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Circumcise Me

VENUE

Bleecker Street Theatre

OPENED

November 11, 2009

PERFORMANCES

Wed at 2:00pm
Thu at 8:00pm
Sat at 8:00pm
Sun at 4:00pm
Sun at 7:00pm

RUNNING TIME

1 hour, 25 minutes
No Intermission

TICKETS

$66.50
212-239-6200
Order tickets online

MORE INFO

· Show Website

CREATORS & ARTISTS

Written & Performed By
Yisrael Campbell

Sets
Aaron Rhyne

Video
Aaron Rhyne

Photo of Circumcise Me

This is from the press release: "In his New York theatrical debut, comedian Yisrael Campbell takes the audience on a hysterically funny and intensely personal journey through his struggles with drugs and alcohol and his eventual salvation in the Jewish faith. Though he was born Catholic, Yisrael (who changed his name from Christopher) charts an extraordinary spiritual, creative, and hilarious journey that includes three circumcisions along the way."

Pictured: Yisrael Campbell in a scene from Circumcise Me (photo © Carol Rosegg)


nytheatre.com review

David Ian Lee · November 14, 2009

A classic Saturday Night Live faux-commercial featuring Gilda Radner as Rhonda Weiss shilling for dungarees ended with the tagline, "You don't have to be Jewish to wear Jewess Jeans...But it couldn't hurt!" Such borscht-belt witticism also applies perfectly to Circumcise Me, the hilarious one-man show written by Yisrael Campbell, currently playing at the Bleecker Street Theatre. Charting Campbell's passage from alcohol abuse and a Catholic upbringing to familial salvation and (multiple) religious conversions, Circumcise Me is at once steeped in Jewish culture and laced with Yiddish nuance, yet immediately accessible to even the most goyische of audience members.

Campbell, born Christopher Campbell in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, relates his personal narrative with ease and a convivial nature. Structured as a direct-address anecdote, Circumcise Me describes his teenaged waywardness, and the long, shaggy-dog path that led to his three conversions to Judaism: first to Reform, then to Conservative, and finally to Orthodox. His monologue culminates with the birth of his children and the sense of belonging he ultimately found in his new home in Israel. Though the ending point of Campbell's narrative is known before the lights even rise on his performance, the joy and surprise in this entertaining show come from Campbell's idiosyncratic humor and wry sense of detail: Much as is often the case for Faith, what is important is not the arrival, but the journey.

Save for a cup of coffee, a few books casually referenced (including Exodus, Go Ask Alice, and Chaim Potok's absurdly massive A History of the Jews), and a flip-top telephone, Campbell relies on few props and even fewer costume pieces, placing the emphasis of his story firmly on his story; it is a wise move, and director Sam Gold is to be credited for his reliance on simplicity and unembellished sincerity. Campbell occasionally slips into dialogues with characters from his past, effortlessly portraying both the role of his younger self and a cadre of family members, priests, Muslim father-in-laws, and mohels. His performance is supported by a backdrop cyclorama designed by Aaron Rhyne, featuring occasional slides and flash animation, all presented with the cheesy, good-natured cheer of a 1970's educational microfilm.

Campbell's chosen forename, Yisrael, means, "He who wrestles with God." As Campbell himself points out, it is a particularly suited nomenclature, and audiences will enjoy the tale of his many years grappling and gasping in the wilderness. Circumcise Me is funny, funny stuff: A show that deserves to be seen and that audiences in want of a meaningful laugh deserve to see.

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