Hugh Jackman makes triumphant return to Broadway in 'The River'

Published November 18, 2014
Hugh Jackman performs during the 68th annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York, in this file photo taken June 8, 2014. - Reuters
Hugh Jackman performs during the 68th annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York, in this file photo taken June 8, 2014. - Reuters

NEW YORK: Hugh Jackman made a stunning return to Broadway with a mesmerizing performance in award-winning playwright Jez Butterworth's new drama The River.

Set in a remote cabin, the three-person play that opened at the Circle in the Square Theater on Sunday for a limited run won praise for the Wolverine actor's portrayal of an outdoorsy man on a romantic night fishing trip.

"Jackman is catch of the day in The River, said the New York Daily News, adding that his performance is "manly, measured and speckled with melancholy."

The New York Times lauded the actor for conveying an impression of self-contained silence and said he "ascends with assurance to a new level as a stage actor."

Jackman, 46, is no stranger to Broadway and won a Tony award in 2004 for The Boy From Oz. But unlike that rousing musical based on the life of singer/songwriter Peter Allen, or his Oscar-nominated role in the film Les Miserables, The River, is an intense, mystical one-act play and Jackman is the center of it.

"It's one of the bravest, most carefully calibrated performances he has ever given," said the newspaper USA Today.

Jackman's character in the play, which was previously staged at the Royal Court Theater in London, is known simply as The Man. He waxes lyrical about trout fishing and love, and he guts and cooks a fish on stage.

British actress Cush Jumbo (The Inbetweeners Movie) is The Woman, who accompanies him on the night-time trout fishing trip and mysteriously goes missing, and Laura Donnelly, who starred in the London production, is The Other Woman.

The Hollywood Reporter said Jackman "brings heart and a haunted sadness to the brawny aesthete who quotes (the poet) Ted Hughes" but it found the play lacking and not up to par with Butterworth's earlier Tony-nominated play Jerusalem.

"Any sense of enveloping menace, mystery and even thematic weight that might mask the writing's more ponderously mannered aspects is missing," it added.

While it found it intriguing, USA Today described the play as 'ultimately disappointing," which the trade journal Variety echoed.

"Aside from the charismatic star’s intense performance as a lovesick fisherman who is given to poetic laments over the fish (and the woman) who slipped away from him, just about everything else about Jez Butterworth’s strange chamber piece, The River, is a downer," it said.

Opinion

Editorial

Out of control
Updated 19 Feb, 2025

Out of control

AS bodies continue to fall in Kurram despite a state-sanctioned ceasefire, one wonders how long local militants’...
Hollow words
19 Feb, 2025

Hollow words

IT is not uncommon for politicians to resort to the use of hyperbole in order to boost their public standing. ...
Migration matters
19 Feb, 2025

Migration matters

THE grass, it seems, did appear greener on the other side to millions of people as evidenced by the latest UN ...
Cholistan project
Updated 18 Feb, 2025

Cholistan project

GPI goals align with Pakistan's broader economic aims but the manner in which the initiative was launched raises questions.
Right to know
18 Feb, 2025

Right to know

IT is an unfortunate paradox that while on paper Pakistan has some of the most impressive right to information laws,...
Dam dispute
18 Feb, 2025

Dam dispute

THE situation in Chilas needs attention and a fair-minded approach so that it can be resolved amicably. Diamer ...