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  • Samuel Beckett in South Florida

    Happy Days at Ft. Lauderdale's Thinking Cap Theatre

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 17th, 2020

    Superb acting, technical work combine to create a compelling production of Samuel Beckett's Happy Days at Thinking Cap Theatre. Veteran south Florida performer Karen Stephens shines in the role of Winnie.

  • National Sawdust Presents Against the Grain Opera

    Intriguing Peek Into Artists-in-Residence Program

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 16th, 2020

    National Sawdust, an artist led Brooklyn group, is a leading incubator of new music. One aspect of their work is an artists-in-residence program. Committed to assisting the creation of music that has impact, artists are encouraged to draw from personal experience and their interpretation of the world. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup explores the opioid crisis.

  • Medea by Simon Stone at BAM

    Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale Deliver Riveting Performances

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 17th, 2020

    BAM is mounting an elegant, moving, hip update of the Medea story, written after Euripides by Simon Stone. Starring Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale, the set is a made up of a rectangular screen onto which video images are projected. Often we see the actors in extreme close up. Their miced voices bring them even closer. The backdrop of the stage and two wings which bend in at about 40 degree angles are white. So too the stage floor. It calls attention to the stage action and to the emotional temper of Anna and Lucas, Claire, the new girlfriend, Elspeth the therapist, and Anna's and Lucas’ two children, Edgar, and Gus.

  • Roland Colton Brings Us a Piano Music eBook

    Mentioned Music Available at a Click as You Read

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 18th, 2020

    Forever Gentleman, by Roland Colton, has several novel twists. It tells the tale of Nathan Sinclair, an architect and sometimes concert pianist of first-rate talents in both disciplines. When we meet him, he has been introduced into a good woman who deeply attracts him. He vows to settle a debt to a loan broker. He has incurred the debt because a client has been unable to pay up. One thread in the story is a Dickensian tour of Victorian debtor courts and jails in 1869. Colton is able to lead us through this tortuous path with vigorous, clear writing.

  • Lifespan of a Fact

    TheaterWorks in Hartford

    By: Karen Isaacs - Feb 20th, 2020

    This is one short play (85 minutes) that kept me so interested, that I never checked my watch. Overall this production is just as good as the one I saw on Broadway a year ago.

  • Boston Arts Leader Ted Landsmark

    Discussed Transitions in 2000

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 20th, 2020

    When we spoke in 2000 the arts leader Ted Landsmark was director of the Boston Architectural College. He was on leave as chair of the board of the Institute of Contemporary Art but still serving on the board of the MFA. It was a time of transition and change. The ICA was constructing a new building on the waterfront. Its director, Jill Medvedow, was competing for funding with MFA director, Malcolm Rogers. Landsmark argued that they should be working together

  • When by Ledelle Moe

    Massive Sculptures by South African Artist at MASS MoCA

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 21st, 2020

    Building Five of MASS MoCA is one of the largest spaces for contemporary art in North America. Since the museum opened in 1999 there has been an annual rotation. The results have been mixed with hits and misses. Curated by Susan Cross, the current installation When by the South African artist Ledelle Moe is on the short list of most astonishing projects. It remains on view in North Adams through September 5.

  • Hamilton On Tour

    At Miami's Adrienne Arsht Center

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 20th, 2020

    A vibrant equity production of Hamilton invades Miami The show isn't available for school licensing just yet, but it should give student thespians something to look forward to. This production, running through March 15, was sold out on opening night.

  • Princeton Atelier at National Sawdust

    Humanizing Electronic Sound

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 24th, 2020

    Introductory visual and audio moments originated in climate data released as sound in a work by Kyle Barnes. This prelude was “a sonificaton of data for voice, electronics and video.” Images played on the huge back wall, which often serves as a screen in this special venue. Gentle scales crested and fell, warming us up for an introduction by Elena Park, a curator of National Sawdust +.

  • Grand Horizons by Bess Wohl

    Superb Cast Burdened with Pedestrian Family Drama

    By: Karen Isaacs - Feb 25th, 2020

    What sets this apart are the fine performances. Any chance you get to see Jane Alexander on stage is one to take advantage of and treasure. Her Nancy exudes both steeliness and calmness.

  • Ivan Fischer and Budapest Festival Orchestra

    Great Performers' Mahler at Lincoln Center

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 25th, 2020

    There is no doubt that Gustav Mahler paired the Kindertotenlieder, symphonic poems of Friedrich Rückert and his Symphony No. 5. Seldom are they programmed together. We were given an extraordinary performance of both works in David Geffen Hall. Iván Fischer conducted the Budapest Festival Orchestra.

  • Skylight in South Florida

    Popular David Hare Play at Palm Beach Dramaworks

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 25th, 2020

    Palm Beach Dramaworks' production of David Hare's Skylight features terrific performances. Tension emanates from the stage as the character spar on stage. The production continues through March 1.

  • Magic and Stillness

    Preparing for a Pandemic

    By: Michael McGrath - Feb 27th, 2020

    Between the news and my daily contact with friends in China, the coronavirus is a daily presence in my awareness. I returned from China just shortly before the first cases in Wuhan. My temple is in Hubei Province, and Wuhan is the province's capital city, only about 500 km from the temple. CDC officials tell us it is not a question of if, it is a question of when the virus will spread across the country, notwithstanding the President's assurances last night. My friends all over China have been inside their homes since the first of the month, and will remain there for several weeks to come, it would seem. That may be us someday, too.

  • The Pajama Game a Perennial Favorite

    At California's Palm Canyon Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Feb 28th, 2020

    “The Pajama Game” opened last weekend in Palm Springs. The musical debuted in 1954 on Broadway, as the Korean War was declared over, and pajamas back then was still considered the choice of men’s sleep-ware. Enduring standards of the vintage musical include “Hey There,” “Steam Heat,” and “Hernando’s Hideaway.”

  • Drew Hyde Was Seminal ICA Director

    Led Institute Back from the Brink

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 29th, 2020

    In 1968 the Institute of Contemporary Art was evicted from Newbury Street. Bag and baggage it was mothballed in its failed former home on Soldier's Field Road. Connected to new Mayor Kevin White and Deputy Mayor, Katky Kane, they gave Andrew C. Hyde a long shot at turning things around. The relaunch largely entailed embracing an emerging generation of artists which formed the Studio Coalition in 1969 and Boston Visual Artists Union in 1970.

  • Verdi's Il Trovatore

    At Opera San José

    By: Victor Cordell - Mar 01st, 2020

    The great Enrico Caruso once noted that all you need to make Il Trovatore a success is to cast the four greatest singers in the world. Although the production reveals a couple of minor glitches, the overall effect is so scintillating that the flaws are not worth discussing.

  • Hedda Gabler: A Play with Live Music

    World Premiere at Chicago's Raven Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Mar 01st, 2020

    The Tuta Theatre world premiere production of Hedda Gabler: A Play With Live Music is adapted and directed by Jacqueline Stone. The play is set in the early 1890s in Kristiania, now Oslo. The original modern and sometimes punklike music is composed by Wain Parham and played by a three-piece band, led by Parham on keys.

  • Film: The 70th Berlinale 2020

    From February 20 - March 1

    By: Angelika Jansen - Mar 04th, 2020

    The 70th Berlinale, the huge international film festival in Berlin took place between February 20th and March 1st, 2020. Great expectations were put upon the new festival leaders, Carlo Chatrian (artistic director) and Mariette Rissenbeek (executive director).

  • The Confession of Lily Dare Off Broadway

    By Renowned Gender Bender Charles Busch

    By: Edward Rubin - Mar 07th, 2020

    In or out of drag, whether on stage or page, the 65-year-old actor playwright Charles Busch, with some forty years of show business under his belt, is a force to be reckoned with.

  • Jane Eyre at Hartford Stage

    Written and Directed by Elizabeth Williamson

    By: Karen Isaacs - Mar 07th, 2020

    Jane Eyre, just like Elizabeth Bennett in Jane Austin’s Pride & Prejudice, understands society’s preconceived notions about a woman’s role and a woman’s manner, and rejects them wholeheartedly.

  • Don’t Eat the Mangos is a Wonderful Play

    At Magic Theatre in San Francisco

    By: Victor Cordell - Mar 07th, 2020

    In Don’t Eat the Mangos, by Ricardo Pérez González, three adult Puerto Rican sisters remain close despite fractious relationships and the different directions their lives have taken. The action centers on clashes that siblings commonly confront in dealing with dying parents and their property. So it is that the sisters argue about how the dirty work of responsibilities are shared.

  • Dai Fujikura Featured at Miller Theatre

    International Contemporary Ensemble Delves into Fujikura's Music

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 06th, 2020

    Dai Fujikura lives in the quotidian and draws from it for the music he creates. We hear a portrait of his daughter in the first month of her life, a secret forest where all the sounds are beautiful, and memories of high school friends who were all wannabe guitarists.

  • The Chelsea Symphony Celebrates Women

    Sojourner Truth, two Horn Players, Mazzoli, Frank and Tower

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 10th, 2020

    This evening, part of the Rise Up Year devoted to music that inspires and uplifts, two gentleman, a bass player and a violist, composed pieces celebrating women. Women composers, Missy Mazzoli, Gabriela Lena Frank and Joan Tower were performed with gusto.

  • Mean Girls

    Tina Fey Comedy's National Equity Tour

    By: Aaron Krause - Mar 11th, 2020

    An energetic national equity touring production of Mean Girls is playing in Ft. Lauderdale through March 15. Fires rage across the stage as Regina George bulldozes over the meek. The production features strong work from the cast to the technical folks. Mean Girls the Musical is based on the 2004 film of the same name, both written by Tina Fey of Saturday Night Live.

  • Network for New Music in Philadelphia

    Musical Ecologies at a Hidden Lake

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 12th, 2020

    On a recent Sunday afternoon, Network for New Music (NNM), an adventuresome Philadelphia group, gathered at The Discovery Center at the Hidden Reservoir in Fairmont Park.. The long pathway to the building’s main entrance leads visitors to a striking view of the center’s reservoir, a pristine, 37-acre body of water that was closed to the public for nearly 50 years. The Center provided a concert hall for music related to ecology.

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