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  • WOW at Carnegie Hall

    Youth Orchestras from Around the World

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 10th, 2024

    The series of WOW (World Orchestra Week) concerts at Carnegie opened with Teddy Abrams, maestro of the Louisville Orchestra and winner of Musical America’s 2022 Conductor of the Year award. He conducted the NYO2 Orchestra. 

  • The Master and Margarita at the 86th Street Theater

    Moscow Ambience Is Wonderful

    By: Viktor Raykin - Aug 10th, 2024

    Alexei Burago has directed Mikhail Bulgakov's Master and Margarita at Theatre 86 in New York. Jean Claude Van Italie did this stage adaptation, which follows the novel closely.

  • A Shonda in South Florida

    World Premiere at The Foundry

    By: Aaron Krause - Aug 10th, 2024

    The world premiere production of a musical adaptation of Wendy Graf's play "A Shonda" is underway in South Florida The winning production runs through Sept. 1 at The Foundry in Wilton Manors, near Ft. Lauderdale. This is a visceral production in the intimate Foundry space.

  • Derecho at the La Jolla PLayhouse

    Timely Take on Identity

    By: Sharon Eubanks - Aug 10th, 2024

    Derecho is the latest work mounted by the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego. A derecho is a widespread, long-lived wind storm associated with a band of rapidly moving showers or thunderstorms.  The play, Derecho, follows two second-generation Latina half-sisters Eugenia and Mercedes, played by Ashley Alvarez and Caro Guzman, respectively.  

  • Pipe Dream at Unicorn Theatre

    Rarely Produced Rodgers and Hammerstein Musical

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 08th, 2024

    Pipe Dream is an obscure, rarely produced musical by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II based on novels by John Steinbeck. Berkshire Theatre Group is making a strong and risky case for why we should take another look at a musical with a flawed book but richly compelling music.

  • Camille A. Brown at Jacob's Pillow

    World Premiere of I Am

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 07th, 2024

    Superstar dancer, choreographer, and Tony nominated director, Camille A. Brown, has a long history with Jacob’s Pillow. Funded by the Hunter Foundation this past winter the company was in residence developing a major new work. It is based on themes from the “I Am” episode of the HBO series Lovecraft Country. Jacob's Pillow was honored to host the world premiere of a game changing work.

  • The Prom

    At Sharon Playhouse

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 08th, 2024

    The Prom is not a great musical, but it is an entertaining show that goes way above what is sometimes created.

  • Legend of the Ring

    West Edge Opera Produces Wagner's Condensed Ring Cycle for a Third Time

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 06th, 2024

    In four operas and over 15 hours of running time, Richard Wagner's epic Ring Cycle spins historic Germanic legends embellished by the composer's own fancy. David Seaman edited the compendium into a 3 1/2hour condensation. The flavor of Wagner's rich romantic music is retained, but while the general plotline is honored, it is jumpy and loses some continuity. Nonetheless, this piece gives a strong flavor of the highly respected yet controversial body of work.

  • Vessels of Slavery: Forget Me Not

    Cape Ann Museum Green

    By: CAM - Aug 08th, 2024

    The artists were brought together by the work of Doris Prouty, an African American quilter who made Gloucester her home for nearly 50 years, when her work was exhibited posthumously at the Cape Ann Museum in 2022.  

  • N/A by Mario Correa at Mitzi Newhouse Theater

    Past, Present and Future of US poitics

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 07th, 2024

    Mario Correa’s play N/A is thoroughly entertaining. The two-hander is at the Mitzi Newhouse in New York through September 1.  Holland Taylor and Ana Villafane star. Diane Paulus directs.

  • Mark St Germain Explores Forgiveness

    World Premiere for Barrington Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 04th, 2024

    Inspired by a newspaper article, Forgiveness is set in Minnesota where prisoners are allowed to plead their case in front of the Governor, in a bid to be returned to society. In this interactive production, audiences help determine who is worthy of forgiveness.

  • Bulrusher - The Opera

    World Premiere Pulitzer Finalist Play by West Edge Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 05th, 2024

    A black female foundling with a gift for telepathy is becoming a woman. Her world of isolation in a white, northern California town is pierced by the arrival of another young black woman from Alabama. Multiple conflicts ensue among the diverse characters. The lush music appeals and performances are first rate.

  • Cape Ann Museum Makeover

    Over $18 million in Campaign Commitments

    By: CAM - Aug 05th, 2024

    Building on the generous support of the Museum’s Board, donors, and supporters amid growing momentum for general Museum operations, Director Oliver Barker and Henrietta Gates, Board Chair, announced that the institution has generated over $18 million in campaign commitments. This significant support will fund renovations to its Downtown facility, provide upgrades to the CAM Green campus, enhance programming, and augment the Museum’s endowment.

  • The Islanders by Carey Crim

    World Premiere at Shakespeare & Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 01st, 2024

    Carey Crim has written a slow, intricate two-hander that takes patience to absorb us into the incremental pace of the Island. Director Reggie Life and a superb cast (Michelle Mountain and "ranney") have meticulously involved us in their struggle for meaning and endurance.

  • Roderick George with the Jacob’s Pillow Men Dancers Award

    In Memory of Ted Shawn

    By: Pillow - Aug 02nd, 2024

    Jacob’s Pillow  presents American dancer and choreographer Roderick George with the Jacob’s Pillow Men Dancers Award. George will accept the award at the outdoor performance by his New York City-based company, kNonAme Artist.

  • Norton Gallery in Palm Beach

    One of America's Top Regional Museums

    By: Charles GiulianoC - Jul 30th, 2024

    The Norton Gallery has been enlarged with a design by Lord Norman Foster. The collection has grown to 8,200 works with five curatorial departments. It took us two days to tour the collection and special exhibitions. The must see Norton is an elite regional museum. It's come a long way from when I visited annually during the 1980s.

  • The Hunchback of Notre Dame

    Victor Hugo's Masterpiece Works Well as a Stage Musical

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 29th, 2024

    The deformed hunchback Quasimodo has suffered a life of abuse and isolation as the cathedral bell ringer. When he has the chance to interact with other people, he endures scorn from many, but the beautiful Roma girl Esméralda is kind. Quasimodo's cruel guardian Frollo, the Deacon of the Cathedral, who despises the Roma but is smitten by Esméralda, intercedes with unhappy consequences.

  • The Prom

    At Playhouse on Park

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jul 30th, 2024

    The Prom is worthwhile seeing because of the fine performances and choreography.

  • Pamela Palmer by David Ives

    World Premiere at Williamstown Theatre Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 27th, 2024

    The highlight of a scaled back Williamstowm Theatre Festival season was the world premiere Pamela Palmer by the renowned playwright David Ives. With a noir approach he would have us accept the improbable. His tale of class struggle is set in the mansion of the unhappy housewife who has hired a detective.

  • Dance Theatre of Harlem

    To Return to Jacob's Pillow

    By: Pllow - Jul 29th, 2024

    In their first appearance at Jacob’s Pillow since 2019, Dance Theatre of Harlem is celebrating their 55th Anniversary, as well as the 90th birthday of their legendary founder Arthur Mitchell (1934-2018).

  • Boeing Boeing at Barrington Stage

    Comedy Takes Flight

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 25th, 2024

    Now retired Julianne Boyd returns to Barrington Stage Company to direct the comedy/ farce Boeing Boeing. She has selected a dream team of BSC frequent flyers, Christopher Innvar as the  scheming bachelor, Bernard, the nubile Mark H. Dold a visiting long lost friend Robert, and Debra Jo Rupp, a comedic national treasure as Bernard’s maid, Berthe.

  • The Great American Mousical

    The Legacy Theatre

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jul 24th, 2024

    The plot is simple; a Broadway theater is about to be demolished while in the basement, a company of mice rehearses their own “musical.”

  • A Streetcar Named Desire

    New City Players near Ft. Lauderdale

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 23rd, 2024

    New City Players' current professional production of "A Streetcar Named Desire" sizzles. The production runs through Aug. 4 in Island City Stage's blackbox theater. The company uses space and budget limitations to the production's advantage.

  • Film at Lincoln Center Presents Mexican Films

    A Spectacle Every Day

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 21st, 2024

    Film at Lincoln Center and the Locarno Film Festival present “Spectacle Every Day: Mexican Popular Cinema,” a retrospective of Mexican cinema from the 1940s through the 1960s, to be from July 26 through August 8. With new restorations of many works rarely screened or some never before seen theatrically in the United States, and standout performances from the biggest stars.

  • The Best of The Second City

    Residency at Berkeley Rep for Storied Improv Troupe

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 19th, 2024

    The vaunted Chicago-based troupe performs sketches, quick-hitters, and enough improvisation to display their fast reaction chops. Old skits are updated, and enough local references are integrated for the production to feel home grown. The cast of six operates black-box fashion, effectively and entertainingly employing mime to represent invisible props.

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