Review of "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground" at Ensemble Theatre
‘Slow Dance’ stumbles despite graceful Ensemble Theatre production Bob Abelman Cleveland Jewish News, The News Herald, The Morning Journal Member, International Association of Theatre Critics A young black fugitive, a political refugee from Nazi Germany, and a Jewish girl seeking a backstreet abortion walk into a room. This sounds like the setup for a bad joke with a distasteful punchline, but it is the plot summary of William Hanley's three-act play “Slow Dance on the Killing Ground,” currently on stage at Ensemble Theatre. Written at a time when the existential plays of Jean-Paul Sartre, the avant-garde work of Samuel Beckett, and the biting dialogue of Edward Albee offered theatergoers creative, cutting-edge social commentary, Hanley’s drama was more concerned with the social dynamics – the slow dance – that takes place when a diverse group of helpless, victimized strangers are confined to the same small space and bare their wounds. For more of this article, go to www.clevelandjewishnews.com/columnists/.
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Bob Abelman via NEohioPAL