Alice in Black and White
Closed 1h 55m
Alice in Black and White
91

Alice in Black and White NYC Reviews and Tickets

91%
(6 Ratings)
Positive
100%
Mixed
0%
Negative
0%
Members say
Absorbing, Enchanting, Intelligent, Entertaining, Clever

About the Show

Looking for Lilith Theatre Company presents Robin Rice's period-hopping bio-play about Alice Austen, a groundbreaking female street photographer of Victorian-era NYC.

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Show-Score Member Reviews (6)

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139 Reviews | 36 Followers
99
Absorbing, Enchanting, Great acting, Great writing, Intelligent

See it if you love NY history, photography, love stories, theatrical staging and intelligent story-telling.

Don't see it if you want fluff.

774 Reviews | 246 Followers
90
Enchanting, Educational, Delightful, Intelligent, Relevant

See it if You want to feel connected to a wonderful artist you probably never heard of. She will reach out of the past and touch you.

Don't see it if You are not interested in history. You want a more intense, fast paced experience.

184 Reviews | 30 Followers
83
Absorbing, Clever, Great singing, Edgy, Entertaining

See it if you enjoy story telling with your music. Jomama is a wonderful raconteur as well as a mesmerizing chanteuse. And can quickly change outfits.

Don't see it if you don't like cabaret or story telling with your music.

442 Reviews | 127 Followers
80
Absorbing, Entertaining, Intelligent, Thought-provoking, Relevant

See it if you are interested in historical plays about mostly unknown people; this play will entice you to find out more about Alice and her work.

Don't see it if you dislike historical plays; you dislike slightly less than top professional productions with minimal scenery, good but not great acting.

14 Reviews | 4 Followers
100
Exquisite, Funny, Great acting

See it if You love classics. Remodeled

Don't see it if No reason

8 Reviews | 4 Followers
100
Absorbing, Clever, Delightful, Enchanting, Entertaining

See it if See it if you can

Don't see it if You should see it

Critic Reviews (12)

The New York Times
August 7th, 2016

"The appealingly modest 'Alice in Black and White' straightforwardly tracks the life of this double pioneer...The show is at its best when it follows Austen at work and in love, especially since Kepler and Ellis have an affectionate rapport. Rice and the director lose their grounding when they turn to Jensen’s efforts to track down Austen’s photos, and the attempts at humor there are strained. You can only impatiently wait for Austen to come back in focus."
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BroadwayWorld
August 9th, 2016

"Beautifully written, splendidly directed, and featuring an excellent cast, this is one to see…Jennifer Thalman Kepler is superb as Alice Austen…’Alice in Black and White’ is an extraordinary testimony to Alice Austen's work, her lifestyle and her legacy. The intimate setting of 59E59 Theaters is ideal for the show's presentation. This is a very important, brilliantly conceived show that shares the ideals of one woman, ideals that have timeless significance."
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CurtainUp
August 7th, 2016

“It all comes off more like an outline for would probably work better as a filmed documentary than this play. Unfortunately, the interspersed scenes that try to add a bit of suspense...are more intrusive than smoothly or interestingly integrated...In fairness to director Kathi E. B. Ellis, it's challenging to move actors and props on and off this tiny stage...While ‘Alice’ is a flawed play, it does introduce us to a little-known game changer.”
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TheaterScene.net
August 9th, 2016

"'Alice In Black and White' is an intimate portrayal of Alice Austen—an unconventional, daring, slice-of-life photographer who focused on 'Street Types of New York' for over 40 years. Robin Rice’s play is structurally uneven and confusing which detracts from a meaningful perspective of Austen’s complicated life choices and what sacrifices she made becoming America’s first female photo-journalist."
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Theater Pizzazz
August 10th, 2016

“Although awkward and obvious in moments, Rice’s play is an important tribute to a great artist. If ‘Alice’ inspires visits to the Alice Austen House in Staten Island it will have served an important benefit...Directed by Kathi E.B. Ellis, some of the acting, particularly at the beginning of the play, might have been more earthbound and realistic, but Ellis wisely picked up the tempo and found breathless hope in the face of life’s tragic circumstances.”
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Stage Buddy
August 8th, 2016

“Alice Austen was a woman ahead of her time. Born during an era and in a society when there were not many options for women besides becoming a wife and mother, Alice was an unmarried, childless lesbian who lived with her girlfriend Gertrude Tate...Lovingly captured in ‘Alice in Black and White' by playwright Robin Rice, director Kathi E.B. Ellis and members of the Looking for Lilith Theatre Company, Alice was a true pioneer; a feminist decades before anybody started using that term.”
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Theatre's Leiter Side
August 9th, 2016

"While Rice’s play fails to bring her subject to life, the same is true of the production, which uses seven actors to play 16 characters, although no one has the requisite versatility to play multiple roles. There are several moments when it’s anyone’s guess as to who some people are. The greatest challenge is faced by Kepler, who has to age incrementally throughout and who can do little more than depend on embarrassingly hoary stage clichés in doing so."
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W
August 11th, 2016

"Rice reveals Austen’s history one piece at a time, separating the years with another story...This secondary storyline is an odd fit for the play...'Alice in Black and White' works well as commentary on the evolution of women’s rights in America, from Victorian times through the 1950s. It also makes a moving point about the women of Austen’s generation, who were brought up being told they were worth only what their wombs could produce."
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