Share

Theatre

  • Southern Comfort at Barrington Stage

    Poignant New Transgendered Musical

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 25th, 2013

    In varying stages of gender reassignment and an ability to pass in hostile Bubba Land a circle of friends are the focus of a new musical Southern Comfort having its world premiere at Barrington Stage. For audiences willing to accept this complex work on its own terms the experience to remarkable.

  • Elements Theatre Company of Cape Cod

    A Midsummer Night’s Dream, August 9-11 and 16-18

    By: Elements - Jul 25th, 2013

    Elements Theatre Company of Cape Cod kicks off its 2013-14 year-long tribute to William Shakespeare with one of his most popular comedies, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, August 9-11 and 16-18 at Paraclete House, Rock Harbor, Orleans. The inspiration for numerous adaptations, including Ingmar Bergman’s “Smiles of a Summer Night,” Stephen Sondheim’s “A Little Night Music,” and a star-studded 1999 feature film with Kevin Kline and Michelle Pfeiffer, A Midsummer Night’s Dream is the perfect escape on a hot summer’s eve.

  • Nicholas Martin’s Gorgeous Pygmalion at WTF

    Stars Robert Sean Leonard and Heather Lind in Shaw’s Masterpiece

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 24th, 2013

    As a strong willed, crafty and independent guttersnipe Eliza Doolittle sold flowers to support herself. As a refined lady, transformed through a wager between the linguists Professor Henry Higgins and his colleague Colonel Pickering, in order to survive in circa 1913 London, she is forced to sell herself. As Shaw wrote his feminist inspired play there was no happy ending. Few if any directors have adhered to his intent which infuriated Shaw. In this stunning Williamstown production director Nicholas Martin provides a new twist,.

  • Adams Updates The Salem Witch Trials at CATF

    A Discourse on the Wonders of the Invisible World

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 24th, 2013

    With A Discourse on the Wonders of the Invisible World it seems that Liz Duffy Adams has taken on the daunting challenge of a sequel to Arthur Miller's classic The Crucible. The real life adolescent hysterics who sent the innocent to the gallows, Abigail Williams and Mercy Lewis, reconnect with widely divergent views a decade later. The new play is a part of the 23rd annual Contemporary American Theatre Festival.

  • Jane Martin’s Riveting H2O at CATF

    Intriguing Drama by Mysterious Playwright

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 23rd, 2013

    Of the five plays of the 23rd Contemporary American Theatre Festival in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, through July 28, the most buzz and impossible to get ticket, is generated by the elusive Jane Martin’s H2O.

  • Sam Shephard's Heartless at CATF

    Triage in West Virginia

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 23rd, 2013

    Sam Shephard's play Heartless had its 2012 premiere at Signature Theatre in New York City. It's getting a rewrite in a second production at Contemporary American Theatre Festival in West Virginia. While it has familiar Shepardesque aspects is that enough to breath life back into a surreal and enervating play?

  • Modern Terrorism by Jon Kern in West Va.

    Contemporary American Theatre Festival to July 28

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 22nd, 2013

    Jon Kern, a writer for The Simpsons, was inspired by the aborted bombing attempt in Time Square to create the comedy Modern Terrorism: Or They Who Want to Kills Us and How We Learn to Love Them. This darkest of comedies attempts to humanize and humorize a suicide bomber avenging American drone strikes and attacks on Islamic citizens.

  • Contemporary American Theatre Festival

    West Virginina Meeting of American Theatre Critics Association

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 22nd, 2013

    The 23rd annual Contemporary American Theatre Festival opened on July 5 and ends on July 28 in Shepherdstown, West Virginia. Last week some 75 members and guests of the American Theatre Critics Association met in Shepherdstown to view and discuss five new plays. During a brutal national heat wave there was a busy schedule of performances, meetings, lectures, panel discussions, banquets and visits to surrounding Civil War sites. It was an intense and richly informative experience.

  • Big Lake Big City at Lookingglass in Chicago

    Theater Noir by Keith Huff Thrills

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 21st, 2013

    At the play’s opening, a spot light focuses on the sculpture of a Modigliani head. Heads in all forms are the focus of Big Lake Big City. Detective Podaris’ head has become unscrewed, Stew’s head screwed with a driver, and head shrink Dr. Susan’s head is stolen. Go figure.

  • Blood and Gifts at Chicago's Timeline

    J.T. Rogers Compelling Play Produced Brilliantly

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 19th, 2013

    Probing current issues is one of the Timeline Theatre’s missions. Blood and Gifts suits their purposes well. It is a terrific theater piece, full of mystery and high drama. Nick Bowling and the Timeline group offer not just a well-conceived and brilliantly acted version of J.T. Rogers play, but also an intimate one.

  • The Jungle Book at the Goodman Theater

    At Boston's Huntington Theatre Company. in September

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 17th, 2013

    This curious mix of writer/director Mary Zimmerman and Disney creates an uplifting, visually gorgeous stage on which the dancers choreographed by Christopher Gattelli, prance and entrance.

  • The Whipping Man at Vermont's Dorset

    Infuses History with Humanity

    By: Leanne Jewett - Jul 15th, 2013

    The Whipping Man, playing at the Dorset Theatre Festival, is a profound and moving theatrical experience that lingers long after the final curtain.

  • Merchant of Venice at Old Globe

    Summer Shakespeare Festival in San Diego

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 15th, 2013

    San Diego's Old Globe annual Shakespeare Summer Theatre Festival in the Lowell Davies Outdoor Theatre is in full sway. The second production is the ambivalent and oft misinterpreted story “The Merchant of Venice”, deftly directed by Adrian Noble. Scholars for centuries have debated the true meaning of the Bard’s play.

  • Rocco Sisto in Rarely Produced Richard II

    Launching a S&Co. Tetraology of Four History Plays

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 13th, 2013

    Over the next four years Shakespeare & Company will present a tetralogy of four history plays. The cycle begins this season with Richard II directed by Timothy Douglas and starring Rocco Sisto. Next year Johnathan Epstein will directed Henry IV.

  • When a Play Expands a Theater

    The Weston Theatre's Bold Production of Next to Normal

    By: Leanne Jewett - Jul 13th, 2013

    With more than two dozen scene changes and a huge challenging score, Next to Normal would be a challenging production in any theater, but the Weston takes it on and succeeds. We are all the fortunate beneficiaries of its courage.

  • A Typical WTF Press Conference?

    Actors are People Too

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Jul 13th, 2013

    The Williamstown Theatre Festival (WTF) season is in high gear. We attended the first WTF press conference to cover the next two productions of 'Pygmalion' by George Bernard Shaw and Johnny Baseball, the Boston Red Sox story, now a musical. It turned out to be a lively event!

  • Kate Burton in Stoppard’s Riveting Hapgood

    Quantum Mechanics of the Spy Game

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 12th, 2013

    I think I saw a great production of Tom Stoppard's Hapgood, starring Kate Burton at the Williamstown Theatre Festival. But then there's the Uncertainty Principle. Whether one enjoys this show depends upon whether you view it from a Newtonian or Quantum Mechanics point of view. It may or may not be the best drama of the Berkshire season. In a Stoppardesque sense.

  • Batter Up for Johnny Baseball at Williamstown

    Controversial ART Musical Steals Second Base

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 11th, 2013

    If shows are not instant hits in regional theaters they rarely get a second chance. It is especially difficult to develop musicals. Johnny Baseball, a musical about the Boston Red Sox and the Curse of the Bambino, opened at American Repertory Theatre in June, 2010. The idea started in 2003 and development, with six new songs and other changes continues. It opens on July 24 at Williamstown Theatre Festival. During a recent press conference we asked about love/ hate relationships which resulted in Globe critic Louise Kennedy losing her job in reaction to her Johnny Baseball review.

  • Summer Shakespeare in San Diego

    A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Old Globe

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 10th, 2013

    It is fitting that “Midsummer…”, creatively directed by Ian Talbot, be the selection to kick off the 2013 Old Globe’s summer festival season. It’s one of Shakespeare’s most enduring comedies filled with oddball characters and silly liaisons and situations.

  • Robert Sean Leonard in WTF's Pygmalion

    Talks About Life After Dr. Wilson on House

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 10th, 2013

    Robert Sean Leonard appeared as Dr. Wilson the best friend of the curmudgeon Hugh Laurie's Dr. House from 2004 to 2012. They shot 175 episodes of the TV series House. That left Leonard the financial freedom to pick and choose roles in theatre. From July 17 to 27 he stars at Williamstown Theatre Festival as Professor Henry Higgins in Shaw's Pygmalion directed by Nicholas Martin. The production, with changes, originated at the Old Globe in San Diego.

  • Amy Herzog's Belleville at Steppenwolf

    Disturbing, Intriguing, Good Theater

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 10th, 2013

    The Belleville section of Paris, in which Belleville by Amy Herzog is set, is known as one of the hotbeds of the Revolution of 1848, as an ethnic melting pot, and also one of the high points of Paris, literally. It competes with Montmartre for the best view of the fabled city. Now it witnesses a couple unravel.

  • Broadway in the Berkshires

    Stars Shine in Benefit for Shakespeare & Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 09th, 2013

    Broadway in the Berkshires, produced by Deborah Grausman and hosted by John Douglas Thompson, was presented as a benefit for the Education and Training programs of Shakespeare & Company. Singer and actor Grausman, appearing this summer in Master Class, was able to call in favors from her many and diverse Broadway, Off Broadway and S & Co. colleagues. Over 300 tickets were sold and upwards of 75 Shakespeare & Company artists and other special guests were also in attendance. The benefit raised $110, 000.

  • Foreign Affairs – at Berliner Festspiele

    Comments and Thoughts

    By: Angelika Jansen - Jul 09th, 2013

    The Berliner Festspiele 2013 continue: From June 27 to July 14 with an array of performances etc. under the title: 'Foreign Affairs.' Theatre, music, dance, video, multi- and interdisciplinary works to actively draw in the public have been scheduled. Foreign, as in new and cutting edge - and foreign, as in international companies and artists, are presented.

  • Oklahoma at the Colonial in Pittsfield

    Like Watching Corn Grow

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 07th, 2013

    The iconic 1943 Oklahoma, with the magnificent music of Rodgers and Hammerstein would seem to be a shoe in hit for the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfeld. While the production has stunning moments, caveat emptor, the whole is less than the sum of its parts. After five decades the jingoism and heart on the sleeve Americana which wowed audiences during World War II is hardly convincing today.

  • Weston's New Works

    Weston Playhouse Supports the Development of Two New Plays

    By: Leanne Jewett - Jul 06th, 2013

    As part of its New Works Programs, Vermont's Weston Playhouse is offering its audiences a dynamic new experience—the opportunity to witness and be part of a step in the development of two new plays.

  • << Previous Next >>