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  In 1995, Carol Burnett returned to Broadway after an absence of three  decades to costar in Ken Ludwig's comedy, Moon over Buffalo. Legendary  documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker and his wife, Chris Hegedus, enjoyed  extraordinary access to capture the nuts and bolts of mounting a Broadway play  in this video equivalent of a backstage pass. It is more entertaining than the  strained farce we glimpse onstage.  Like Pennebaker's cinéma vérité masterworks, the filmmakers  do not impose themselves on the proceedings. There is no narration. The cameras  record the process, from the introductory press conference to the anxious  anticipation of the opening night reviews.   The play's director, Tom Moore, certainly has his hands full. Ludwig (who hit it  big with the play Lend Me a Tenor) bemoans what the actors are doing to  his words. "It's like a pact with the devil, having to cast stars," he  complains. He must massage the actors' egos (the play's ingenue dislikes the  picture of herself displayed outside the theater) and assuage their  insecurities. Observe how he deftly and delicately reins in Burnett, who  initially falls back on shtick to get a laugh. In one tense moment, Philip  Bosco, Burnett's esteemed costar, becomes flustered when he believes his input  is not appreciated. "Don't you want the benefit of our years of experience, of  our sense of comedy?" he demands of Moore. Moon over Broadway is just the  ticket for theater buffs. --Donald Liebenson
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