News Ticker

1-2-3 Manhunt

A child’s game becomes a metaphor for two lost lives.

Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

Santo Fazio, Chris Paul Morales, Ilene Kristen and Anthony Barile in a scene from Tony DiMurro’s 1-2-3 Manhunt at Theater for the New City (Photo credit: Maria Baranova)

Joel Benjamin

Joel Benjamin, Critic

The title of Tony DiMurro’s new play 1-2-3 Manhunt is the name of an urban hide-and-seek game played by New York City street kids several generations ago.  It is also the weighty metaphor for the characters of this play as it slips into a Grand Canyon of grief.

On a realistically shabby tenement rooftop in the Lower East Side of Manhattan—incredibly detailed design by Julie Melton DiMurro—Manhunt’s leading character, Alex, (Santo Fazio in a beautifully detailed performance) rants and spews drunken venom at the character-killing gentrification of his old neighborhood.

He is surprised by the sudden appearance of Alec, a Chinese-American teenager played movingly with a soon-to-be destroyed naiveté by Chris Paul Morales.  This rooftop is his sanctuary from the discipline of religious school and his family’s thriving home goods store on the fringe of Chinatown.

Chris Paul Morales and Ilene Kristen in a scene from Tony DiMurro’s 1-2-3 Manhunt at Theater for the New City (Photo credit: Maria Baranova)

The two at first clash then reach an uneasy détente fueled by some shared parochial school anecdotes. Despite Alex’s rampant racism—he keeps calling Alex “Chairman Mao”—Alec finds himself pouring his heart out, particularly about a Father Tizzio who cheered on members of the Holy Redeemer baseball team.

Alex was also on that team way back when and both remember Father Tiz’s famous, “Now remember, son, you and God are a majority,” with which he cheered the batters as they came to the plate. Inevitably they begin tossing Alec’s baseball around leading to Alex coming up with a scheme to make the neighborhood pay for its sins, a plan that, in the second act, causes much grief.

The next day, two of Alex’s old friends find him still on the roof.  Millie (Ilene Kristen, perfect as a foul-mouthed, frowsy blonde) and Frankie (Anthony Barile, fine as a slightly calmer version of Alex) have been searching for runaway Alex on roof after roof to force him to go home to his wife.

Ilene Kristen and Santo Fazio in a scene from Tony DiMurro’s 1-2-3 Manhunt at Theater for the New City (Photo credit: Maria Baranova)

This sets the stage for the dramatic high point of Manhunt, Alex’s seething tour de force outburst, a cascade of regret, recrimination and rage, interrupted by the reappearance of a train wreck Alec whose life is forever ruined.

DiMurro writes with an acute sense of the rhythm of New York speech and its old-school jargon, helped by director William Roudebush’s complementary sense of timing, not to mention four expert actors who know how to embody these characters.

Herrick Goldman’s atmospheric lighting and Andy Evan Cohen’s brilliant urban soundscape immeasurably added to the overall impact of 1-2-3 Manhunt.

1-2-3 Manhunt (through October 24, 2021)

Theater for the New City, 155 First Avenue, in Manhattan

For tickets, call 212-254-1109 or visit http://www.123manhunt.com

Running time:  90 minutes including one intermission

Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

Joel Benjamin
About Joel Benjamin (553 Articles)
JOEL BENJAMIN was a child performer on Broadway and danced with leading modern dance and ballet companies. Joel has been attending theater, ballet and opera performances ever since childhood, becoming quite opinionated over the years. He was the founder and artistic director of the American Chamber Ballet and subsequently was massage therapist to the stars before becoming a reviewer and memoirist. He is a member of the Outer Critics Circle.

2 Comments on 1-2-3 Manhunt

  1. The rants were interminable. Ilene Kristen’s performance powerful and authentic. First act way over-written, audience squirming in seats.

  2. YAY CONGRATS TO ALL/YOUR HARD WORK/TALENT PAYED OFF!

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.