Before he picked up a paintbrush and saw art as a life’s journey for both religious and emotional expression, he dabbled with work in the garment district of New York and with acting in Portland, Oregon. The play “RED” deals with a period when he has found some artistic success, with Peggy Guggenheim as a patron, has works hanging in the Museum of Modern Art and with solo shows at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Architects Mies Van der Rohe and Philip Johnson, designers of a new building on Park Avenue, the Seagram edifice, want Rothko to accept a new commission, to provide a series of murals for its luxury restaurant, The Four Seasons. This challenging project, with a price tag of $30,000, for which he paints forty large canvases, with horizontal and rectangular shapes in a variety of shades of red, consumes him.
Stephen Rowe is staggeringly strong as Rothko in all his bombastic and egotistical splendor, a man obsessed as much by his talents as by his doubts. To him, his larger than life paintings are a “continuous narrative…10% paint on canvas, 90% thinking.” He wants to make the restaurant a temple and, at the same time, make it impossible for the patrons to eat anything while sitting under his work. To him, there is "tragedy in every brush stroke” and he agonizes to make sure his art speaks for itself.
Rothko hires a young assistant, portrayed by an eager to learn Patrick Andrews, who gets quite an education under Rothko’s abrasive and intimidating tutelage as he helps the master prepare the blank canvases, intimidating in their stark whiteness. The student bows down to his mentor, accepting abuse until he explodes in a virulent speech meant to cut Rothko down to size. Director Mark Lamos illuminates this dramatic play of insights and aspirations with a keen eye for detail. Lamos has paired this play with “ART” by Yasmina Reza, in repertory, for a full frontal attack on this fascinating world.
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