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Theatre

  • Arlo Guthrie Benefit Earns $23,000

    Shakespeare & Company Rallying Support

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 10th, 2009

    There were 339 paid admissions in the not quite full 406 seat Founders Theater for the recent Arlo Guthrie benefit staged by Shakespeare & Company. The evening brought in $23,000 for the Lenox based company facing a debt of $10 million.

  • Nicholas Martin to Resign after 2010 Season

    Williamstown Theatre Festival Seeks New Leadership

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 08th, 2009

    While last season was financially challenged and less successful than his first one as artistic director, Nicholas Martin was widely applauded for restoring stability and artistic integrity to the historic Williamstown Theatre Festival. Martin, now 71, has announced that he will step down after the coming 2010 season.

  • American Repertory Theater's Gatz

    Directed by John Collins Through Feb. 7

    By: Ariel Petrova - Dec 08th, 2009

    Imagine the Great Gatsby deconstructed as Gatz by Elevator Repair Service. This itchy glitchy production will be directed by John Collins opening at American Repertory Theater in Cambridge runs through February 7.

  • All My Sons at Huntington Theatre Company

    Arthur Miller Classic Through Feb. 7

    By: Ariel Petrova - Dec 08th, 2009

    David Esbjornson was Arthur Miller's director of choice late in life, staging the premieres of his last two plays. He will bring Miller's classic "All My Sons" to the Huntington Theatre Company in Boston through February 7.

  • David Mamet Plays the Race Card

    James Spader at NY's Barrymore Theater

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 07th, 2009

    David Mamet is widely regarded as the foremost contemporary American playwright. He is known for taking on tough issues with expletive laced frankness. This time he has focused on the hot button of Race which has opened at Broadway's Ethel Barrymore Theater starring perennial TV attorney James Spader. It has evoked mostly mixed reviews.

  • High Holidays by Alan Gross Chicago's Goodman Theater

    Starring 13 Year-Old Max Zuppa

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 30th, 2009

    Award-winning poet and playwright Alan Gross returns to Chicago and the legitimate theater. The Goodman Theater presented the world premiere of "High Holiday," brilliantly directed by Steven Robman.

  • Huntington Theatre Holiday Special Offer

    $25 One Day Sale December 10

    By: Bob Fowler - Nov 24th, 2009

    In the spirit of gift giving the Huntington Theatre Company in Boston will conduct a one day sale on Thursday, December 10. Selected performances are being offered at just $25.

  • Barrington Stage to Open Season with Sweeney Todd

    Jeff McCarthy to Star as Sondheim's Demon Barber

    By: Ariel Petrova - Nov 22nd, 2009

    Julianne Boyd, the artistic director of Barrington Stage in Pittsfield likes to start the season with a popular musical. For the third time, marking his 80th birthday, Boyd will direct a Stephen Sondheim production, this time, the ghoulishly delicious Sweeney Todd. It will run from June 17 through July 17 to the delight of one and all.

  • A Civil War Christmas at The Huntington

    An American Musical and Historical Celebration

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 22nd, 2009

    Set at Christmas in and around Washington, D.C. in 1864, A Civil War Christmas at the Huntington Theatre Company portrays a number of poignant stories of various individuals including the Lincolns, soldiers on both sides of the conflict and runaway slaves. The narrative is told in a lovely tapestry of song as well as often with poetic words. The voices and acting are superb. Created by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Paula Vogel, it is a tough and humanly complex story to tell well and stylishly.

  • Fela! Nominated for 11 Tony Awards

    Bill T. Jones to be Honored by Jacob's Pillow

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 18th, 2009

    The Nigerian musician and political activist,Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, who created the genre of Afro Pop, died of AIDS at 59 in 1997. He had been arrested and tortured some 200 times. His mother, a feminist, was thrown from a window during the destruction of Fela's compound and nightclub. Bill T. Jones has brought the music and dance to Broadway in what is sure to be an award winning hit. And yet.

  • Cindy Bella Slips into Shakespeare & Company

    Cinderella Adapted December 10 to 20

    By: Ariel Petrova - Nov 18th, 2009

    In a limited run, December 10 through 20, Shakespeare & Company presents family entertainment. The production of Cindy Bella is based on the traditional fairy tale of Cinderella. Irina Brook directs this production created and adapted by Brook and Anna Brownstead.

  • American Repertory Theater Holiday Shows

    Best of Both Worlds Through Jan.3

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 13th, 2009

    The American Repertory Theatre will present Best of Both Worlds. written by Randy Weiner, music by Diedre Murray, and directed by A.R.T. Artistic Director Diane Paulus. Bursting with the sounds of R&B and gospel, Best of Both Worlds is a soulful re-envisioning of The Winter's Tale, Shakespeare's timeless story of heartbreak and redemption. Clap your hands, jump out of your seat, and feel the power of love with this holiday treat for all ages. It runs from November 21 through January 3.

  • John Douglas Thompson Riveting in The Emperor Jones

    Hit Show Moves to Soho Playhouse to Jan. 31

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 06th, 2009

    John Douglas Thompson is familiar to Berkshire audience for his sensational performances in Othello and the Dreamer Examines His Pillow this past season at Shakespeare & Company. His portrayal of The Emperor Jones has been met with rave reviews and sold out shows at New York's Irish Repertory Theater. The hit show has moved to the larger Soho Playhouse through January 31.

  • Sondheim's Sweeney Todd at Cohoes Music Hall, NY

    Macabre Musical Thriller Just in Time for Halloween

    By: Larry Murray - Oct 18th, 2009

    Sweeney Todd is a great example of an urban legend of a serial killer that first became a penny dreadful serial, then a Broadway musical and finally a movie. He and his partner, Mrs. Lovett built quite a business harvesting wealthy customers as meat for her tasty pies.

  • Barrington Stage Company Presents Laramie Project: An Epilogue

    All Star Cast of Actors and Community Leaders

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 14th, 2009

    On the occasion of the anniversary of the death of Matthew Shepard, six days after being assaulted by Aaron James McKinney and Russel Arthur Henderson, there were 120 productions all across America of "The Laramie Project Ten Years Later: An Epilogue." The Barrington Stage production occured during the first "Out in the Berkshires" three day Holiday weekend. It included an all star cast of actors and community leaders.

  • The Fantasticks at Barrington Stage Company

    Creator Tom Jones Discusses Longest Running Musical

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 12th, 2009

    Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt opened their musical "The Fantasticks" in 1960. It closed in 2002 and has had more than 20,000 global productions since then. Jones dropped by after a matinee to discuss the longest running musical with Barrington's artistic director, Julianne Boyd. The Pittsfield production may be the shortest running ever of the beloved musical.

  • Williamstown Theatre Festival Appoints New General Manager

    Joe Finnegan to Work with Artistic Director Nicholas Martin

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 10th, 2009

    With a combination of budget cuts, a reduced schedule and mixed reviews the second season for Williamstown Theatre Festival artistic director, Nicholas Martin, proved to be challenging. In 2010 Martin will work with a new general manager Joe Finnegan. This appointment has been announced by WTF.

  • Something Old, Something New: The Fantasticks at Barrington Stage

    BFA Interviews the Director, Andrew Volkoff

    By: Larry Murray - Oct 07th, 2009

    As the musical The Fantasticks gets ready for its Berkshire run, we catch up with its director, Andrew Volkoff for a peek behind the scenes.

  • Mixed Company Theater Takes Wing with Five Flights

    Great Barrington Company Presents Adam Bock Play

    By: Larry Murray - Oct 04th, 2009

    Mixed Company is a superb example of this region's diverse local theater scene. The plays they tackle might not be easy, but they are worthwhile, and the acting is great. "FIve Flights" has its ups and downs, but lands ok in the end.

  • Who's Really Afraid of Virginia Woolf at Boston's Publick Theatre?

    Tina Packer Says On With the Show

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 30th, 2009

    Mid way through rehearsals for a production of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" at Boston's Publick Theatre it appeared that Edward Albee would not allow the play to be staged. After more than a week of chaos Tina Packer, who plays Martha, told us that the show will open as scheduled. Her performance promises to be the highlight of Boston's theatre season.

  • Donkey Show Dances at American Repertory Theatre at Zero Arrow Street, Cambridge, MA

    Shakespeare to a Disco Beat Through January

    By: Mark Favermann - Sep 30th, 2009

    A.R.T.'s The Donkey Show is not your mother's A Midsummer Night's Dream. Instead, it is sex, drugs and rock and roll to a 70's disco beat. This show is Artistic Director Diane Paulus' first American Rep production. Fairies and actors in disguise, swirling mirror lights, relationship problems, skating diva Puck and a donkey all add to the entertainment.The crowd is going wild. Let's dance, let's dance. It may be addictive.

  • Fences At Huntington Theatre Company Smashes It Out of the Ballpark

    August Wilson's Greatest Drama

    By: Mark Favermann - Sep 30th, 2009

    Playwright August Wilson chronicled the African-American experience in the 20th Century by setting a play in each decade. These very American stories display and dissect the humanity of what it meant to be Black in a prejudiced predominant white society. The 6th in the cycle, Fences is triumphantly brilliant at the Huntington Theatre Company.

  • Hound of the Baskervilles a Howling Success at Shakespeare & Company

    Never have so few done so much, so well, with so little

    By: Larry Murray and Caleb Hiliadis - Sep 28th, 2009

    With Tina Packer out of town, director Tony Simotes has the Shakespeare encampment in Lenox pretty much to himself. After a summer of managerial worries, he is back to directing, having taken several serious Shakespearean actors off the leash. For the next five weeks they will make total fools of themselves in front of hysterical and appreciative audiences in their reworking of a Sherlock Holmes classic.

  • Barrington Stage Joins 120 Theatres for The Laramie Project

    October 12 Marks The Epilogue - 10 Years Later

    By: Larry Murray - Sep 25th, 2009

    Barrington Stage Company is but one of 120 theaters in all 50 states and 7 countries who will create an original Epilogue to Tectonic Theater Project's The Laramie Project. Many Berkshire residents have been working for weeks with the company's actors to make this a memorable and searing theatrical event.

  • Madcap Hound of the Baskervilles Due at Shakespeare & Company

    Holmes and Watson Deliver Comedy and Cross Dressing in Lenox

    By: Larry Murray - Sep 18th, 2009

    Here's an advance peek at the wild and wooly romp that takes one of the most popular Sherlock Holmes tales and ruins it—umm, we mean, turns it inside out—stuffing it with endless laughs as it barrels forward at a breakneck pace, all the while daring the audience to hold on tight with both hands.

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