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  • First Annual Berkies Awards

    Theatre VIPs Jam Mr. Finn's Cabaret

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 14th, 2016

    The Berkshire theatre gilterrati crammed into Mr. Finn's Cabaret for a raucous evening celebrating The First Annual Berkshire Theatre Awards. Seventeen arts journalists voted on 120 nominees in 25 categories chosen from artists in the 75 live theatre productions mounted in Berkshire County and adjacent areas between October 1, 2015 and September 30, 2016.

  • Venetian Coronation at Lincoln Center

    Gabriele Conducted By Paul McCreesh

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 13th, 2016

    For a Venetian Coronation, the golden wood of Alice Tully Hall is lit around the stage by floor floodlights cast upwards. The 1595 Coronation ritual inducted Marino Grimani who would rule until his death in 1605. The Baroque style of the performance was delivered with clarity and beauty Challenges in playing period instruments with fewer vents and using the high larynx to produce tones of exquisite beauty were not apparent in the formal but easy movements of the groups.

  • After by Michael McKeever

    World Premiere at Miami's Adrienne Arsht Center

    By: Aaron Kraus - Nov 12th, 2016

    “Now what” are the words playwright Michael McKeever wants us to ponder after watching his devastatingly honest, explosive, unflinching and all-too-topical play titled simply “After.”

  • Thomas Ades and the Boston Symphony Orchestra

    British Composer Begins Three Year Partnership with BSO

    By: David Bonetti - Nov 11th, 2016

    Young (45 years old) hotshot Thomas Ades is a triple threat: composer, conductor and pianist. In his first outing with the BSO as artistic partner he showcased each of those skills. The results were mostly good. Among the highlights was the local premiere of his "Totentanz," a major work by any standard.

  • Finian's Rainbow Arcs Over New York

    Irish Repertory Mounts Charming Production

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 11th, 2016

    FInian's Rainbow was first produced in 1947, but the tough issues it raises are very contemporary. In Southern United States blacks and whites live comfortably, but are challenged by land grabs, Sears Roebuck salesmen and a Senator ripe for conversion.

  • White Lights Festival Presents All That Fall

    Beckett's Radio Drama Re-imagined

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 10th, 2016

    The brilliance of Samuel Beckett is captured by the Pan Pan Theatre Company of Dublin. Beckett's magical words never had more music and humor. The irony of death's grip is fully evoked in our mind's eye as we sit in rocking chairs, imagining figures. Beckett is laugh-inside funny, his words ricocheting around the room.

  • The Little Flower of East Orange in Chicago

    Play by Stephen Adly Guirgis at Eclipse Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 10th, 2016

    Stephen Adly Guirgis opens the veins of family feelings in his plays, with his gritty, piercing dialogue. He writes scenes we usually don’t see in public, scenes that reveal long histories of family abuse that become painful memories. He does this in Between Riverside and Crazy and The Motherfucker with the Hat, He is is a member of New York’s highly regarded LAByrinth Theater Company. Little Flower premiered at LAByrinth in 2008, directed by the late Philip Seymour Hoffman.

  • Carnegie Hall's Invites Music in the Resnick Center

    Developing Performers and Listeners Alike

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 08th, 2016

    Carnegie Hall programs explore an individual's musicality. For those who are born with the musical gene, their basic instincts are led out into the beat and the song. For those who do not have the gene, music is brought inside and listeners made.

  • Sharr White's Annapurna

    Launches CV Repertory Theatre's Season

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 08th, 2016

    The narrative of Sharr White’s play is not its strongest asset. It’s the performances of the actors that win the day. The technical credits at CV REP are always top tier.

  • Tony Winner Fun Home

    Touring Company Visits Chicago

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 08th, 2016

    Fun Home, the prize-winning show (five 2015 Tonys including best musical), opened at Chicago's Oriental Theatre last week for a very short run. The play, based on Alison Bechdel’s best-selling graphic novel, is a story of growing up trying to figure out yourself and seeing your parents through new eyes as you mature.

  • First Berkies Theatre Awards This Sunday

    VIPs to Gather at Mr. Finn's Cabaret in Pittsfield

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 08th, 2016

    Theatre celebrities, from critics to thespians, will gather at 5 pm on Sunday, November 13, 2016 at Mr. Finn’s Cabaret in Pittsfield. With a champagne toast they will celebrate the first, annual Berkshire Theatre Awards AKA 'The Berkies." The 25 winners in a range of categories, many of whom plan to attend, have previously been announced. The suspense will focus on the winner of the Larry Murray humanitarian award named for the critic and founder of the awards.

  • Heisenberg by Simon Stephens

    Manhattan Theatre Club Through December 11

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 07th, 2016

    British playwright Simon Stephens and director Mark Brokaw weave an engaging obbligato of nicely nuanced, performances by two terrifically talented stars who know how to draw the audience into their small, compelling story and make it sing. It's currently on Broadway at Manhattan Theatre Club.

  • Relativity at TheaterWorks Stars Richard Dreyfuss

    St. Germain Play Asks Can a Great Man Be a Good Man

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 07th, 2016

    While the theories of Albert Einstein ushered in the nuclear age his private life, as examined in the new Mark St. Germain play Relativity, was just as volatile. Although he crafted an eccentric and accessible public persona we learn that he was a misogynist and misanthrope. The drama evokes a hypothetical tug of war between Einstein (Richard Dreyfuss) and an abandoned daughter Margaret (Christa Scott-Reed) who has used deception to visit and confront him.

  • Zora Neale Hurston: a Theatrical Biography

    Celebrating the Queen of the Harlem Renaissance

    By: Aaron Kraus - Nov 05th, 2016

    The "Queen of the Harlem Renaissance" would probably be thrilled with the birthday bash Off-Broadway's New Federal Theatre and Castillo Theatre are throwing in her honor. They're presenting a fresh, dynamic production of the bio-play "Zora Neale Hurston: a Theatrical Biography" through Nov. 20 in Castillo's intimate black box theater.

  • Xian Zhang, Maestra of the New Jersey Symphony

    Handel, Beethoven and Strauss at the Bergen PAC

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 04th, 2016

    The New Jersey Symphony tours the state, winter, summer and fall. Starting her inaugural season as Music Director, Xian Zhang was welcomed enthusiastically by residents of Englewood.

  • Tiger Style Purrs At Huntington

    Chinese-American Play Promises More Than It Delivers

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 04th, 2016

    Squabbling siblings Albert and Jennifer Chen attained academic achievement. But as adults, they’re socially awkward depressed failures: he’s just been passed up for promotion and she’s been dumped by her loser boyfriend. So pivoting to the West and the East, they confront their Tiger parents and launch an Asian Freedom Tour! From California to China and back, this new comedy examines race, parenting, and success.

  • Bluebeard's Castle at the BSO

    Hungarian Rarity a Perfect Halloween Opera

    By: David Bonetti - Nov 03rd, 2016

    Bela Bartok is known for his folklore inspired spiky modernism, which he applied distinctively to orchestral and chamber works. "Bluebeard" is his only opera, and it is an awkward undramatic outlier in the repertory. Its lushly beautiful music, however, is a powerful reason why it is revived on occasion. The BSO under Charles Dutoit did it proud.

  • Philip Roth’s Books Return Home

    Distinguished Author Gifts Newark Public Library

    By: George Abbott White - Nov 03rd, 2016

    New Jersey-born Philip Roth has donated his personal library to the safe space home away from home of his childhood. With this gift, he has completed the circle of his intellectual and literary life. The Newark Public Library (built in 1901) is a great temple of literature based upon Florentine Palacio. According to George Abbott White, Roth has added to library's glory.

  • The Bottle Tree by Beth Kander

    Premiere at Chicago's Stage Left Theater

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 02nd, 2016

    The bottle tree is a background symbol in Stage Left Theatre’s haunting new play by that name—a world premiere script by Beth Kander—about the U.S. gun culture and its most horrific example, school shootings.

  • Carnegie Celebrates Steve Reich's 80th Birthday

    To Defy God or Not is the Big Question

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 02nd, 2016

    The year long birthday celebration for Steve Reich, our country's foremost composer, continues. At Carnegie Hall, we heard a Quartet from 2013 and the world premier of Pulse with the International Contemporary Ensemble. The evening was capped by Three Tales, a collaboration between Reich and his wife, Beryl Korot, a video artist. While Reich appears to be fit as a fiddle, these tributes to his decades might better be annual for all the pleasure they offer.

  • One Flea Spare by Naomi Wallace

    Playhouse Creatures Theatre Company Off Broadway

    By: Aaron Kraus - Nov 02nd, 2016

    The title of the play, which feels like a cross between Tennessee Williams and Harold Pinter's work, comes from words in a poem by English poet John Donne (1573-1631).

  • Richard Tucker Gala at Carnegie Hall

    Opera's All Stars Gather

    By: Susan Hall and Susan Seidenstein - Oct 31st, 2016

    The Richard Tucker Gala began about forty years ago to celebrate the career of a tenor who made his mark around the world, moving from Synagogue to opera stage and back. Today, the annual prize is awarded to deserving young talent who often end at the top of the opera world. Tonight's awardee, Tamara Wilson, shows all the promise of a huge career.

  • The Piano Lesson by August Wilson

    Revival at Hartford Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 31st, 2016

    In 1987 August Wilson's The Piano Lesson premiered at Yale Rep. It was one of two plays from the ten in the decades spanning Pittsburgh Cycle that won a Pulitzer Prize. It is being revived in a production at Hartford Stage Company. The stunning, vintage, hand crafted upright piano from the original Yale production has been borrowed for this occasion. It is the centerpiece for sibling tension that informs the iconic Wilson drama.

  • A Man Called Ove: Grace of Community

    Film by Swedish Director Hannes Holm

    By: Nancy S. Kempf - Oct 28th, 2016

    Adapted from Frederik Backman's 2012 novel and a 2017 Academy Awards selection for Best Foreign Language Film, "A Man Called Ove" is a moving portrait of a man whose suppressed emotion manifests in curmudgeonly bluster.

  • Kallor Opera, The Tell Tale Heart

    Tales from the Crypt

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 27th, 2016

    The ironic title of the website for the presentations at the Crypt of the Chutch of the Intercession in New York is 'death of classical.' Surely if classical music is to survive during the 21st century it will be in performances that are taken out to its audience in venues which are unique and intimate. Andrew Ousley, who conceived the Crypt Sessions, has a deep sense of what works in the venue, buried in the beautiful arches of a church in New York. The Tell Tale Heart was his Halloween, or perhaps All Saints Day, offering.

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