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Theatre

  • Cedars at Berkshire Theatre Group

    James Naughton Solos in Premiere by Erik Tarloff

    By: Maria Reveley - Jul 30th, 2014

    James Naughton, two time Tony award winner, brings his formidable acting skills to this one man play. We get to know him as a son, husband, father, lawyer and, at times, a complete wreck. Naughton’s voice is a true instrument, displaying anger, humor, despair, bitterness, weakness, fear.

  • The Orphan of Zhao at La Jolla Playhouse,

    BD Wong in Ancient Chinese Tale

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 29th, 2014

    “The Orphan of Zhao”, at La Jolla Playhouse, is receiving an intelligent and intense revival of the classic Chinese legend that has roots in the fourth century BC. Starring Tony winner BD Wong (M Butterfly) it runs through August 2.

  • Ether Dome by Elizabeth Egloff a Snore

    West Coast Premiere at La Jolla Playhouse

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 29th, 2014

    “Ether Dome” written by Elizabeth Egloff, and directed by Michael Wilson, is a fascinating subject for exploration regarding the subject of pain and the quest of medicine to conquer a condition that has afflicted human beings since the dawn of time. Compelling as the subject matter may be, the action of the piece comes off as sluggish; periodically engaging the audience, only later to “anesthetize” them (pun intended) by having the story wander to Paris, France, New York City, and then back to Boston.

  • Into the Woods at Old Globe

    Inventive Co Production with Fiasco Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 29th, 2014

    The musical has seen many script versions and hundreds of stagings by theatres all over the world in the last twenty-eight years. It’s considered to be one of the greatest musicals of all time. “Into the Woods” 2014 version, is once again a reimagined, inventive and energetic co-production this time Old Globe partnered with the critically acclaimed Fiasco Theatre that originated at the McCarter Theatre Center.

  • Sam Shepard’s Fool for Love

    Cowboy Chic in Williamstown

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 25th, 2014

    Now 70 Sam Shepard has created a riveting existential American theatre through a cowboy chic deconstuction of the mythology of the American West. In the manner of Beckett's theatre of the absurd the tense and tight drama of Fool for Love is confined to a motel room. There is a death struggle between Tony winner, the formidable Nina Arainda, and the desperate cowboy played by Sam Rockwell. Since 1970 it is the sixth Shepard production for Williamstown Theatre Festival.

  • The Golem of Havana

    Oi Vey Olé

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 24th, 2014

    Set in Cuba during the last gasp of the Batista regime a new musical for Barrington Stage company is a complicated balancing act between Jewish history and mythology and Cuba's Santaria tradition during the Revolution. The Golem of Havana mixes musical mataphors between Eurpoean Klezmer and Cuban Salsa

  • Berliner Festspiele, Foreign Affairs - 2014

    An Attempt to Understand

    By: Angelika Jansen - Jul 23rd, 2014

    The 2014 Berliner Festspiele continued with a July program titled 'Foreign Affairs.' Artistic Director, Matthias von Hartz, presented a third summer festival of theatre, dance, music and visual arts that lasted nearly three weeks and ended July 13. It was a quest for collaborations and finding new forms of cultural expressions.

  • Breaking the Code at Barrington Stage Company

    Enigma of Alan Turing Brilliantly Portrayed by Mark. H. Dold

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 21st, 2014

    As a member of the top secret team of 10,000 at Bletchley Park Alan Turning was key to the effort to Breaking the Code of the German enigma apparatus. With endless daily permutations it was used to send orders to the maurading U Boat fleets decimating allied shipping. In the role of a lifetime Mark H. Dold has totally inhabited the persona of the complex and tormented individual whom Churchill credited with shortening and ending the war. Time Magazine named Turing among the 100 Most Important People of the 20th century. At Barrington Stage until August 2.

  • Living on Love in Williamstown

    Theatre Debut for Diva Renée Fleming

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 20th, 2014

    The theatrical debut of Renée Fleming in the comedy Living On Love is a delight and triumph. The renowned opera diva plays, what else, a renowned opera diva. That would seem to be easy and obvious but Fleming underplays the role with a naturalism that parallels her real life persona. She is just charming and enchanting. Especially when intereacting with a superb cast directed by Tony winner Kathleen Marshall. Based on marquee bankability and an enthusiastic reception this Williamstown production has a shot of making it to Broadway.

  • This is Our Youth: Steppenwolf to Broadway

    Kenneth Lonergan's Classic Play Coming to the Cort

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 19th, 2014

    If these are the children of the 80’s and now the parents of the 21st century, what kind of kids are they producing? In the upper echelons of New York, many of these characters are working their way out of adolescence in paretts’ homes or supported by their successful parents. Drugs and alcohol continue to make the passage to adulthood even more complicated than it always has been. If our children have to smell a bit to help us release the offspring we love so much and wish to protect, the stink has not gone. And Broadway should welcome them in this taut, funny, moving Steppenwolf production.

  • Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike in Vermont

    Finding Comedy in the Overwhelming Futility of Life.

    By: Leanne Jewett - Jul 19th, 2014

    A modern comedy mirroring the structure and themes of the master playwright Anton Chekov, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike finds humor in the regrets and disappointments of life as they are confronted during two days in the family home by three siblings in their middle age. This play wll run through July 26 at Vermont's Weston Playhouse.

  • A Slight Ache by Harold Pinter

    Produced by Eve Mugar Off Off Broadway

    By: Ariel Petrova - Jul 14th, 2014

    Jimmy's 43 E 7th St, New York, NY 10003 provided an off off setting for Harold Pinter's Slight Ache was produced by Eve Mugar.. Due to its brevity and the limited number of actors in the play, it provided the opportunity to mount a play in New York. She purchased the rights, sent the word out to fellow actors, raised some money on line and rented a venue for two nights

  • Out of the City Premieres at Dorset Theater Festival

    Turning 60 and Still Discovering Themselves

    By: Leanne Jewett - Jul 13th, 2014

    Two couples, celebrating a 60th birthday "out of the city" are still finding themselves in this new light comedy by Leslie Ayvazian set in the Poconos.

  • Michael Frayn’s Benefactors

    Skyscrapers for 1%ers at Berkshire Theatre Group

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 13th, 2014

    The triumph of the one percent and destruction of the middle class is underscored by the soaring speculation of urban real estate and resultant skyscraper residences. The 1984 play Benefactors by Michael Frayn focused on this topic which is being given a superb production at Berkshire Theatre Group in Stockbridge

  • A Great Wilderness in Williamstown

    Drama Launches Nikos Season for WTF

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 11th, 2014

    In a mountaintop retreat in Samuel D. Hunter's, A Great Wilderness, through prayer, scripture and intent listening Walt counsels young men struggling with identity, confusion and the "sin" of homosexuality. This intense and thought provoking drama opens the Nikos Stage season for the Williamstown Theatre Festival.

  • Renée Fleming Living on Love

    First Career Dramatic Role at Williamstown Theatre Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 07th, 2014

    Over the Fourth of July weekend Renée Fleming was the featured soloist for the opening night performance of the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s summer season in Tanglewood. On July 16, for the first time in her career, Fleming will appear in a play Living on Love at the Williamstown Theatre Festival. Depending upon its success at WTF the production may be bound for Broadway.

  • June Moon Brightens Williamstown

    Vintage Lardner / Kaufman Comedy Launches WTF Season

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 04th, 2014

    Mostly a moldy fig, the vintage, 1929 comedy June Moon about Tin Pan Alley, by Ring Lardner and George S. Kaufman, seems like an oddly conservative choice to launch the Williamstown Theatre Festival season. With tedious plot exposition the play slogged through the first act but under the adept direction of Jessica Stone came alive hilariously in the second act.

  • Jessica Stone Returns to Williamstown Theatre Festival

    Remembering Her Mentor and Friend Nicholas Martin

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 02nd, 2014

    Jessica Stone made her debut as a director when through a hunch her mentor and friend, Nicholas Martin, tapped her for an all male production of Sondheim's "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum." That first effort was a smash hit for Williamstown Theatre Festival. It was followed by "Last of the Red Hot Lovers." She returns to the main stage this season directing "June Moon." Poignantly she discussed WTF as a family and the legacy of Martin.

  • Dog and Pony at Old Globe

    Wolrd Premiere Musical by Rick Elice and Michael Patrick Walker

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 02nd, 2014

    California's Old Globe premiered a musical Dog and Pony by writer Rick Elice and composer Michael Patrick Walker. The wobbly story that Elice and Walker have fashioned comes from a meeting the two had discussing the idea of a workplace romantic comedy. It has been directed by Roger Rees.

  • The Mystery of Irma Vep: A Penny Dreadful

    Drag Farce Launches Berkshire Theatre Group’s Season

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 30th, 2014

    The actors, Bill Bowers and Tom Hewitt, appears to have having as much if not more fun than the audience in a campy, over the top, drag farce the Charles Ludlam classic Irma Vep: A Penny Dreadul. It launches the season for the Berkshire Theatre Group in Stockbridge. It's a hoot if you like that sort of thing.

  • Camus; Les Juste at The Trap Door

    Dynamic Reversals Charge This Chicago Interpretation

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 29th, 2014

    In some ways Camus’ plays are as difficult to translate as the famous first line of The Stranger, best expressed, “Today, mother died.” It is the ‘todayness’ that often gets lost in translation. By 'Regarding the Just' and twisting from stage action to commentary, Chicago's Trap Door succeeds in making Camus live.

  • Analog & Vinyl at the Weston Playhouse

    A World Premier

    By: Leanne Jewett - Jun 28th, 2014

    Weston Playhouse presents the World Premier of Paul Gordon's Analog and Vinyl. This quirky and charming modern musical comedy has been in development for three years.

  • David Suchet in The Last Confession

    Reaching Beyond Hercule Poirot in LA

    By: Jack Lyons - Jun 25th, 2014

    At LA’s Music Center’s Ahmanson Theatre, David Suchet portrays Cardinal Giovanni Benelli, a friend and adviser to the recently crowned caretaker Pope John Paul I, the successor to the conservative Pope Paul VI. The actor is best known as Belgian detective Hercule Poirot through 74 episodes for Masterpiece Mystery on PBS.

  • The Country House by Donald Margulies

    LA’s Geffen Playhouse a World Premiere

    By: Jack Lyons - Jun 24th, 2014

    “The Country House” a world premiere by Donald Margulies deftly directed by the award winning Daniel Sullivan is a bit of a mishmash when it comes to knowing what it wants to be when it grows up. Is it a comedy? Well, maybe. On the other hand, perhaps it’s a melodrama.

  • Working on a Special Day Transforms Italian Movie

    Chalk Talks at Barrington Stage

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 23rd, 2014

    Una Giornata Particolare was a 1977 Italian movie which earned two Academy Award nominations. It has been adapted for the stage as Working on a Special Day in a performance acted and directed by the Mexican couple of Ana Graham and Antonio Vega. The charming and absorbing one act play inventively explores the boundaries between illusion and theatrical reality.

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