Prentiss & Benjamin Cease Their Promenade Power Plays, Jan. 3 | Playbill

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News Prentiss & Benjamin Cease Their Promenade Power Plays, Jan. 3 As with so many shows on and Off-Broadway, the comedy Power Plays played through the holidays and ends its run immediately afteward. Richard Benjamin and real-life wife Paula Prentiss star in the three one-acts, which opened May 21, 1998 and ends Jan. 3, 1999 at the Promenade Theatre.

As with so many shows on and Off-Broadway, the comedy Power Plays played through the holidays and ends its run immediately afteward. Richard Benjamin and real-life wife Paula Prentiss star in the three one-acts, which opened May 21, 1998 and ends Jan. 3, 1999 at the Promenade Theatre.

The show was scheduled to run through Jan. 10 but closed a week earlier, joining such other long-runners as Nunsense A-Men, Dinah Was and R & J. According to the Boneau/Bryan-Brown press office, Power Plays played 42 previews and 252 regular performances at the Promenade Theatre.

Benjamin and Prentiss took over the lead roles from Alan Arkin and Elaine May, Sept. 22.

Benjamin made his mark in films of the late 1960s and early 1970s, particularly as an interpreter of Philip Roth's work in the films of Goodbye Columbus and Portnoy's Complaint. Other film roles include Catch 22, Deconstructing Harry and Love at First Bite. In recent years, he has turned to directing. On Broadway, he starred in 1966 in The Star Spangled Girl. Prentiss has starred in such films as In Harm's Way, What's New Pussycat? and The Parallax View.

As a duo, they starred in TV's "He and She" and on Broadway in Alan Ayckbourn's The Norman Conquests. According to the Times, Power Plays came about when Arkin sent his one act, Virtual Reality, to producer Julian Schlossberg. May saw the reading and added her own play, The Way Of All Fish, to the evening. Later, she wrote the third piece, the farcical "Dr. Kastenbaum's End," now titled In and Out of the Light Or, Dr. Kessleman's End. The latter piece features Arkin as a dentist and May as his assistant. The last time the two worked together as actors was when they were both in different Chicago improv troupes in the 1950s.

Also in the cast are May's daughter, Jeanne Berlin, an Academy Award nominee for her supporting role in The Heartbreak Kid, and Arkin's son, Anthony.

Arkin is best known for his film work (Catch 22, Simon) but his theatre credits include directing The Soft Touch in Boston in 1975 and Jules Feiffer's The White House Murder Case Off Broadway in 1970, as well as the original Sunshine Boys and Little Murders. Arkin junior has worked at NY's Miranda Theatre, Westbank Cafe and 42nd Street Collective. (Arkin's other son, Adam, is also a stage and television actor, best known for playing Dr. Shutt in "Chicago Hope." Arkin's other son, Matthew, is now on Broadway in The Sunshine Boys.) May's plays include Adaptation, Not Enough Rope and Mr. Gogol And Mr. Preen.

Designing Power Plays are Michael McGarty (Master Class, Cakewalk) on sets; Michael Krass on costumes, Adam Silverman on lighting and Andrew S. Keister on sound.

-- By Robert Simonson and David Lefkowitz

 
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