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Theatre

  • Gregorian by Matthew Greene at Walkerspace Theatre

    Armenian Genocide Based Drama

    By: Edward Rubin - Sep 09th, 2016

    Gregorian, Matthew Greene’s latest play, produced by Working Artists Theatre Project at the Walkerspace Theater, digs deep into the painful history of the Armenian people, examining the century long effects of the 1915 genocide on four generations of the Gregorian family, in which the Ottoman Empire slaughtered 1.5 million Armenians.

  • St. Germain’s Camping with Henry and Tom

    Barrington's Revival Seems Ripped from the Headlines

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 10th, 2016

    The 1993 Mark St. Germain play, Camping with Henry and Tom, is as fresh as a daisy in a timely revival at Barrington Stage Company. With an update of just five lines Henry Ford, originally inspired by third party candidate Ross Perot, has an uncanny resemblance to the worst aspects of Donald Trump.

  • Perennial Favorite The Fantasticks

    At Pasadena Playhouse

    By: Lisa Lyons - Sep 24th, 2016

    The Pasadena Playhouse has produced a lively version of the longest running musical The Fantasticks. Even if you have seen it this is a woderful chance to again be enchanted and "Follow, Follow, Follow."

  • How Walt Disney Lost His Head

    Dark Comedy by Lucas Hnath in Ft. Lauderdale

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 25th, 2016

    “A Public Reading of an Unproduced Screenplay about the Death of Walt Disney,” by playwright Lucas Hnath, turns upside down the positive image of the man popular culture has ingrained in our minds.

  • Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

    August Wilson Play at Mark Taper Forum in LA

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 25th, 2016

    ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’ now on the boards of the Mark Taper Forum is fabulously acted and brilliantly staged by Tony winner Phylicia Rashad.

  • The Cocktail Hour by A. R. Gurney

    Launches North Coast Repertory Theatre’s 35th Season

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 26th, 2016

    In ‘The Cocktail Hour’ A.R. Gurney hits the vanishing cultural nail of privilege right on the proverbial head.

  • Michael Cristofer’s Man in the Ring

    Riveting Premiere at Chicago's Court Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 26th, 2016

    Michael Cristofer’s Man in the Ring, having its world premiere in Chicago, is a play about boxing with a dark and riveting under card.

  • Mahabharata as Battlefield via Peter Brook at BAM

    A Startling Message from the Distant Past

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 30th, 2016

    Mahabharata is older and many times as long as the Bible. Its message of man's impulsive thrust to war and destruction is as fresh today as it must have been when it was first composed. Brook has tackled the piece before. This short form packs a powerful punch.

  • Kate Hennig’s The Last Wife

    From Stratford Festival to Chicago's Timeline

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 01st, 2016

    The Last Wife premiered last year at the Stratford Festival in Ontario and Timeline snagged it for its first US production. The 2.5 hour play is smart and funny and will have you turning on your phone at intermission to look at Katherine Parr’s Wikipedia page.

  • October Sky at Old Globe

    Musical is Outasight

    By: Jack Lyons - Oct 03rd, 2016

    “October Sky” is an uplifting, feel-good type of musical that boasts 19 songs with such numbers as “Look to the Stars”, “We’re Gonna Build a Rocket”, “Stars Shine Down”, “The Man I Met”, and “The Last Kiss Goodbye”, the latter number being especially poignant as sung by the miners’ wives and girlfriends.

  • Tony and Emmy Winner Hal Linden

    Now 85 in Fantasticks at Pasadena Playhouse

    By: Lisa Lyons - Oct 03rd, 2016

    I think because the writing was solid, not “trendy”, and always very relatable. I recently put together a clip reel for a concert appearance I was doing, and I had to sit down and watch over 100 hours of “Barney Miller” episodes. I was amazed at how substantial they were, and that they still hold up almost forty years later.

  • New Victory's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

    Captain Nemo Makes His Case

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 03rd, 2016

    The New Victory uses every imaginable tool to go to the depths of the ocean in a 19th century submarine. Jules Verne tells his story with present references to the throttling of the sea by plastic and a case for democratic leadership.

  • The Bakelite Masterpiece by Kate Cayley

    Faking Vermeers in WAM and Berkshire Theatre Group's Co-Production

    By: Maria Reveley - Oct 03rd, 2016

    The Bakelite Masterpiece by Kate Cayley in Stockbridge at the Unicorn Theatre is a co-production of WAM and Berkshire Theatre Group. An artist is on trial for selling Vermeers to the Nazis. He has to make a fake to prove his innocence. The play is based on a true story in post war Holland.

  • The Normal Heart by Larry Kramer

    Florida's Outre Theatre Company

    By: Aaron Krause - Oct 04th, 2016

    “The Normal Heart” deals with multiple thought-provoking, timely themes and issues that spur discussion, make us look inward and potentially take action: The need to work together toward a common goal, the uselessness of fighting and blaming one another, reconciliation among family members, the agenda of the press and government, the right to be recognized as valued citizens and feel loved as well as to live and die with dignity.

  • Sunday in the Park Stunning at Huntington

    Sondheim and Seurat Bring Out the Best in Each Other

    By: Mark Favermann - Oct 06th, 2016

    Stephen Sondheim’s stunning masterpiece centers on enigmatic painter Georges Seurat and his obssession with “the art of making art.” Certainly, one of the most acclaimed musicals ever, this Pulitzer Prize winner features a glorious score, with the songs “Finishing the Hat,” “Putting it Together,” and “Move On,” and is directed by Artistic Director Peter DuBois who did a superb job with last year's A Little Night Music.

  • Miller's A View from the Bridge

    Ivo Van Hove Directs at LA's Ahmanson Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 23rd, 2016

    The cutting edge, Dutch director Ivo Van Hove has transferred his stark and riveting production of Arthur Miller's A View from the Bridge from Broadway to LA. With cast changes there is the same stark staging that reworks a classic Miller play.

  • Berkshire's Fiorello Comes to New York

    BTG Production Transfers With a Wallop

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 21st, 2016

    I happened on the Berkshire Theatre Company production on East 13th Street in New York and was entranced. Packed into a small stage and directed to perfection by Bob Moss, the intimate setting works perfectly for this musical portrait of an oversized man.

  • Love’s Labor’s Lost

    Old Globe’s Lowell Davies Outdoor Festival Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 10th, 2016

    Director Marshall nicely controls the on stage silliness that frothy, light Shakespearean rom-coms deliver to audiences while at the same time providing the actors the opportunity to enjoy themselves. When they have a good time we have a good time.

  • Hershey Felder's Maestro

    Leonard Bernstein's Tanglewood and So Much More

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 11th, 2016

    After an early triumphant conducting performance, the press crowded into the green room to speak to the young Maestro. They then turned to his father Sam and asked," Why did you block your son’s early career in music,?" To which Sam replied "How did I know he was Leonard Bernstein?"

  • Invasion of Privacy by Larry Parr

    Florida's The Abyss Stage

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 12th, 2016

    Pigs Do Fly Productions is a small theater company that has, until this point, produced short plays featuring characters over age 50. “Invasion of Privacy” is its “first foray” into a full-length play, founder and artistic director Ellen Wacher announced before Saturday evening’s performance.

  • Sondheim's A Little Night Music

    Stratford Festival of Canada to October 23

    By: Herbert M. Simpson - Sep 12th, 2016

    Gary Griffin has established himself internationally as an exciting director and re-thinker of staging musicals and has created a streamlined but very elegant production with Stratford’s great ensemble. This is really a wonderful revival.

  • The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

    By C.S. Lewis; Adapted by Adrian Mitchell, at Stratford Festival

    By: Herbert M. Simpson - Sep 13th, 2016

    Stratford’s lovely production is enormously imaginative. The stage-creature that is Aslan, the holy lion, is inhabited by three men and made up of five separate segments which move fascinatingly together.

  • Sam Shepard's True West

    Chicago's Shattered Globe Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 15th, 2016

    In Sam Shepard's True West the duality of emotion lies in wait in every aspect of our tense two hours with brothers Lee (Joseph Wiens) and Austin (Kevin Viol). They compete and collaborate, love and hate, drink and work, reminisce and prevaricate.

  • The Birds Updated for the Stage

    Du Maurier to Hitchcock to McPherson

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 15th, 2016

    The Birds comes to the stage via a Daphne Du Maurier story on which Alfred Hitchcock's classic film of the same title was based. Now it provides the basis for playwright Conor McPherson's innovative play at 59E59th Street Theatres. McPherson has moved his story into a setting that is more reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road than Du Maurier and Hitchcock.

  • Life Sucks by Aaron Posner

    Chicago's Lookingglass Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 21st, 2016

    Life Sucks is Aaron Posner’s sort-of adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya, that often-performed masterpiece in which members of the rural bourgeoisie loll about, falling in love with the wrong people and longing to change their miserable lives. What is the play about? Love, longing and loss, as the characters tell us in their prologue. The basic elements of the human condition.

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