-Theodore Bikel |
The critics are raving about ZERO HOUR......
bCRITIC’S CHOICE! |
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CRITIC’S CHOICE! |
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CRITICS CHOICE! by Robert Hurwitt (November 11, 2007) |
CRITIC’S CHOICE! |
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by Joseph Feinstein (July 19, 2006) Brochu bats a thousand with Zero Hour. The swagger, ferocity, anger, frustration, but mostly the comedic genius of Samuel "Zero" Mostel as played by Jim Brochu comes to life in the West Coast Jewish Theatre's production at the Egyptian Arena Theatre. Mostel seems to inhabit Brochu, and that force, those big eyes, that hammering voice is all evident in this excellent portrayal. We never fail to see Zero the comedian, the clever, witty, sarcastic fellow who carries large chips on his shoulders, yet dispenses his lines with an ever-present sense of humor. At no time can you look away, for you are mesmerized by Brochu's words, gestures, and eye contact. His highs and lows, his screams and whispers, his deliberate movements or stationary moments while drawing, sketching and painting that we are kept on the edge of our chairs. Mr. Brochu has created a hit which will be received with rapt audience attention anywhere he plans to take the show. Zero always felt he was "the third choice" by producers when they needed an actor. I can assure you this play should be your first choice for exquisite theater. |
by Michael Menzies (August 12, 2006) Rush to see Jim Brochu as Zero Mostel in a performance of such size that it could barely fit in Montana. When he first appeared all the breath was knocked out of me: it was Zero Mostel! He was a force of nature - a storm brewing, thunder, lightning and the sun suddenly coming out. He was all weathers, all temperatures; all magnificent - like a Hirschfeld drawing come to life - I swear I counted ten Nina's. He has such danger on stage: it's like watching a savage bear on a fraying leash, ready for the "snap" of the restraint when he pounces on the audience and devours us. And devour us he does with passion and energy and humor and emotion. I was on a rollercoaster of a ride - laughing and crying and cheering and so enraptured and enthralled - nothing else entered my mind. |
by Everett Evans (May 2, 2007) |
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By Wenzel Jones (July 20, 2006) The initial, almost startling appearance of Jim Brochu in the role of Zero Mostel, so calls to mind a Hirschfeld caricature of the great comic actor that there is no need for a window of time during which the audience decides whether or not it will accept one distinctive actor playing another. Brochu creates a character that never fails to engage whether or not you know anything about Mostel. His performance is like a painting - a dab of bluster, a wash of insecurity and vibrant fields of talent and charisma applied to a sturdy canvas of humanity which create a rich portrait of the man. |
by Les Spindle (July 10, 2006) In Jim Brochu's entertaining new solo play Zero Hour, the writer-performer gives us a flavorful glimpse at the remarkable life and career of the late, great actor-singer-painter Zero Mostel. The play begins in Mostel's Manhattan art studio in 1977, as he is preparing to play Shylock in a play called The Merchant. (Mostel died during an out-of-town tryout in Philadelphia.) The premise is that a New York Times reporter has come to interview Mostel; in exchange Mostel insists on painting a portrait of the newsman. In a fully believable development -- based on what we know of Mostel -- the actor takes over the interview, and his bombastic mix of tirades, jokes, digressions, and laments becomes a crash course in his tumultuous life. The multi-talented Brochu captures the all-important wild-eyed look and the actor's idiosyncratic outbursts are fully credible. Zero Hour’s mix of comedy, tragedy, showbiz history, and nostalgia -- results in a fresh and inventive piece. |
by Julio Martinez (July 11, 2006) When Jim Brochu makes his entrance as Zero Mostel, he admirably embodies the flamboyance, mood swings and dead-on comic timing of this legendary yockmeister. He is at his best when demonstrating Mostel's ability to level an audience with his exquisitely executed emotional booby traps. Brochu's Mostel flails through his life and career, unabashedly thrusting the reporter into whatever role suits his immediate fancy, be it sounding board, artist's model, foil, confidante, enemy or pal.The piece is chockfull of captivating Mostel bio tidbits --his early desire to become an artist (including his studies at City College of New York), his first real comic outing in 1941 at the downtown nightclub Cafe Society (on the same bill with Billie Holiday), his courtship and eventual lifelong marriage to former Rockette Kathryn Harkin (whom his orthodox family completely rejected), his never fully realized film career and his transcendent career on Broadway. |
by Sharon Perlmutter (July 10, 2006) First, Zero Hour is funny - sometimes tremendously so. Once or twice, I found myself not only laughing out loud, but shaking at the memory of the joke several minutes later. But this Mostel doesn't always go for the laugh; his temper can ignite instantaneously, and sometimes his quick shifts from open and friendly to full-voiced insanity are themselves funny. But the play isn't always funny, it is a potent piece of theatre that has something to say. |
by Cynthia Citron (July 9, 2006) Zero Mostel, by his own definition, was a “heap of contradictions.” He was also, according to Jim Brochu, angry, perverse, rude, insulting, and hilarious. Brochu, who onstage looks amazingly like Mostel, invests the role with a blazing passion and a palpable anger. For actor and playwright Jim Brochu, however, “Zero Hour” has to be one of the greatest achievements of his very extensive career. |
by Mark Evanier (July 8, 2006) Jim Brochu in his new one-man play, Zero Hour has managed to magically — don't ask me how — turn himself into Zero Mostel. Brochu captures the basic absurdity of the way the man thought, rambling from topic to topic, going from non sequitur to non sequitur and having them somehow flow logically from one to the next. It's probably as close as you could ever come to spending time with the genuine article. Should you be in or around Hollywood through mid-August, I suggest you go. And if you're not in this area, just wait. I have a feeling Jim Brochu is going to be doing this all over America before he's through. |
by Don Shirley (July 22, 2006) The volatility and theatricality of actor and painter Zero Mostel make him more fit for solo show treatment than many a famous man. Jim Brochu’s script evokes memories of the blacklist and a bus accident to darken the greatest-hits chronology, and Brochu’s sharp performance displays Mostel’s fangs as well as his charm. |