• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Reviews from Broadway and Beyond

  • Now Playing
  • Recently Opened
    • Broadway
    • Off-Broadway
    • Beyond
  • Critics’ Picks
  • Our Critics
    • About Us
    • Melissa Rose Bernardo
    • Michael Feingold
    • David Finkle
    • Elysa Gardner
    • Jesse Oxfeld
    • MICHAEL SOMMERS
    • Steven Suskin
    • Frank Scheck
    • Roma Torre
    • Bob Verini
  • Sign Up
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Now Playing
  • Recently Opened
    • Broadway
    • Off-Broadway
    • Beyond
  • Critics’ Picks
  • Our Critics
    • About Us
    • Melissa Rose Bernardo
    • Michael Feingold
    • David Finkle
    • Elysa Gardner
    • Jesse Oxfeld
    • MICHAEL SOMMERS
    • Steven Suskin
    • Frank Scheck
    • Roma Torre
    • Bob Verini
  • Sign Up
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
November 3, 2025 10:29 pm

Kyoto: Greenhouse Gassing

By Michael Sommers

★★★☆☆ Stephen Kunken is good as a bad guy in a new Royal Shakespeare drama about special interests and global warming

Kyoto
The ensemble of Kyoto. Photo: Emilio Madrid

“Now the story you’re about to see is true, but as a lawyer I have to say that some scenes and characters have been invented for practical purposes,” candidly notes Don Pearlman, the narrator and real-life central figure of Kyoto. Drawn from relatively recent history by English playwrights Joe Murphy and Joe Robertson, Kyoto dramatizes how a special interest group funded by the international oil industry impeded and sabotaged ongoing United Nations efforts to effectively recognize, let alone combat, global warming during the 1990s.

Opening on Monday in its U.S. premiere at Lincoln Center Theater’s Mitzi E. Newhouse space, Kyoto is imported by the Royal Shakespeare Company, which presented the play originally in Stratford-Upon-Avon in 2024. The production then enjoyed a four-month run in a 600-seat London theater in 2025. Kyoto is staged here by its original directors, Stephen Daldry and Justin Martin, along with their same ace design team plus several leading actors from the West End iteration.

Heading a 14-member company is Stephen Kunken, a sterling American artist who originated the role of Pearlman (1935–2005), a Harvard- and Yale-educated legal wonk in the Reagan administration with a specialty in energy policy. Hired as a lobbyist by oil interests, Pearlman plots its shadow campaign to discredit climate science. Meanwhile, he entangles the U.N. delegations in procedural issues, textual minutiae, and diplomatic maneuvering as they strive to develop the Kyoto Protocol on carbon emissions during their several meetings around the globe.

[Read Frank Scheck’s ★★★★★ review here.]

Here’s the wonderful thing about the ingratiatingly written character of Pearlman that fuses with Kunken’s devilish performance as a misleading man: You really, really like him a lot until you realize he’s the bad guy. That dawning recognition depends upon your advance knowledge of the sad history that Kyoto relates in overabundant detail in two acts and well over two hours.

Murphy and Robertson ably construct their play to function as a rapid ride through dozens of short scenes delivered by a 14-actor ensemble depicting numerous characters gassing away on complex issues such as the greenhouse effect or wheeling and dealing through plenary sessions. In its densely packed dramatic style and investigative purpose, Kyoto recalls similar history-based muckrakers: J.T. Rogers’ Corruption, about the Murdoch phone hacking scandal, staged at the Newhouse in early 2024; Ayad Akhtar’s Junk, regarding 1980s Wall Street greed, which played upstairs at LCT’s Beaumont in 2017; and Lucy Prebble’s Enron, a look at the Texas energy company’s crash. Enjoyed those plays with one-word titles? You may like Kyoto.

Backed by a translucent projection wall for video designer Akhila Krishnan’s series of still and live images, Miriam Buether’s fluent scenic design neatly anchors the 299-seat stadium-style Newhouse space. Its central stage is filled by a vast circular conference table ringed by seats, a few delegated to lucky spectators. The actors, dressed by designer Natalie Pryce to appear distinctive as various international folk, hustle through their scenes both atop and around the table.

Giving Pearlman a frank, self-deprecating manner as he chats with the audience, Kunken initially registers as an agreeable guy and then gradually turns ugly. Also from the English production, Jorge Bosch offers a delightful presence as a savvy Argentinian diplomat. Taiana Tully urgently speaks for island nations dealing with rising oceans. A bluff, gum-chewing Kate Burton acts tough as the USA delegate. A stately Roslyn Ruff, an elegant Dariush Kashani, and Erin Darke, dryly funny in an Angela Merkel cameo, are among other notable performances.

While Kyoto offers striking scenes and moments, often staged at a quick clip by its directors, the play remains a weighty work that’s not always engrossing in spite of the excellence of its actors, who do plenty of heavy lifting to keep it moving along. Once the show suddenly ends, the play’s somewhat foregone conclusion may well leave you flat, with only a bitter taste in your mouth.

Kyoto opened Nov. 3, 2025, at the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theatre and runs through Nov. 30. Tickets and information: lct.org

About Michael Sommers

Michael Sommers has written about the New York and regional theater scenes since 1981. He served two terms as president of the New York Drama Critics Circle and was the longtime chief reviewer for The Star-Ledger and the Newhouse News Service. For an archive of Village Voice reviews, go here. Email: michael@nystagereview.com.

Primary Sidebar

Othello: Free As the Open Air

By Michael Sommers

★★★☆☆ Nick Westrate and James Udom play alpha and beta dogs in Classical Theatre of Harlem’s outdoor staging of Shakespeare’s drama

Birthright: Six Characters in Search of a Common Ground

By Melissa Rose Bernardo

★★★★☆ Politics underscore but don’t overpower the character-driven epic from Jonathan Spector

Birthright: Political and Personal Issues Intersect to Powerful Effect

By Frank Scheck

★★★★☆ The new play by Jonathan Spector ("Eureka Day") depicts the reunions over two decades of a group of friends who met on a Birthright trip to Israel.

A Walk on the Moon: A Musical Tribute to Enduring Marriage Vows

By David Finkle

★★★☆☆ Pamela Gray adapts her 1999 film, Annmarie Milazzo adds the tuneful score

CRITICS' PICKS

women of Birthright

Birthright: Six Characters in Search of a Common Ground

★★★★☆ Politics underscore but don’t overpower the character-driven epic from Jonathan Spector

Dad Don’t Read This: 16 Going On Angst 

★★★★☆ Amalia Yoo and friends brighten the stage with Eliya Smith’s intriguing teen talk

Melanie Moore in Black Swan. Photo by Hawver and Hall

From Cambridge, MA: Black Swan, Tu-Tu Thrilling

★★★★☆ Classy musicalization of a psychosexual cinethriller uses human and technical legerdemain to spellbind

Well, I’ll Let You Go: Coping with Grief, Magnificently

★★★★★ Quincy Tyler Bernstine gives a whirlwind performance in a stunning new play by Bubba Weiler

Joe Turner’s Come and Gone: Revival of Wilson’s Drama About “Finding Your Song” Mostly Sings

★★★★☆ Cedric the Entertainer and Taraji P. Henson star in Debbie Allen's revival of August Wilson's modern classic.

Death of a Salesman: More Relevant Than Ever

★★★★★ Nathan Lane, Laurie Metcalf and Christopher Abbott star in Joe Mantello's emotionally searing revival.

Sign up for new reviews

Copyright © 2026 • New York Stage Review • All Rights Reserved.

Website Built by Digital Culture NYC.