they are driven by conscience to see how the other half lives . . . . If Mr. Greenberg's only achievement were to re-create the joy of , from their elegant structure to their endlessly quotable dialogue, Eastern Standard would be merely dazzling good fun. But what gives this play its unexpected weight and subversive punch is its author's ability to fold the traumas of his own time into vintage comedy without sacrificing the integrity of either his troubling content or his effervescent theatrical form . . . For anyone who has been waiting for a play that tells what it is like to be more or less middle-class, more or less young and more or less well-intentioned in a frightening city at this moment in this time zone, Eastern Standard at long last is it."Rich, Frank. " Review" New York Times, October 28, 1998

, in his review for the , wrote: "Alternately compassionate and caustic, funny and sad, Eastern Standard marks the arrival of a major playwrighting talent who has been percolating on the theater scene for several years....With Eastern Standard, the playwright tackles bigger, more ambitious themes. He mixes his materialistic and upwardly mobile characters with such up-to-the-minute social concerns as the homeless and AIDS. It makes for an intriguing theatrical confrontation as his complaisant people face some unpleasant aspects of their society as well as their own social conventions."Kuchwara, Michael. "'Eastern Standard,' A Play by Richard Greenberg, Opens Off-Broadway" apnewsarchive.com, October 27, 1988


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