Friday, June 25, 2004

Will Jewtopia be the next big hit on "off" Broadway?

Jewtopia follows the story of two single guys — a Jew and a Gentile — on the verge of turning 30 who are obsessed with dating women of the other's religion. The two devise a plan to help both their causes by teaching one another their cultures.

The show, which has run over a year in Los Angeles, previously announced that Jewtopia was "in final negotiations to open Off-Broadway this summer in New York," according to a release. Fogel told The New York Times the Off-Broadway producing team is waiting on availability for several venues.


2 comments:

  1. Anonymous11:57 PM

    I beg to differ, but JEWTOPIA is more of the Jackie Mason shite stereotypes stuff that is in the end negative and unproductive. This play is full of Jewish self-hatred. Stop already. Enough already!

    To put it another way, Bryan Fogel and Sam Wolfson's "Jewtopia" is crude, vulgar, tasteless
    while often painfully funny. Yes.

    The long-running show, which has moved to
    New York, takes nearly every negative Jewish stereotype
    on record and blows it up to outrageous proportions. Forget friendly
    Borscht-belt humor. "Jewtopia's" aim is largely below the belt.

    The show has a clever premise. Chris (Fogel), a disgruntled gentile in
    his late 20s, is desperate to find a Jewish mate because he believes
    she will gladly make all his decisions for him. To accomplish this,
    Chris cuts a deal with his Jewish friend Adam (Wolfson) to teach Chris
    everything he needs to know to pass as a Jew. In return, Chris will
    help Adam with his own dating problems.

    Chris' education in how to be a Jew covers all the basics, including
    how to complain about nearly everything in a restaurant and how to
    deal with your mother, relatives, rabbis, Jewish holidays and much
    more. Meanwhile, Adam is dating Jewish females on the Internet. These
    encounters are the play's weakest scenes as the young women he meets
    are less Jewish stereotypes than obnoxious cartoons, so far over the
    top they manage not to be funny. Generally, the writing in the show is
    maddeningly uneven, careening from very funny to very dumb (in the
    wrong sense) and back to very funny. Fogel and Wolfson obviously enjoy
    playing in their own lucrative creation, and they're not that bad.

    Sad, that American Jews have to stoop to this shite. Enough already. Grow up, everyone!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous11:58 PM

    Q & A With Jewtopia Creators Bryan Fogel and Sam
    Wolfson

    ''Are you interested in a 29-year-old Jewish
    girl?"

    I'm standing in the foyer of the Coast Playhouse
    in West Hollywood talking to Bryan Fogel, the
    co-writer/co-producer/co-star of "Jewtopia" ¡X a
    play that parodies dating, JDating, interdating,
    rabbis, Passover seders, Purim, Chanukah bushes,
    bar mitzvahs, shofar blowing, other types of
    blowing, goyim, Asian fixations, synagogue
    memberships and, most of all, Jewish women and
    their overbearing mothers ¡X when this
    overbearing Jewish mother shamelessly accosts
    Fogel outside his dressing room to peddle her
    daughter to him.

    "I tried to bring her today, but she couldn¡¦t
    come," the gray-haired woman continues,
    describing her daughter, eventually extracting
    Fogel¡¦s information from him ("It¡¦s on the
    Playbill," Fogel says).

    The whole exchange was all the more surreal
    because we had just spent the past two hours
    watching a play in which she could have been one
    of the characters.

    That seems to be the thing about "Jewtopia:" it
    skewers Jewish stereotypes, and still leaves most
    of the subjects of the satire laughing (like the
    aforementioned unfazed pushy mother).

    The two-hour play tells the story of Adam
    Lipschitz (Sam Wolfson), a Jewish guy facing
    extraordinary parental pressure (normal for
    Jewish parents) to marry a Jewish woman, who
    meets up with an old friend, Chris O¡¦Connell
    (Fogel), a Christian obsessed with meeting a
    Jewish woman. They strike a Faustian bargain: Sam
    will help Chris pass as Jewish if Chris helps Sam
    find a Jewish woman to marry.

    When The Journal first saw "Jewtopia" on opening
    night last May, it was originally set for a
    six-week run. Nine sold-out months later and 40
    minutes shorter, the play is about to hit its
    150th performance. Fogel and Wolfson, together
    with Clear Channel Communications, are taking
    "Jewtopia" to Chicago in April and, if all goes
    well, they plan to open in Boston, Miami and New
    York within the next year.

    The Jewish Journal: What do you think of this
    "Jewtopia" phenomenon?

    Bryan Fogel: When we wrote "Jewtopia" we were
    hoping it was funny, that people would have our
    sense of humor and our sensibility ¡X but
    statistically, [knowing] L.A., we were holding
    our breath ¡X and we were prepared to be $80,000
    in debt.

    Before the opening weekend we did a marketing
    thing with JDate and The Jewish Federation and
    other singles groups, and from that point on it
    just took off. Once the [Los Angeles] Times
    review came out [last May] we sold 1,500 tickets.
    From that Friday on, we were sold out two months
    ahead of time. It was just totally bizarre.

    JJ: How do you account for the popularity of the
    show?

    Sam Wolfson: Who knows why people laugh at what?
    [At] our show last night one-third of the people
    were between 20-30, one-third were between 30-60
    and one-third were between 60-80 years old.
    [Comedian] Jan Murray brought like 12 people with
    him. They laughed as much as the 20-years-olds.

    There¡¦s been this wild age crossover.

    BF: There¡¦s our generation, and my
    grandparents¡¦ and parents¡¦ generation, who
    stayed where they were born. There was never any
    issue that they weren¡¦t going to marry a Jew;
    our generation is the first generation ¡X and I
    think it¡¦s similar for Christianity, too. I love
    being Jewish, but I think that our generation is
    the first generation that crossed that line
    between being a cultural versus a practicing Jew.
    I think that our generation has started to
    question all that.

    SW: A perfect example of why people are going
    nuts for it: This woman, she must¡¦ve been 70 or
    something, and she said, "My son married a
    Mongolian [a character in the play meets a
    Mongolian woman]. I can¡¦t believe it! How did
    you come up with Mongolia? This is my life!"

    BF: We had the founder of JDate, Alon Carmel [and
    he said], "This is my Mongolian wife ¡X she¡¦s
    Japanese, and this is my half-breed child." My
    character Chris [is based on my sister¡¦s
    husband] ¡X he had the same
    military/hunting/fishing background; he
    converted, and he¡¦s more Jewish than she¡¦s ever
    been.

    I think that what¡¦s working ¡X everything we¡¦re
    doing is in really, really good fun. The whole
    show comes from a love of Judaism. I love being
    Jewish. We¡¦ve taken some stereotypes and turned
    them on their head in a way that everyone can
    identify. What we¡¦re doing is not spiteful,
    it¡¦s not coming from any other place but this
    zany, irreverence for our culture. When the
    Buddist says at the seder, "We can stop suffering
    and reach enlightenment, and the grandfather
    asks, "Stop suffering?" it¡¦s about a love for
    our culture, and I think that the audiences love
    it. We¡¦re pleasing most of the people. There¡¦s
    always one person who says this is offensive. But
    I think that people can say that we¡¦re not
    making fun.

    JJ: People either love it or hate it. What
    offends people? And does this bother you?

    BF: In my opinion, 97 percent love it. That 2 or
    3 percent who hate it, I think that¡¦s a small
    percentage. It seems to be the older people, or
    observant, who think we take it too far, that it
    reinforces Jewish stereotypes.

    SW: These jokes have been going on for 100 years
    and suddenly we¡¦re responsible for perpetuating
    it?

    BF: Jackie Mason, Jerry Seinfeld, Larry David,
    this self-deprecating humor is Jewish humor, so
    when I hear that they are offended, I think they
    would be offended by Jackie Mason, too.

    SW: I do feel like if a lot of these jokes were
    done by those guys ¡X if it was in "The
    Producers" they [audiences] wouldn¡¦t think
    twice. It¡¦s OK if it¡¦s an established comedian,
    but not from two punks who haven¡¦t done it
    before. Nobody likes everything. But the fact
    that people who don¡¦t like it really don¡¦t like
    it ¡X I think that it means we¡¦re doing
    something right.

    JJ: Speaking of offensive, I thought the play was
    a bit misogynistic. (Are Jewish women really that
    bad?)

    BF: I don¡¦t think the play is misogynistic at
    all. There¡¦s no gray area in the play ¡X we just
    decided to make everything zany and over-the-top.
    Obviously in real life you don¡¦t get peed on [as
    Sam does on one of his 150 JDates] but I don¡¦t
    think that the stereotypes are directed at Jewish
    women.... Just overall craziness, rather than
    anything grounded in reality.

    SW: Stereotypes are so ridiculous. We made a
    conscious decision never to make the Fran
    Drescher-type, "Friends" Janice-type. In terms of
    presenting the Jewish girl ... when I¡¦m on the
    phone [making dates with 150 Jewish women] I¡¦m
    happy about it! I¡¦m excited! I break down
    because I¡¦m broke and haven¡¦t had sex for six
    months.... We never wanted it to be "Jewish women
    are bad and evil."

    BF: It¡¦s coming from the two guys that wrote it,
    and the single dating world. My mother is my best
    friend. There was nothing in our writing
    spiteful. Sam¡¦s last three girlfriends have been
    Jewish.

    JJ: Go Sam! Perhaps misogynistic is the wrong
    word. Perhaps it¡¦s just uneven ¡X skewering
    Jewish women and not Jewish men.

    BF: We did write about Jewish men. He has the
    pressure of marrying a Jewish woman. These two
    guys have a lot of flaws. You couldn¡¦t look at
    these guys and think they¡¦re the ideal guy.

    SW: No Jewish women were harmed when writing this
    play.

    JJ: What is the message of this play? Is Adam¡¦s
    statement at the end, that "we¡¦re all people and
    we should all get along," a statement in favor of
    intermarriage?

    BF: It¡¦s a reality, that last monologue, that
    for better or for worse, it¡¦s more grounded in
    the real world. In the ideal world, I¡¦d find a
    Jewish girl and you¡¦d find a Jewish guy, but the
    importance has diminished because there hasn¡¦t
    been the threat of persecution ¡X that we have to
    stay together or we¡¦ll die. If I could just find
    a Jewish girl that I was into, wouldn¡¦t my life
    be easier. Well, that¡¦s not as exciting.

    SW: I¡¦m sure it¡¦s the same for everyone and
    every religion. It¡¦s a part of the culture, I
    guess.

    JJ: Has this gotten you more dates?

    SW: Well, it hasn¡¦t been bad. We have both met
    girls through the show.

    JJ: Bryan, would you go out with that girl whose
    mother was peddling her the day I saw the show?

    BF: I would certainly entertain the idea.

    ReplyDelete