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The Credeaux Canvas

VENUE

Gene Frankel Theatre

OPENED

November 4, 2009

CLOSED

November 21, 2009

PERFORMANCES

Wed at 8:00pm
Thu at 8:00pm
Fri at 8:00pm
Sat at 2:00pm
Sat at 8:00pm

TICKETS

$20.00
Order tickets online

SPECIAL TICKET PRICES

Students: $15

MORE INFO

· Company Website

CREATORS & ARTISTS

Cast
Billie Colombaro, Megan Melnyk, Sergey Nagorny, RJ Passetti

Author
Keith Bunin

Director
Bryan Radtke

Producer
Aeternalis Theatre

Photo of The Credeaux Canvas

This is a new revival of Keith Bunin's play. In The Credeaux Canvas, Winston, a young painter, shares an East Village apartment with Jamie, the son of a prominent art dealer. After the death of his father, who disinherited him, Jamie is spun into the depths of despair, and it seems that neither Winston nor Jamie's girlfriend Amelia, can do anything to help him. But when Jamie runs into one of his father's richest, most important collectors, Tess, he lies, telling her that his father left him one of the rarest of all of Credeaux's canvases, and that she of course must buy it. Convinced that his idea will work, Jamie talks Winston into inventing the painting, with Amelia as the model. But as soon as the painting is completed and Tess enters their lives, the relationships between the three begin to shift as their individual wants and desires become more evident.

Pictured: A scene from The Credeaux Canvas


nytheatre.com review

Brad Lee Thomason · November 6, 2009

The Credeaux Canvas starts off with the line "it's a fake" as Amelia studies a painting her boyfriend's roommate is working on for class. It's a fitting beginning to a play where forgery is the name of the game.

Winston, the character who utters these first words, is a passionate art student with some real talent and a special love for the artist Jean Paul Credeaux, and it isn't long before he spills his knowledge excitedly to the bemused Amelia, an aspiring singer and freshly unemployed waitress who is quickly charmed by the socially awkward but obviously deeply dedicated young artist; setting up a very comfortable relationship between the two that allows them to truly expose themselves to each other; in many more ways than one.

The Credeaux Canvas originally ran at Playwrights Horizons in 2001, and it is very easy to see why the Aeternalis Theatre has decided to mount a revival: Keith Bunin has crafted an excellently constructed play, and the characters are well-drawn examples of struggling young New Yorkers becoming more and more disillusioned. Jamie, the boyfriend of Amelia and roommate to Winston, is struggling most of all; his estranged father, a recently deceased art dealer, has cut him completely out of his will, and Jamie is desperate to improve his current financial woes that the inheritance would have alleviated. Fortunately, he has told his father's art connoisseur friend he owns an original painting by Jean Paul Credeaux, the artist of Winston's obsession. This is of course a lie, but his roommate could easily fake an original, the art critic won't know the difference, and nothing could possibly go wrong with such a tidy plan. Did I mention the marriage between Jamie and Amelia hangs in the balance? Or that Winston would be painting Amelia—nude—for five hours a day in the moonlight while Jamie is away working? What problems could arise?

Well, Amelia and Winston could fall in love with each other, the art critic could turn out to be a bona fide expert, and Jamie's last desperate and dishonest attempt to create the life he imagines himself entitled to could instead effectively ruin him forever.

Megan Melnyk gracefully plays Amelia with beautiful vulnerability and incredible naturalism, and the Act One scenes between her and RJ Passetti, who plays the gifted and self-effacing Winston, are true gems. Director Bryan Radtke does an excellent job slowly building the tension between these two as they reveal themselves to each other in body, mind, and spirit. I wanted to see more bravado from Sergey Nagorny as Jamie to effectively counterbalance his actual desperation. Jamie enters the play larger than life, but Nagorny does not summon up the necessary steam. The second half of the play is highlighted by the enthusiastic performance of Billie Colombaro, who plays the would-be scammed art lover Tess. She is not easily taken, as it turns out; she certainly knows her stuff, and the scene where she examines Winston's forged painting is nail-biting and highly entertaining.

It's not just that Tess knows her stuff; it would appear that playwright Bunin knows his stuff, too. He has written a very intelligent play; one that is well-envisioned and delivered by Aeternalis at the Gene Frankel Theatre.

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