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  • Williamstown Theatre Festival Upgrades

    Jayne Atkinson Cast and Heather Raffo Gets Weissberger New Play Award

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 15th, 2017

    Two-time Tony Award-nominee Jayne Atkinson and Cote de Pablo will appear in Sarah Ruhl’s The Clean House; Tony Award-nominee Micah Stock will appear in Jason Kim’s The Model American and Halley Feiffer’s Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow; Christopher Livingston, LeRoy McClain and Joniece Abbott-Pratt will perform in Harrison David Rivers’ Where Storms are Born; and Rebecca Henderson will perform in Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow.

  • Corneille’s L’IIlusion Comique

    Adapted by Tony Kushner for North Coast Rep

    By: Jack Lyons - Mar 13th, 2017

    In the current North Coast Repertory Theatre production Tony Kushner translates and adapts 17th century French playwright Pierre Corneille’s “L’IIlusion Comique” into a delicious and superbly acted French soufflé of a comedy/farce called “The Illusion”.

  • New York Philharmonic Performs John Adams

    Happy Birthday to Tunes of Absolute Jest

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 12th, 2017

    John Adams has close ties to the New York Philharmonic. He was in David Gefffen Hall to hear two works performed. In Absolute Jest a quartet formed by the principal performers of the Philharmonic was embedded, an alien force in their own home.

  • The Book Club by Karen Zacarias

    Comic Farce A Good Read at Hubbard Hall

    By: A. Jones - Mar 12th, 2017

    Kirk Jackson has succinctly directed a production of The Book Club by Karen Zacarias.

  • Emperor Jones at Irish Repertory Theatre

    Obi Abili Takes the Crown

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 12th, 2017

    The Irish Repertory Theatre knows how to produce terrific plays with stunning actors and telling sets, costumes and lights. The Emperor Jones returns with a new Brutus Jones, Obi Abili. It is a smashing success.

  • Artists As Pinball Wizards

    Exhibition at the Elmhurst Museum

    By: Nancy Bishop - Mar 11th, 2017

    Kings & Queens: Pinball, Imagists and Chicago sets 16 working vintage pinball machines in several galleries with about 30 pieces of art by the pioneers of 1960s and ‘70s Chicago Imagists: Ed Paschke, Karl Wirsum, Suellen Rocca, Ed Flood, Jim Nutt, Gladys Nilsson, Christine Ramberg, Roger Brown and Ray Yoshida. The connection, of course, is that the artists were influenced in childhood and adolescence by the art of pinball machines and comic books.

  • Remembering Critic Larry Murray

    Founded Berkshire Theatre Awards

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 11th, 2017

    After a long illness, on March 10, the widely respected publisher and editor of Berkshire on Stage and Screen, Lawrence “Larry” Murray, passed away. He organized the Berkshire Theatre Critics Association. Last November he rallied to attend the First Annual Bertkshire Theatre Awards. He presented the top award, named for him, to Jullian Boyd of Barrington Stage for community service through theatre.

  • Fiddler on the Roof Lyricist Sheldon Harnick

    West Palm Beach Dramaworks Speakers Series

    By: Aaron Krause - Mar 11th, 2017

    West Palm Beach Dramaworks Speakers Series featured the 92-year-old lyricist of Fiddler on the Roof, Sheldon Harnick.

  • Cafe Sabarsky at the Neue Gallery

    Out of this World Cabaret

    By: Susan Halll - Mar 10th, 2017

    Serge Sabarsky was co-founded of the Neue Gallery, one of the most learned and charming places in New York. Cafe Sabarsky offers an Austrian menu. Often you can find cabaraet Artists like Rachelle Garniez performing.

  • Barrington Adds Bye Bye Birdie

    Updates to Pittsfield Schedule

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 10th, 2017

    Barrington Stage Company adds a reading of the musical Butterflies, Speech & Debate on the St. Germain Stage, and its annual youth production, Bye Bye Birdie, at the Pittsfield Museum.

  • A Few Good Men at St. Joseph Players

    Stone's Throw from Yucca Valley Marine Base

    By: Jack Lyons - Mar 09th, 2017

    Rebecca Havely has selected the powerful military courtroom drama “A Few Good Men”, written by Academy and Emmy Award-winning screenwriter and playwright Aaron Sorkin as her directing choice for 2017. St. Joseph's Players in Yucca Valley, California, is only a stone’s throw away from one of largest Marine bases in the country.

  • Huntington Theatre Company 2017-2018

    Extensive Upgrade of Site and Services

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 08th, 2017

    The 36th season will include four plays at the Huntington Avenue Theatre, as well as three plays at the Wimberly Theatre and one special event in the Roberts Studio Theatre, both located in the Calderwood Pavilion at the BCA in the South End.

  • The Philadelphia Orchestra at Carnegie Hall

    Yannick Nezet-Seguin, Masterful Storyteller

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 07th, 2017

    Love battles evil in Swan Lake and Bluebeard's Castle. Yannick Nezet-Seguin, who comes to the Metropolitan Opera in 2021, is a masterful story teller, forging drama and complex pictures in the performance.of The Philadelphia Orchestra.

  • ICA To Lease Expanded Space

    Two if by Sea in East Boston

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 07th, 2017

    When the Institute of Contemporary Art opened its waterfront home there were awards for the dramatic design by Diller Scofido and Renfro. Immediately, however, it was obvious that with 65,000 square feet, and just its top floor for exhibitions, there was no plan for expansion and growth. For the next five to ten years the ICA is leasing a 15,000 square foot industrial place in East Boston. Visitors will commute by ferry to the seasonal Watershed which opens in the summer of 2018.

  • Iowa's Field of Dreams

    If Your Build It They Will Come

    By: Susan Cohn - Mar 06th, 2017

    The Ghost Players who emerge from the cornfield in the movie are re-enacted at the movie site by local residents in period White Sox uniforms.

  • Anything Goes at Ft. Myers Dinner Theater

    Refreshing, Energetic Rendition of a Cole Porter Classic

    By: Aaron Krause - Mar 06th, 2017

    Cast shines in vibrant production of "Anything Goes" at Ft. Myers Dinner Theater through April 1. It is a tasty evening of theatre in every sense.

  • St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra at Carnegie

    Ambivalence of Shostakovich Apology Beautiful to Hear

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 05th, 2017

    Who can play Shostakovich better than a Russian? Shostakovich’s Fifth symphony has come down to us as an apology to Stalin during a time of heightened scrutiny not only of artists but of everyone under him. Now it is thought to be a protest against Stalinist terror. Whatever its messages, and messages from Russians continue to be unclear, the music is beautiful, a classical symphony brought forward into the 20th century.

  • Figaretto Is the Only Gravity-Fed Valpolicella

    Mauro Bustaggi Knows Winemaking

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Mar 05th, 2017

    Great wines from the Valpolicella wine region begin with winemaker Mauro Bustaggi and his great gravity-fed winemaking skills.

  • O'Neill's Long Day’s Journey into Night

    Compelling at Geffen Playhouse

    By: Jack Lyons - Mar 04th, 2017

    Geffen’s Artistic Director Randall Arney, took on the challenge of producing O’Neill’s masterpiece. Staged by acclaimed director Jeanie Hackett, this revival of “Long Day’s Journey into Night” features gifted actors: the superb Alfred Molina as James Tyrone , the brilliant Jane Kaczmarek as morphine addicted Mary Tyrone, Stephen Louis Grush as the star-crossed and fated Jamie Tyrone, and Colin Woodell as young Edmund Tyrone (the alter-ego of Eugene O’Neill), a poet/writer battling tuberculosis and alcoholism.

  • Crackskull Row at the Irish Repertory Theatre

    All Family Blood Is the Same

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 04th, 2017

    Crackskull Row is an eighty-minute tone poem composed in the lilting Irish language. It is a quartet, the characters: a women, a man, their son and an angel, who is perhaps an aborted fetus of a girl who comes to life. She arrives on the tiny set, a perfect stage for this intimate yet profoundly resonating drama, by sliding down the chimney. She lands on a blood stain which sends a son to jail for 33 years and also on the spot where the fetus was deposited.

  • Annual Steinberg Awards Finalists

    Juried by American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA)

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 04th, 2017

    The American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA) has selected six finalists for the Harold and Mimi Steinberg/American Theatre Critics Association New Play Award, recognizing playwrights for the best scripts that premiered professionally outside New York City during 2016.

  • Glenn Close Ignites Sunset Boulvard

    Ready For Her Closeup on Broadway

    By: Edward Rubin - Mar 04th, 2017

    Glenn Close is the magnet that is filling the house – the musical has already been extended a month – and everything, from her glittering silver and gold lame wardrobe (Anthony Powell), makeup (Charlotte Hayward), wigs (Andrew Simonin), the set (James Noone), and even the other actors in the play who mostly fade into the background when Close is on stage, play second fiddle to her electrifying presence which at times threatens to ignite the theater.

  • Andris Nelsons Collaborates with BSO

    Beautiful Tone, Dynamic Range and Story Telling

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 03rd, 2017

    When Andris Nelsons stepped on to the Carnegie Hall stage as the last minute substitute for James Levine, we did not know that the event would be as momentous as Leonard Bernstein's last minute substitution for an aiiling Bruno Walter. Who knows how these seminal moments will be ranked in musical history. So much lies before the the young conductor. Performance after performance Nelsons and his musician collaborators from the Boston Symphony exceed themselves.

  • To Kill a Mockingbird in Ft. Myers

    Adaptation of Harper Lee's Classic is Broadway Bound

    By: Aaron Krause - Mar 03rd, 2017

    "To Kill a Mockingbird" forces audiences to examine their prejudices. bcast mostly excels in production of Harper Lee classic at Florida Repertory Theatre.

  • Rockefeller Offers Hamilton Matinees

    Title 1 School Children See the Best Show in Town

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 02nd, 2017

    Alexander Hamilton may have created the financial system that made building John D. Rockefeller's fortune possible. Now Rockefeller money is being used to fund tickets for Title 1 school children to attend the hottest show in town, "Hamilton."

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