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Theatre

  • GableStage's 2021-22 Season

    The First Under New Producing Artistic Director Bari Newport

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 24th, 2021

    GableStage in Coral Gables will open its 2021-22 season with Arthur Miller's The Price. The nonprofit, professional theater company near Miami had planned to produce Miller's drama last season, however, the pandemic closed theaters. GableStage's 2021-22 season will be the first under new producing artistic director Bari Newport. Newport succeeds Joe Adler, a South Florida theater icon who has died.

  • Dr. Glas Based on Norwegian Hjalmar Soderberg

    California's North Coast Repertory Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 24th, 2021

    American journeyman playwright and author Jeremy Hatcher has fashioned a new version of Dr. Glas that takes into considerations the heart of the story set in 1905 Sweden, while creating a riveting psychological thriller, and a perfect vehicle for the talent of polished British actor Daniel Gerroll, in a solo tour-de-force performance that is smartly directed by NCRT artistic director David Ellenstein.

  • The Song of Summer by Lauren Yee

    Produced by San Francisco Playhouse

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 25th, 2021

    “The Song of Summer” contains many stock situations, but they are written and performed with great flair, and the outcomes are not always as expected.  Importantly, the play’s subtext provides layers of depth that result in a thoughtful work.  Though the work doesn’t wallow in self-importance, this is not an episode of “Happy Days.”  

  • Wolf and Badger

    World Premiere by Miami Lakes' Main Street Players

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 26th, 2021

    Wolf and Badger is a tight and intense drama receiving its world premiere production at Main Street Players in Miami Lakes. The drama by Michael John McGoldrick shows what can happen drug use becomes habitual. The play takes place in 2006 in a working class neighborhood of Syracuse, N.Y. Main Street Players' strong production runs through Aug. 29. People can watch the play virtually if they choose.

  • Salome in Munich

    Marlis Petersen, Kirill Petrenko and Krzysztof Warlikowski

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 26th, 2021

    The Munich State Opera is presenting Salome, the opera by Richard Strauss. The set is dark, yet in full view as we enter the opera house. A man is fidgeting over a desk deep in the set. On it sits a banker’s lamp with its classic green hood. A patent for this lamp was taken out in 1909. In a prologue to the opera, Mahler songs are being sung, another brief clue to date the monumental, elegant setting created by Malgorzata Szczesniak. 

  • And Away We Stared

    Chicago's Trap Door Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Jul 28th, 2021

    And Away We Stared is an inventive and theatrically imaginative production, using text from the works of writers Charles Mee, Gertrude Stein and Matei Visniec, a Romanian-French playwright frequently produced by Trap Door. The theater is committed to “seeking out challenging yet obscure works and bringing them to startling life on stage” and they’ve succeeded here.

  • Irish Repertory Theatre Streams The Cordelia Dream

    Marina Carr Play in Dublin

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 06th, 2021

    The Irish Repertory Theatre has expanded our notion of performance in their streamed productions.  A company with a small theatre (146 seats in the main house), now offers its consistently superior productions to the wide audience they deserve.

  • Sondheim's Into the Woods

    At Conn'sPlayhouse on Park

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 08th, 2021

    The production is enjoyable due to the hard work and talent of the cast. Because of various complications caused by Covid, the cast does not include any members of Actor’s Equity.

  • Parsifal at Bayreuth

    Celebrating 139 Years of Wagner

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 12th, 2021

    One hundred and thirty-nine years after Richard Wagner’s final opera Parsifal premiered at the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, it was performed in concert in this house that Wagner built for its performance. Apparently, Richard Wagner himself took the podium to conduct Act III of Parsifal at the Festival performance in 1883.  He died later that year in Venice. There is  no recording of the performance, but witnesses  commented on the extremely slow tempos and the majesty of the reading.

  • Maltz Jupiter Theatre

    The Company's 2021-22 Season

    By: Aaron Krause - Aug 12th, 2021

    Maltz Jupiter Theatre in Southeast Florida will kick off this upcoming season by presenting "Jersey Boys" in a baseball stadium. The season opens on Jan. 11, with Jersey Boys running from Jan. 11-30. Maltz Jupiter Theatre will re-open following a $36 million expansion. Highlights of the theater’s expansion include a new larger stage.

  • Oedipus Rex

    Legacy Theatre CT

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 13th, 2021

    This production features a translation by Ian Johnston, who has translated many Greek works. I have read better translations, this one lacks poetry. At times the wording is jarring, too informal for such a work.

  • Walden by Amy Berryman

    TheaterWorks in Conjunction with Riverfront Recapture

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 14th, 2021

    Welcome to Walden the new play presented by TheaterWorks in conjunction with Riverfront Recapture running through Sunday, Aug. 29. It will also be available for streaming from Sunday, Aug. 15 to Sunday, Aug. 29.

  • World Premiere by Composer Eve Beglarian

    Twenty-four Double Basses in a Grove of Trees

    By: Jessica Robinson - Aug 16th, 2021

    When was the last time you listened to music that was composed by a piece of birch wood? Eve Beglarian, in collaboration with superstar bassist Robert Black, one of the founding members of the renowned Bang-on-a-Can All-Stars, has composed a fascinating new work entitled "A Murmur in the Trees."

  • A Tony Award for Woodie King Jr.

    At Last

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 16th, 2021

    Woodie King Jr. will receive a Tony Honoring for Excellence in the Theatre on September 26. These awards were established in 1990. It's about time! King and his New Federal Theatre have been producing excellent work for over fifty years.

  • George M. Cohan Tonight!

    An Irish Repertory Theatre Streaming Production.

    By: Aaron Krause - Aug 19th, 2021

    The Irish Repertory Theatre (IRT) is streaming a shortened version of George M. Cohan Tonight! through Aug. 29. IRT gave the piece its theatrical debut in 2006. The original IRT production earned award nominations. While reservations are free, IRT suggests a $25 donation for those who can afford it.

  • The Lord of Cries by John Corigliano

    Commissioned by Santa Fe Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 19th, 2021

    “The Lord of Cries” is an unusual melange of two literary works written two millennia apart.  The more recent is Bram Stoker’s “Dracula,” which has been used as the basis for operas before, but none have entered the repertoire.  Adamo concludes that Stoker must have known the other contributing piece, Euripides’s “The Bacchae.” 

  • Benjamin Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream

    At Santa Fe Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 20th, 2021

    Shakespeare’s frequent conceits include mistaken identities, confused love matches, supernatural interventions, play-within-a-play, and multiple plot lines, but “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” embraces them all, and more.  Several  threads are interspersed and overlapping throughout the play and opera’s narrative that may cause confusion to the uninitiated.

  • Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin

    At Santa Fe Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 22nd, 2021

    “Eugene Onegin” not only represents the greatness of Russian opera but is one of the fine representatives of the whole operatic idiom. Director Alessandro Talevi marshals the creative team to give a look that blends traditional and modern elements. 

  • Elektra in Salzburg

    Supreme Strauss

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 25th, 2021

    Elektra, the stage drama that underlies the opera Elektra, was written by Hugo von Hoffmansthal for a theatre venue run by Max Reinhardt in Berlin. Reinhardt would go on to found the Salzburg Festival in 1920. After a hundred years, this Festival is inarguably one of the world’s most satisfying. Their new production of Elektra is classic and thrilling.

  • Faust by Berlioz in Salzburg

    A Masterpiece Revealed

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 27th, 2021

    La Damnation of Faust is a glorious dramatic legend.  It bombed in Paris, much to composer Hector Berlioz’ dismay and confusion. Yet even members of the orchestra he conducted at the premiere asked the composer about notes he wrote.  “That note does not exist,” complained a horn player. “It sounds like a sneeze.”  “That’s just what I wanted,” replied Berlioz. No one contests the musicality of the "Romane" aria, "D'amour l'ardente flame," so beautiful that it was selected to conclude the memorial service for Maria Callas.

  • Having Our Say- the Delaney Sisters First 100 Years

    At Ivoryton Playhouse

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 28th, 2021

    These two sisters, 103 and 101 at the time of the play, regale us with incidents and observations on their lives and opinions. And what experiences they are. They talk about their family’s history (and photos are projected) of slavery and freedom.

  • Sweet Land, Opera of the Year

    The Industry Produces Grand Opera

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 29th, 2021

    Sweet Land by a consortium of artists formed by the adventuresome Los Angeles company The Industry has won the award for best new opera in 2020 from the Music Critics Association of North America.  Music by Du Yun and Raven Chacon. Libretto by Douglas Kearney and Aja Couchois Duncan . Directed by Cannupa Hanska Luger and Yuval Sharon.

  • The New Agit Prop

    American Repertory Theatre

    By: A.R.T - Sep 01st, 2021

    The press release for fall programing at American Repertory Theatre contained a signifying statement.

  • The Suburbs

    Thrown Stone Theatre in Ridgefield i

    By: Karen Isaacs - Sep 02nd, 2021

    After a two block walk, the audience arrives at the lawn of the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum for The Caterers by Tony Menses. At least you can understand why a museum dedicated to recent art was chosen, since the play takes place sometime after 2030.

  • Angela's Ashes: The Musical

    An Irish Repertory Theatre Streaming Production

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 02nd, 2021

    Angela's Ashes: The Musical is a new musical adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Frank McCourt memoir. The award-winning, Off-Broadway Irish Repertory Theatre will stream the show from Sept. 9 through Sept. 22. The online production follows an in-person, critically-acclaimed run in Ireland in 2017.

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