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  • Debra Jo Rupp Romps in The Cake

    Geffen Playhouse Bakes Hilarous Comedy

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 25th, 2018

    The Barrington Stage Company production of The Cake has gone West young man to LA's Geffen Playhouse. Now another coast shares the delicious comedy of Debra Jo Rupp. This is a run don't walk production.

  • Bess Wohl’s Make Believe

    World Premiere at Hartford Stage

    By: Karen Isaacs - Sep 25th, 2018

    Make Believe has potential but it isn’t ready for prime time. When people start taking peeks at their watches during a 90 minute play, it’s a clear sign that something isn’t working.

  • Shaw's Arms and the Man

    Chicago's City Lit Theater

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 26th, 2018

    City Lit Theater’s new production of George Bernard Shaw’s 1894 play, Arms and the Man, takes full advantage of its broad humor. Perhaps Shaw’s most frothy script, director Brian Pastor directs it with panache, although he sometimes lets his cast drift into silliness.

  • The Agitators at Gloucester Stage

    Remarkable Friends Frederick Douglass and Susan B. Anthony

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 26th, 2018

    Beyond their names most folks don't know much about abolitionist, Frederick Douglass, and women's suffrage leader, Susan B. Anthony. The remarkable play, The Agitators, by Mat Smart, offers more than a history lesson at Gloucester Stage. It has been given a compact and powerful production sharply directed by Jacqui Parker.

  • A Classic Play by Ntozake Shange

    African-American Shakespeare Company

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 27th, 2018

    Ntozake Shange’s for colored girls who have considered suicide when the rainbow is enuf is a work of great moment that gave black women a platform, in some ways a pedestal, from which to denounce their double indignity of racial and gender discrimination and announce their worth and beauty.

  • Miller Theater Premiers Missy Mazzoli

    Proving Up Arrives in New York

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 27th, 2018

    Aware that all art forms now compete with Netflix, composer Missy Mazzoli and librettist Royce Vavrek seek out stories for their musical theater that will attract audiences. Mazzoli, a masterful young composer, can go very dark in tales because her music, in its blocks of beauty no matter what the subject, is compelling and evocative.

  • Paula Vogel’s compelling Indecent,

    At Victory Gardens Theater.

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 01st, 2018

    Indecent blends time-jumping scenes with an occasional dance routine and klezmer-flavored music. It’s a fine example of a dramatic play with music. The story and its characters are paramount and the music provides a lyrical underpinning. It’s an epic story told on a very personal level.

  • Conrad Tao and Bruckner at NY Philharmonic

    Shock and Awe Under Jaap Van Zweden

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 30th, 2018

    Conrad Tao’s world premier composition Everything Must Go was performed by the New York Philharmonic and followed without a breath by Anton Bruckner’s powerful Eighth Symphony.

  • The Revolutionists by Lauren Gunderson

    At Town Hall Theatre Company

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 03rd, 2018

    For the greater part, history has been made by and written by men. Like Olympe, Lauren Gunderson hopes to rectify gender imbalances in some small measure by sharing the stories of four women who impacted and were victims of the French Revolution

  • Linda Leslie Brown's Plastiglormate

    At Boston's Kingston Gallery

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 03rd, 2018

    Just when you think you have a handle on the work of Linda Leslie Brown she does something different. As always there is a fresh sense of adventure to Plastiglomorate an exhibition of sculpture at Boston's Kingston Gallery.

  • Mendoza at Goodman Theatre

    Macbeth by Los Colochos Teatro of Mexico City

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 05th, 2018

    Mendoza, a thrillingly raw and earthy adaptation of Shakespeare’s Macbeth, is being presented this week at Goodman Theatre in collaboration with the Chicago Latino Theater Alliance.

  • Downstate at Steppenwolf Theatre.

    Bruce Norris’ Uproarious, Heartbreaking, World Premiere

    By: Matthew Nerber - Oct 05th, 2018

    This is a group of detestable, rotten apples, but each of these men is also, in his own way, disarming and hilarious, with quirks and charms that make us forget why they are in this make-shift homestead wearing ankle bracelets; until we’re reminded, and once again infuriated by the hypocrisy. This is a world premiere by Bruce Norris.

  • Pat Metheny at Beverly’s Cabot Theatre

    Touring with a New Group of Emerging Musicians

    By: Doug Hall - Oct 06th, 2018

    Now at mid career, with 20 Grammy Awards, Pat Metheny launched a tour at the Cabot Theatre in Beverly, Massachusetts. While performing material from those now classic albums he did so with emerging musicians. He derived fresh energy and inspiration from Gwilym Simcock on piano/keyboards, Linda Oh on bass, and Antonio Sanchez on drums. Yet again his guitar virtuosity sparked a phenomenal performance.

  • Oslo by J.T. Rogers

    produced by Marin Theatre Company

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 06th, 2018

    One complaint about Oslo that may be heard is that we already know its outcome. Twenty-five years beyond, notable progress has been made, but the condition between Israelis and Palestinians remains sad and unresolved.

  • Zürich by Amelia Roper

    At Chicago's Steep Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 07th, 2018

    Zürich is played by 10 actors—two each in five scenes—set in a luxury hotel room or rooms in that Swiss banking city. The play begins in a seemingly lighthearted way, with a man and a woman who have spent the night together in a room on the 40th floor of a Zürich hotel.

  • Glass Menagerie at Barrington Stage Company

    Dehorning the Unicorn

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 08th, 2018

    The final fall production of Barrington Stage Company for a number of years had been coordinated with the reginal school curriculum. It has been the norm to explore an agenda with social justice theatre. This time, however, Barrington has opted to focus on ars gratia artis. Teachers as their lesson plan will discuss a harrowing masterpiece of American theatre, The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams.

  • Hancock Shaker Village Newest Shaker, Paul Muldoon

    The Pulitzer Prize Winning Poet Wrote And Performed A Shaker Poem

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Oct 08th, 2018

    Paul Muldoon, a 67 year old New Yorker, originally from Northern Ireland, recited his poetry while the band, Rogue Olifant, played accompanying music. The evening at Hancock Shaker Village emulated a 1960s scene from my past.

  • Montserrat Caballé, La Superba

    Star Soprano of the 20th Century

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Oct 07th, 2018

    One would argue that in opera singers of a vanished age, it was the voice and only the voice that mattered. These words would be fitting as a eulogy for Montserrat Caballé. The soprano, who passed away at the age of 85, possessed one of the largest and most flexible instruments of her age, succeeding in everything from Rossini to dramatic operas by Puccini and Strauss.

  • Man of La Mancha

    At Westport Country Playhouse

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 09th, 2018

    A successful production requires an excellent Cervantes/Don Quixote and Phillip Hernandez meets the challenge. His voice is expressive and powerful, he bring a sense of age to the part, and his acting totally encompasses the character.

  • Summary of 86th Jacobs Pillow Season

    $2.5 Million in Ticket Sales for 500 Performances and Events

    By: Pillow - Oct 09th, 2018

    One month after the close of its 86th season, Jacob’s Pillow announces record-breaking ticket sales for its acclaimed summer dance festival. The organization reports over $2.5 million in ticket sales, an increase of 13% when compared with 2017; over 40,000 tickets were sold, an increase of 5%, when compared with last year. The season boasts 10,000 unique ticket buyers, an increase of 8% and the largest number since the organization began tracking this particular indicator in 2005.

  • Eclipse Annual Exhibition and Open Studios

    Work by North Adams Artists

    By: Eclipse - Oct 10th, 2018

    The Eclipse Annual Exhibition features work by residents of the North Adams, studio/loft residence complex. The reception from 6 to 8 PM, Friday, October 12 launches the annual Open Studios that weekend. The popular event provides the opportunity to interact with artists in the setting where their work is created. In addition to studios work by resident artists is displayed in corridors of the four floor complex that houses 40 units.

  • Girl of the Golden West at Metropolitan Opera

    Blazing Saddles

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Oct 10th, 2018

    The Girl of the Golden West returned to the Met this month with a good cast. On Monday night, a performance featuring tenor Yusif Eyvazov and soprano Eva-Maria Westbroek provided a much needed shot of red blood to an anemic fall season.

  • 154 Years of Serendipity at Gallery Kayafas

    Roger Kizik and Clara Wainwright

    By: John Walsh - Oct 12th, 2018

    With 154 Years of Serendipity the artists Roger Kizik and Clara Wainwright celebrate their creaitive friendship with an exhibition at Kayafas Gallery in Boston's SOWA district. John Walsh, Director Emeritus of the J. Paul Getty writes about the pairing of Wainwright & Kizik.

  • Berkshire Theatre Critics Association

    Third Annual Berkshire Theatre Awards

    By: Gail M. Burns - Oct 15th, 2018

    This week the Berkshire Theatre Critics Association is voting on the final award list in preparation for the Third Annual Berkshire Theatre Awards. Winners will be announced at the awards ceremony to be held on Monday, November 12 at 7 pm at the Zion Lutheran Church, 74 First Street (Route 7) in Pittsfield, MA. --

  • Arendt/Heidegger by Douglass Lackey

    A Love Story in Ideas at Theater for the New CIty

    By: Rachel de Aragon - Oct 15th, 2018

    Arendt/Heidegger is a love story which has happened countless times, and yet his betrayal of his beloved mirrors the profundity of the Heidegger's political, spiritual and intellectual betrayals. It is a most extraordinary love story. The realities of the times are ever present in the lives.

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