One line gets a big laugh at Guild Hall’s production of Red, the play screenwriter John Logan wrote about the painter Mark Rothko: in his studio, superbly created on the John Drew Theater stage, Rothko (Victor Slezak) pontificates to his new assistant (Christian Scheider) about the empty soul of commercial art. In a hundred years, he says, no one will think the work of Andy Warhol of any importance. If the play is to be believed, Rothko was indeed a small-minded man, competitive with Jackson Pollock in abstract expressionism, deriding Roy Lichtenstein, Warhol, and others in the pop genre. The play’s occasion is a commission that will make him a lot of money, to create art for The Four Seasons, a new restaurant in Philip Johnson’s Seagram’s building. In fact, in its rotation of art, East Hampton’s Roy Nicholson’s work has graced the Four Seasons walls, to be replaced this past year by Robert Indiana’s. As directed by Stephen Hamilton, in Red, Rothko’s conflict about this commercial endeavor vs. his artistic integrity is high stakes, as is his generosity as a human being.
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