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Theatre

  • New York New York It’s a Helluva Town

    Berkshires on Broadway

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 09th, 2014

    In 2013 Shakespeare & Company produced a star studded gala Broadway in the Berkshires. With On the Town from Barrngton Stage and Williamstown Theater Festival's Elephant Man both currently enjoying rave reviews it seems more like The Berkshires on Broadway. Now WTF's Fool For Love is headed for the Great White Way next year.

  • Hugh Jackman in The River

    Fish Story of Ones That Got Away

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 08th, 2014

    In the current film Birdman a cartoonish Hollywood star seeks to make his bones on Broadway. While Wolverine star Hugh Jackman is no stranger to Broadway in The River he appears up close and personal in an intimate play staged in the miniscule, by Broadway standards, Circle in the Square. Fans paid top dollar to get close to a beefy but uncannily talented celebrity.

  • Necessary Monsters At SpeakEasy

    Playwright/Actor Kuntz Disrupts Narrative Expectations

    By: Mark Favermann - Dec 07th, 2014

    Set in a cage and creatively dramatizing different presentations forms, "Necessary Monsters" by John Kuntz is a play that tells a fragmented story. Its title figuring into at least four story lines. “Necessary Monsters” is the name of a romance novel, a horror film, a bit of film noir, and a children’s television show. This is an unusual production that is part dream sequence, part pill-induced hallucination and serial killer nightmare. It is a provocative thinking person's entertainment.

  • The Secret Garden at Capital Repertory Theater

    A Great Way to Introduce Kids to Theater

    By: Chris Buchanan - Nov 30th, 2014

    When actors take the stage as musicians, there are some sacrifices to be made. Can Cap Rep pull off this balancing act between innovation and performance standards? Just barely.

  • Hershey Felder as Irving Berlin

    LA's Geffen, Gil Cates Main Stage Until January 4

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 28th, 2014

    In “Hershey Felder as Irving Berlin”, directed by Trevor Hay, now on the boards of the Gil Cates Main stage theatre, the genius of Berlin, is not only his longevity (he lived to be 101 years-old), but the prodigious output of his canon. We’re talking over one thousand songs over his career, many becoming major hits, which made him a household legend before he turned thirty.

  • The Hunchback of Notre Dame

    La Jolla Playhouse Premiere

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 28th, 2014

    The masterful staging and direction of Scott Schwartz, who combines new orchestrations for this production from Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz’s 1996 original score, is blessed not only with a solid cast of supporting players and ensemble performers, but benefits from the local San Diego area SACRA/PROFANA choir whose singing and Gregorian chanting enriches all of the musical aspects of this impressive production.

  • What the Butler Saw

    Mark Taper Forum through December 21

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 28th, 2014

    “What the Butler Saw” written by English playwright and ‘infant terrible’ Joe Orton, is classic English farce performed with stiff upper lip by a cast of clueless characters that looked as if they just stepped out of a West End theatre production. They find themselves on the stage of the Mark Taper Forum, bewildered as ever, but supremely confident in the correctness of their decisions.

  • The Tale of the Allergist's Wife At Lyric Stage

    Charles Busch's Broad Comedy of Culture

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 23rd, 2014

    A middle-aged Upper-West-Side doctor’s wife spends her mornings at the Whitney, afternoons at MOMA, and evenings at BAM. Plunged into a mid-life crisis of Medea-like proportions, she’s shaken out of her lethargy by the sudden reappearance of a fascinating and somewhat mysterious childhood friend. This is a comedy filled with cultural humor about mid-life malaise.

  • Brainy Funny Ruby Wax At Oberon

    Absolutely Fabulous Writer/Actor Speaks Neuroscience

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 20th, 2014

    American comedian/writer/television host Ruby Wax's Out Of Her Mind is a hilarious and a bit dark show. Brash but thoughtful, she touches on the contemporay toxins of envy, fame, television, getting rich, getting the perfect body, marriage, careers, the insatiable drive to win. And above all, staying busy while looking like you’re actually accomplishing something is a special annoyance. Ruby has written for and co-edited every episode of the British TV comedy Absolutely Fabulous, and her best-selling memoir How Do You Want Me? is a classic autobiography. She is a special talent.

  • Tamburlaine Today at the Theatre for a New Audience

    John Douglas Thompson Rages at the Polonsky Shakespeare Center

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 16th, 2014

    John Douglas Thompson is a great classic actor. As Tamburlaine, he conquers every corner of the stage, and the rafters too before his all-consuming lust for power crashes him. What a piece of work this actor is. At every turn he engages.

  • The Chosen by Aaron Posner

    Season Opener for CV REP Rancho Mirage

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 13th, 2014

    “The Chosen” swoops into the audience’s heart and neatly captures the essence of Potok’s affecting human message of hope. Even in a diverse and secular America of 310 million citizens, every culture and every religion has the ability to leave the “old world” of European Jewry behind and blend into the “new world” of America, and still remain true to one’s Jewish traditions.

  • Odets' Stirring Awake and Sing! At Huntington

    Depression Era Drama About Dysfunctional Family

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 12th, 2014

    Set in a cramped Bronx apartment, three generations of a working-class Jewish family are frustrated in their dreams of a brighter future. Matriarch Bessie Berger's fierce determination keeps her family afloat, whatever the cost. Gritty, passionate, funny, and heartbreaking, With outstanding performances, Odets' 1935 drama captures both the hopes, disappointments and struggles of a memorable American family.

  • Hedda Gabler Quirky At Gamm Theatre

    Caricatured Characters With Theatrical Energy

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 02nd, 2014

    The production of Hedda Gabler at Pawtucket's Gamm Theatre is a less than nuanced production of the 1889 Ibsen classic. Set when Gabler has returned from an extended honeymoon with her tediously academic and wimpy husband, carrying heavy personal baggage she is already bored of marriage. Suffocated by bourgeois society and disdainful of intellectual pursuits, she tries to fulfill her aimless often mean-spirited desires by manipulating those around her resulting tragically. A play with offering no easy answers, the focal point is a Hedda Gabler who is a troubled and troubling woman. Slipping into despair as her options narrow, even with directional script flaws, this is a compelling play.

  • Bad Jews Provocative at SpeakEasy Stage

    Brilliant Layered Drama About Family, Faith and History

    By: Mark Favermann - Oct 27th, 2014

    Don't let the title put you off. This is not a negative play. The narrative concerns the war between two cousins over a coveted family heirloom, It is a biting comedy/drama about religion and culture. At odds are the annoyingly self-righteous Daphna, a young woman who wears her Jewishness like a badge of honor, and her equally self-centered first cousin Liam, an entitled graduate student who enjoys distancing himself from his cultural traditions. Thrown into the mix is Liam's younger brother Jonah and Liam's white bread girlfriend Melody. When the combatants are forced to spend the night in a studio apartment, all hell breaks loose resulting in a viciously funny brawl over family, faith, and legacy.

  • Biblical Themed Play by Scott Carter

    Geffen Playhouse Through November 23

    By: Jack Lyons - Oct 25th, 2014

    In the Geffen Playhouse’s current production “The Gospel According to Thomas Jefferson, Charles Dickens, and Count Leo Tolstoy: Discord”, written by Scott Carter and directed by Matt August, three of history’s great thinker/writers come together in a blisteringly funny battle of wits to explain their divergently held opinions.

  • St. Germain's Freud's Last Session

    At North Coast Rep Theatre in California

    By: Jack Lyons - Oct 25th, 2014

    Since its premiere at Barrington Stage in the Berkshires Freud's Last Session by Mark St. Germain has been produced all over the world. He was recently in Oslo for a production of his enormously popular play. Jack Lyons reviews a California production at North Coast Rep Theatre through November 9.

  • Ether Dome: Medical Miracle At Huntington

    Surgical Anesthetic Discovery As Gripping Narrative History

    By: Mark Favermann - Oct 23rd, 2014

    This clever production tells the story of the search for a new treatment promising to end pain as it pits a doctor and his student in an epic battle between altruism and ambition, ego and empathy. Based on the true story of the discovery of ether as an anesthetic in 1846, it is set in Boston's Massachusetts General Hospital. This new play explores the horror of pain, the sweetness of relief, and the very modern notion of the hysteria that erupts when healthcare becomes big business.

  • When January Feels Like Summer in New York

    Ensemble Studio & Women's Porject Theater Join Forces

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 20th, 2014

    Originally produced by Ensemble Studio Theatre this terrific play is instantly in revival and deserves any staging it gets. Cori Thomas, the playwright, has taken often stereotyped characters and made them real and full of surprises.

  • Dear Elizabeth Speaks Volumes at Lyric Stage

    A Play in Letters Between Elizabeth Bishop & Robert Lowell

    By: Mark Favermann - Oct 20th, 2014

    Told through an extensive and compelling correspondence between two of 20th century’s most important and celebrated American poets, Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell, this play on and with words is a different kind of love. It is a story of the spirit and imagination between artists and friends. This thirty-year friendship served to buoy each other up in life and art. Their often messy, addictive and sometimes unhealthy lives were profoundly impacted by the other. This is a lyrical, moving portrait of a friendship that eloquently transcends oceans, continents, and time.

  • Glass Menagerie at Pittsburgh Public Theatre

    Superb Production of Tennessee Williams Drama

    By: Wendy Arons - Oct 17th, 2014

    The trick to a good production of this play – and the one at the Pittsburgh Public Theatre falls squarely into that category – lies in finding a style for representing memory, one that keeps in view not only the events as remembered by Tom, infused and informed by his guilty conscience over having left his overbearing mother and fragile sister to their own devices, but also the reality of the characters themselves, distinct from his memory somehow, so that we in the audience don’t fall into the trap of only seeing the other characters as Tom remembers them.

  • Steve Martin and Edie Brickell's Bright Star

    World Premiere at San Diego's Old Globe

    By: Jack Lyons - Oct 17th, 2014

    The immensely multi-talented Steve Martin – actor, playwright, director, musician, producer author – has joined creative forces with Southern songwriter-singer Edie Brickell becoming of one America’s newest and successful musical writing teams in the process. Their Bright Star runs at the Old Globe through November 2.

  • Tony Simotes Leaves Shakespeare & Company

    Rick Dildine Takes Charge

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 11th, 2014

    When Tony Simotes took over Shakespeare & Company from founder Tina Packer five years ago it soon was revealed that the company was on the brink of ruin. With negotiations and austerity the company was put on a more secure footing. It is now more stable as leadership passes to Rick Dildine..

  • Assassins Sinister Sondheim At New Rep

    Dark Musical About Murderous Losers

    By: Mark Favermann - Oct 07th, 2014

    With a large cast and Stephen Sondheim's music, Assassins is a musical based on the premise of a murderous carnival game to produce a revue-style portrayal of men and women who attempted (successfully or not) to assassinate various Presidents of the United States. Even though the music varies to reflect the popular music of the eras depicted, the time warps of the characters act to confuse the audience. With a fine ensemble, The New Rep tries hard with a very dark Sondheim vehicle.

  • Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

    Alex Sharp Brilliant as an Autistic Boy

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 06th, 2014

    The title suggests an Oliver Sacks' story, but unfortuntately his humanity is not translated to the stage.

  • Barrington Stage Company 2015

    Lost in Yonkers and Man of La Mancha

    By: Barrington - Oct 03rd, 2014

    Barrington Stage Company (BSC),announced today two of its 2015 Boyd-Quinson Mainstage productions – Neil Simon’s Lost in Yonkers and Man of La Mancha.

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