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Theatre

  • When We Were Young and Unafraid

    Sarah Treem Produced by Custom Made Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Jan 25th, 2019

    Why do women make self-defeating decisions when virtually certain of the dark consequences? These are among the questions explored in Sarah Treem’s entertaining and sometimes surprising When We Were Young and Unafraid.

  • Looped at the Desert Rose Playhouse

    Judith Chapman as Tallulah Bankhead

    By: Jack Lyons - Jan 25th, 2019

    It’s pure Judith Chapman totally immersed and completely in command within the skin, body movement, quirks, and tics of Tallulah Bankhead that reaches out and grabs the audience turning them into acolytes of an actor who knows how to take the stage and perform her special magic.

  • American Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford

    Closed Since 1989 Now Up in Smoke

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jan 27th, 2019

    In 1955 with funding from select patrons The American Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford, Connecticut was launched. It was the third major Shakespeare festival conflated with the name Stratford, the home of the Bard. Initially there was less competition in the region for its season of summer and student oriented productions. Relying on a few with deep pockets the company failed to seek a broad base of support for its 1600 seat venue and lavish productions. When founding donors died in the 1970s decline set in with the company ceasing operations in 1989. The property was abandoned and decrepit when recently it went up in smoke.

  • Shakespeare & Company 2019

    Something Old Something New

    By: S&Co. - Jan 30th, 2019

    There will be four plays by Shakespeare. Contemporary plays include Pulitzer Prize finalist The Waverly Gallery by Kenneth Lonergan; Tony Award nominated play The Children by Lucy Kirkwood; Pulitzer Prize winner Topdog/Underdog by MacArthur Foundation Fellowship recipient Suzan-Lori Parks; and Time Stands Still by Obie Award winner Donald Margulies.

  • Jeffrey Lo’s New Comic Farce

    Spending the End of the World on OK Cupid

    By: Victor Cordell - Jan 31st, 2019

    In Jeffrey Lo’s new comic farce, Spending the End of the World on OK Cupid, a prophet of doom named Alfred Winters had accurately predicted “The Vanishing” in which half of humanity recently disappeared at once without a trace. Now Winters has assured those who have survived that the world will end at midnight on the day that the action of the play takes place.

  • August Strindberg’s Creditors

    Aurora Theatre in Berkeley, California

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 04th, 2019

    Threads of Strindberg's Creditors are woven into later hostile relationship dramas from Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler to Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf. Indeed, Strindberg publicly accused Ibsen of basing Hedda on Tekla

  • New Theater Company In South Florida

    A Band Of Actors Produced Experimental Work

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 07th, 2019

    A Band of Actors theater company has joined the South Florida theatrical scene. The Delray Beach-based troupe is performing an absurdist play in the vein of Beckett titled Momo & Toto (Together Forever in Perpetuity). Troupe to focus on experimental work, shy away from traditional, naturalistic "kitchen sink" dramas.

  • Barrington Stage Company 2019

    Season Opens on May 25

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 08th, 2019

    Barrington Stage Company (BSC) will feature four world premieres including the new musical from BSC’s Musical Theatre Lab, Fall Springs by Niko Tsakalakos and Peter Sinn Nachtrieb; America v. 2.1: The Sad Demise & Eventual Extinction of The American Negro by Stacey Rose; American Underground by Brent Askari; and Ragtag Theatre’s Hansel and Gretel, commissioned by BSC.

  • Red Rex at Steep Theatre

    Rightlynd Neighborhood in Ike Holter’s play

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 08th, 2019

    Red Rex, beautifully directed by Jonathan Berry, poses the contentious question of who gets to tell the story. It’s a play about a Chicago storefront theater staged by one of Chicago’s foremost storefront theaters in a space that used to be a grocery store.

  • Late Company by Jordan Tannahill

    At New Conservatory Theatre Center

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 09th, 2019

    In Jordan Tannahill’s Late Company, that time has passed. Debora and Michael’s teenage son, Joel, has committed suicide. Although the obvious path for the parents is to suffer in silence and live with the memory of the lost loved one, Debora is driven by a need to find closure. That target would be someone who can be implicated for the condition that she feels had caused Joel to take his own life.

  • A Reductive My Fair Lady

    Compact Production at Central Square Theatre

    By: Matt Robinson - Feb 11th, 2019

    With the iconic music of My Fair Lady deleted this stripped down production, with a multi-tasking cast, gets at the essence of Shaw's masterpiece. Directed by Eric Tucker of Bedlam it is on view at Cantral Square Theatre in Cambridge. Much is done by few.

  • Honky Tonk Laundry by Roger Bean

    At Coyote StageWorks of Palm Springs

    By: Jack Lyons - Feb 11th, 2019

    Coyote StageWorks of Palm Springs delivers an early Valentine to fans and lovers of Country Music with a country-western comedy romp and hoot called “Honky Tonk Laundry”, written and directed by prolific playwright Roger Bean. It all comes out in the wash.

  • Moby Dick a Whale of an Opera

    At Opera San José

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 12th, 2019

    Although Moby-Dick adheres to the continuous melody mode, many striking set pieces punctuate the score. Much beauty also derives from the orchestral interludes which reflect smooth seas as well as storm with equal competence. But the most striking pieces are the many rousing choruses.

  • Opera Philadelphia's A Midsummer Night's Dream

    Acclaimed Robert Carsen Production Makes US Debut

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 12th, 2019

    Opera Philadelphia has mounted a delightful production of Benjamin Britten's A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The company reminds us, as it does so often, that opera can be highly entertaining and occasionally hilariously funny. Created by Robert Carsen thirty years ago in Aix-en-Provence, the stage is full of royal blues and lime forest greens until all is resolved in white. A new moon hangs in the sky.

  • The Pipeline by Dominique Morisseau

    At Victory Gardens Theater

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 12th, 2019

    The pipeline in Dominique Morisseau’s play is the school-to-prison path followed too often by young people from disadvantaged backgrounds because of harsh school and police policies.

  • Williamstown Theatre Festival 2019

    S. Epatha Merkerson and Uma Thurman to Star

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 13th, 2019

    Yet again Williamstown Theatre Festival mixes old and new for its 2019 season.

  • The Father by Florian Zeller

    Chicago's Remy Bumppo Theatre Company

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 14th, 2019

    The Father by French playwright Florian Zeller is a play about aging and dementia. But it’s not your typical touching human story designed to gain your sympathy for a troubled person and family.

  • A Doll’s House Part 2

    Ibsen Sequel by Lucas Hnath

    By: Karen Isaacs - Feb 14th, 2019

    The Lucas Hnath sequel to Ibsen A Doll's House-Part 2 was a hit on Broadway. The door slammer is making the rounds of regional theatre. This production runs at TheaterWorks in Connecticut through February 24.

  • Berkshire Theatre Group 2019

    Performances on Three Stages

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 14th, 2019

    The 2019 program of Bwerkshire Theatre Group will occur at The Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield and on the Fitzpatrick Mainstage as well as Unicorn in Stockbridge. The season starts with previews of The Goat or, Who is Sylvia? by Edward Albee on May 24 in Stockbridge.

  • Bonnie's Last Flight by Eliza Bent

    Next Door at New York Theater Workshop

    By: Rachel de Aragon - Feb 14th, 2019

    Buckle your seat belts; the plane is still on the tarmac and we the audience, seated in airplane style aisles, are already anticipating a turbulent trip. There are technical difficulties. Flight attendants are rushing up and down the aisles shutting the overhead compartments, allaying our fraying nerves with snacks.

  • 8th Annual 10X10 New Play Festival

    Pittsfield's 2019 10X10 Upstreet Arts Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 18th, 2019

    Kudos to Barrington Stage Company for bringing theatre back to the Berkshires in the dead of winter. Yesterday we enjoyed a matinee of the eighth annual, 10X10 New Play Festival. It runs February 14 - March 10, 2019 at BSC’s St. Germain Stage.

  • I Due Foscari by Verdi

    Produced by West Bay Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 18th, 2019

    Like much early Verdi, I Due Foscari lacks the memorable arias and ensembles that appear on compilation recordings. However, it may be that we just haven’t heard these enough to become familiar with them.

  • Fulfillment Center by Abe Koogler

    A Red Orchid Theatre Production

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 19th, 2019

    Abe Koogler’s play, Fulfillment Center, is the story of four working people (two of them educated ex-New Yorkers) trying to get by in a mid-size New Mexico city. Jess McLeod smoothly directs an excellent cast of four.

  • Indecent In South Florida

    GableStage Production Of Popular Paula Vogel Play

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 18th, 2019

    Coral Gables theater company presents robust production of play about a controversial 1920s Yiddish work. Indecent tracks the path of The God of Vengeance' success across Europe, until its shut down on Broadway. Music, dance and dialogue combine to celebrate Yiddish language and theater while exploring a dark period in theater history.

  • Violet the Musical in San Francisco

    Book and Lyrics by Brian Crawley and Music by Jeanine Tesori

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 20th, 2019

    The year is 1964. Violet, a young woman with suitcase in hand, is about to board a Greyhound bus to leave her hometown of Spruce Pine, North Carolina. Her destination – Tulsa, Oklahoma. Bay Area Musicals offers a lively and well-staged representation of a journey that changes its central figure in unexpected ways.

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