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  • Bill Riley at Real Eyes Gallery in Adams

    Interrupted Landscapes

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 18th, 2019

    Bill Riley wears a number of hats. He is showing this month at Real Eyes the top notch gallery he runs in Adams. Mass, Now retired his day gig for many years was as a scene painter for the Metrpolitan Opera. Recently he has been free lancing for the hit Amazon comedy series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. He has the skill set to be a master forger to create works and sets in any medium or style. Many of these technical skills are applied to the works in the exhibition Interrupted Landscapes.

  • Jenufa by Leoš Janácek

    Produced by Santa Fe Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 19th, 2019

    With the exception of a little light relief in the wedding preparation, Jenufa is tense and emotionally charged from beginning to end. Janácek endows his lead characters with complexity and with demanding vocals. In keeping with the tone of the action, much of the vocalization is harsh, yet particularly in the orchestra, appealing passages emerge. Overall, the score fulfills many demands with great success.

  • The Pearl Fishers at Santa Fe Opera

    Georges Bizet with Libretto by Eugène Carmon and Michel Carré

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 20th, 2019

    Many operas have suffered a rocky road to recognition and appreciation, The Pearl Fishers, among them. Yet when one considers its virtues, it is hard to understand why. Santa Fe Opera presented a rare and much appreciated production.

  • Shakepeare's Macbeth

    A Production by Ft. Lauderdale's New City Players

    By: Aaron Krause - Aug 19th, 2019

    New City Players' dark and creepy Macbeth taps into the zeitgeist. This production in South Florida isn't perfect, but features admirable acting and vivid, foreboding sound effects. Ft. Lauderdale-based company's mounting runs through Sept. 1 in that city's downtown. For the most part, darkness shrouds the extremely intimate playing space, which offers a visceral theatrical experience.

  • All Quiet on the Western Front in Chicago

    At the Red Tape Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Aug 20th, 2019

    The Erich Maria Remarque novel All Quiet on the Western Front is a literary masterpiece. Perhaps yuu have read it or seen the classic 1930 film. One likely comes to this stunning stage production with many preconceptions. This galvanic production at Red Tape Theatre more than adequately meets out expectations.

  • The Thirteenth Child at Opera Santa Fe

    By Poul Ruders with Libretto by Becky and David Starobin

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 21st, 2019

    In an age of sweeping movement toward gender equity, Danish composer Poul Ruders has surprisingly drawn on a Grimm fairytale as a source for female heroics and female enabling. The result is a fable for adults – a taut and riveting opera, yet one that begs for more. Santa Fe Opera’s world premiere of The Thirteenth Child offers stunning production values that enhance the score and yield an engaging musical drama.

  • Ladies Night at Dell'Arte Opera Ensemble

    Bond, Musgrave and Viardot Intrigue and Engage

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 22nd, 2019

    Dell’Arte Opera Ensemble, always venturesome, presented an evening in which three female composers were featured Franz Liszt had said that in Pauline Viardot the world had finally found a woman composer of genius. Her short opera Cendrillon was performed in full.

  • Gladys Knight and The Spinners

    Soulful Nostalgia at Tanglewood

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 29th, 2019

    It was a soulful night of nostalgia at Tanglewood. The Spinners went on at 7 and cooked. We needed the heat on a cool wet night. In ever sense they warmed up the audience for Gladys Knight. There was a long intermission before she went on at ten of nine and by 10:25 after some 20 songs we made our way home.

  • Little Shop of Horrors at Lyric Stage

    Plant Makes Lunch Meat of Actors

    By: Matt Robinson - Aug 30th, 2019

    Where can you see the story of a barely-sentient being that promises everyone whatever they want but ends up eating them alive? No! Not on the nightly news- It’s The Lyric Stage Company of Boston’s revival of “Little Shop of Horrors” which is being staged through October 6 at 140 Clarendon Street in Boston’s Back Bay.

  • Die Fledermaus by Johann Strauss

    Produced by Opera San Jose

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 17th, 2019

    The intersection of the world of grand opera and musical confection rarely occurs. An exception to that rule would be Johann Strauss’s operetta Die Fledermaus. Maestro Michael Morgan maintains brisk pace throughout the musical sections, resulting in a spirited rendering of the score.

  • Harold Pinter's Betrayal

    Director Jamie Lloyd's Broadway Revival

    By: Karen Isaacs - Sep 23rd, 2019

    Pinter tells this story with a twist – the play begins two years after the affair has ended, and ends as the affair is beginning.

  • Clara Schuman 200 Years Young

    Works by Women Composers Featured at National Sawdust

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 29th, 2019

    Constellation by Emma O'Halloran was inspired by images of hands in the first cave drawings. Turns out that most of these were women's hands, and they looked like constellations, which was O'Halloran's jumping off point. Naomi Louisa O'Connell drew their pictures in riveting song.

  • Wittengenstein and Russell Revealed

    Douglas Lackey Play at Theater for the New City

    By: Rachel de Aragon - Oct 01st, 2019

    Lackey is a master at bringing philosophy out of the dusty corners of academia and putting them on a very passion filled center stage. As with his previous works produced at Theater for a New City Daylight Precision (2014) and Arendt/ Heidegger; a love story (2018) Ludwig and Bertie is a victory for smart theater.

  • Falling In South Florida

    New City Players Presents Deanna Jent's Dramady

    By: Aaron Krause - Oct 21st, 2019

    Falling is a touching, honest look at a family caring for an autistic young man. New City Players' production presents a master class is naturalistic acting. The production runs through Sunday.

  • Wondrous Oscar Wao at Repertorio Espanol

    Written and Directed by Marco Antonio Rodriquez

    By: Rachel de Aragon - Oct 23rd, 2019

    Repertorio Espanol Presents The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao based on the novel by Junot Diaz. It is written and directed by Marco Antonio Rodriquez. The Pulitzer winning novel (2008) creates a painfully socially dysfunctional character. A young Dominican man armors himself within the world of sci-fi fantasy in order to weather the difficult process of assimilation. The story is as much a tale of one man's unbearable loneliness as it is a metaphor for the scars and trauma of ruthless dictatorial oppression, social fragmentation, ultimate immigration and assimilation.

  • Ancient Nubia Now

    Social Justice Catches Up with the MFA

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 25th, 2019

    During a recent visit to the Museum of Fine Arts a school group was inappropriately treated in a blatantly racist manner. That has caught the museum, and its director Matthew Teitelbaum, in the cross hairs of media whiplash. There is a shameful legacy of racism and anti Semitism at the MFA. It will take decades to make appropriate changes.

  • Billy Elliot at Goodspeed

    Boys of Ballet

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 26th, 2019

    Some flaws exist in this production of Billy Elliot directed by Gabriel Barre and choreographed by Marc Kimelman. Barre has changed a few things from the original show and overall they work,

  • Kingfishers Catch Fire

    Play by Robin Glendinning at Irish Rep

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 26th, 2019

    The play by Robin Glendinning is based on fact. Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty, the first Irish priest to hold the title of Notary of the Holy Office, spent WWII at the Vatican, where he proved to be a man of action.

  • Boston Jazz Entrepreneur Fred Taylor at 90

    What and Quit Show Biz!

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 27th, 2019

    Jazz entrepreneur Fred Taylor has passed at 90. He never retired producing concerts and programming for the Cabot Theatre in Beverly. Not surprisingly his yet to be published autobiography, a collaboration with Richard Vacca, is titled What and Quit Show Business. Taylor booked Boston's Jazz Workshop/ Paul’s Mall from 1963 to 1978. From 1991 to 2017 he booked Scullers Jazz Club and produced the Tanglewood Jazz Festival from 2001 to 2007.

  • Tootsie the Musical

    Drag Wins Tony on Broadway

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 06th, 2019

    Michael/Dorothy comes alive on Broadway. The updated book by Robert Horn in the musical version of Tootsie shifts the action from the soap opera world to that of Broadway and improves the narrative and dynamics. David Yazbeck’s pop score with sparkling and penetrating lyrics adds another dimension with a sharper focus on female empowerment.

  • Will Arbery’s Heroes of the Fourth Turning

    Off Broadway At Playwrights Horizons

    By: Edward Rubin - Nov 07th, 2019

    Will Arbery’s Heroes of the Fourth Turning has more religious, personal, and political exposition (read talk) than many a mind can absorb at one sitting, The play is essentially a snapshot of the current divisive state of affairs in this country.

  • Pacini's Mary Tudor at Odyssey Opera

    First-Rate Mounting of an Under-appreciated Gem

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 06th, 2019

    Queen Mary I is infatuated with the Scottish adventurer Fenimoore, who is in love with Clothilde, who in turn loves Ernesto. Romance and political intrigue are treacherous bedfellows in this opera based on Victor Hugo’s play about Mary Tudor. A remarkable and largely forgotten opera, its expressive vocal characterization paints an unforgettable portrait of a Queen and the repercussions of her indulgence in an unwise love. Presented as a fully-staged production in Italian with English subtitles. Libretto by Leopoldo Tarantini.

  • Arnold Trachtman Boston Protest Artist at 89

    A Formidable Legacy of Social Concern

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 09th, 2019

    An exhibition of Vietnam protest paintings by Arnold Trachtman was censored and closed by the admninistration of Harvard University. We remounted it at the Institute of Contemporary Art then on Soldier's Field Road. That formed a professional and personal relationship. He was a part of a niche of major Boston artists that existed out of the mainstream, Yesterday he passed away in Cambridge at 89.

  • Ain't Too Proud

    Jukebox Musical About The Temptations On Broadway

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 16th, 2019

    Ain't Too Proud: The Life and Times of The Temptations is playing in Broadway. This show, while a jukebox musical, does more than string a series of hits together. The dancing is electric and the singing is expressive.

  • West Side Story

    Classic Musical In South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 23rd, 2019

    Broadway in Broward series kicks off strong with a heartfelt production of West Side Story. Broadway Palm's inaugural series production features talented triple threat performers. The production runs through Dec. 1.

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