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Aysan Celik

No Singing in the Navy

April 7, 2026

"School Pictures," Milo Cramer’s last New York show, a solo musical, was wildly inventive, hilarious funny, and extremely insightful about the New York education system, based on his own experiences as a tutor. Unfortunately, his new musical show again premiering at Playwrights Horizons seems to be out of his comfort zone though he has been a fan of musicals for years. "No Singing in the Navy" is a three-character revue which purports to be a tribute to Golden Age musicals, but its format is a series of very slight skits, à la 'Saturday Night Live," all with the same three sailors. It does use the premise from "On the Town": three sailors on leave for 24 hours before shipping out to the war, also used in a series of original Hollywood musicals, usually about sailors who become involved in putting on a show in either New York or on the coast. This show claims to have parodies of songs from "The Music Man," 'Peter Pan" and "The Sound of Music" but most theatergoers will not recognize them. A charming idea, but "No Singing in the Navy" is too thin and simplistic to make us think of those golden age musicals that still get revived on stage and reaired in their film versions. [more]

The Undertaking

January 17, 2018

Dull, smug and interminable," The Undertaking" is a multimedia play written by Steve Cosson that explores the meaning of death.  Jean Cocteau, Marcel Duchamp and Greek mythology are trotted out during this 80-minute hodgepodge. Mr. Cosson is also the director and his physical staging ranges from sedate to overdrive, with the actors incited to be manic. The ending, however, does have an affirmative simplicity. [more]