From: Terje Rod-Larsen To: Jeffrey Epstein <Jeevacationggmail.com> Subject: Fwd: Off Broadway Review: CEOslot Date: Tue, 12 Jul 2016 13:58:58 +0000 Sent from my iPhone Begin forwarded message: From: Camilla Reksten-Monsen < Date: July 12, 2016 at 16:10:59 GMT+3 To: Terje Rod-Larsen < >, Mona Juul Subject: Off Broadway Review: ifOsio' Off Broadway Review: 'Oslo' http://variety.conn/2016/legitireviews/oslo-review-play-1201812346/ T. Charles Erickson July 11, 2016 I 08:00PM PT What would it take to get you to Lincoln Center Theater to see a three-hour political drama about the 1993 peace treaty between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization known as the Oslo Accords? I doubt this review is going to do it, which is really a shame, because "Oslo," a new drama by J.T. Rogers, is unequivocally fascinating. Would that some playwright would write as gripping a play about some contemporary political issue. But again, who would go to see it? LCT subscribers should know how lucky they are, having the opportunity to see director Bartlett Sher's striking production of this compelling drama. Heading the flawlessly cast ensemble are Jefferson Mays and Jennifer Ehle as the Norwegian tacticians who pull off the incredible coup of getting high-level officials from Israel and the PLO in the same room and actually talking with one another. Terje Rod-Larsen (Mays) is the inspired and somewhat excitable academic who dares to reach out to the Israelis to start the delicate and dangerous process of these secret negotiations. Terje is a fussy fellow who dresses so well (costumer Catherine Zuber scores again) and whose manners are so refined that Yitzak Rabin insists on referring to him as a Frenchman. Mona Juul (Ehle), his wife and the narrator of the dramatic events, is the even-tempered government diplomat who does whatever has to be done — from ordering the liquor to putting out emotional fires — to make it happen. EFTA00824006