Andy Warhol in Iran Reviews
Andy Warhol in Iran
Washington Post- Somewhat Recommended
"...This setup has enormous potential, including a deep dive into Warhol's carefully curated persona, the role artists play in politics, the tangled history of the United States and Iran, and a basic clash of personalities. Askari touches on all of this, with moments of camp and comedy, and an ambiguous ending that leaves open the possibility that the whole thing was a dream by an artist who was insistently elusive when it came to things like reality."
DC Theater Arts- Highly Recommended
"...Mosaic Theater Company’s production of Andy Warhol in Iran is a masterful, creative blend of humor and reflection. Brent Askari’s play imagines a possible event during the pop artist’s 1976 visit to Iran to take Polaroids of the Empress for paintings, an event that, as Andy puts it, “might have happened.” Directed by Serge Seiden, the play intimately reveals the connections between two seemingly different people."
MD Theatre Guide- Recommended
"...Capturing the essence of a character like Andy Warhol (who arguably was as much self-conceptualized character as he was actual human being) can go one of two ways: either the portrayal will devolve into caricature to further prove a point, or surprisingly, it will offer up new and even more sophisticated ways for said character to be interpreted. In Brent Askari's "Andy Warhol in Iran," presented by Mosaic Theater, the Andy Warhol that we ultimately get languishes somewhere between the two as he rides out a heartfelt story of finding humanity in a hotel room."
BroadwayWorld- Highly Recommended
"...Andy Warhol really did go to Iran. In 1976, the Shah's wife, Farah Pahlavi, arranged to sit for Polaroid photos which Warhol would then use as a basecoat for a series of prints, and Andrew Cohen reproduces Warhol's image of her as a permanently present part of his set design. Warhol also could really order reasonably priced caviar from his hotel's room service. But playwright Brent Askari has not written a documentary. Rather, he's found a way to use facts to explore, enlighten, entertain; Andy Warhol in Iran places an interesting set of "what if" questions in the middle of what really happened in and to the 2500 year old civilization now called Iran."