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Tony Frankel
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FROM THE ARCHIVES — Theater Review: JEWTOPIA (Greenway Court Theatre in West Hollywood)
DON’T JEW HAVE ANYTHING BETTER TO DO? {From the Archives — Back in 2010, when Facebook was still fun and Broadway still flirted with stereotypes like they were going out of style (which they were), Stage and Cinema took a trip to Jewtopia. We survived to tell the tale — and we’re not even charging…
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Broadway Review: OPERATION MINCEMEAT (Golden Theatre)
A RIPPING GOOD YARN WITH A JOLLY GOOD CAST OPERATION MINCEMEAT EXTENDS ON BROADWAY When I first encountered Operation Mincemeat at Riverside Studios in London back in 2022, it was a scrappy, spirited affair that, while brimming with potential, occasionally left one scratching one’s head. Fast forward to its Broadway debut at the Golden Theatre,…
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Documentary Film Review: S.O.S. / STATE OF SECURITY (directed by Michèle Ohayon)
PUBLIC RELATIONS OR DOCUMENTARY? Richard Clarke may not be a household name, but his testimony before the 9/11 Commission in March 2004 was monumental: after serving under four Presidents as a security advisor, Clarke — whose warnings of possible attacks by Al Qaeda went dismissed — sat before America and said, “Your government failed you,…
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Theater Review: THE HEIDI CHRONICLES (Group Rep)
THE MORE THINGS CHANGE, THE MORE THEY STAY THE SAME A friend warned me that The Heidi Chronicles might feel dated—after all, Wendy Wasserstein’s Pulitzer- and Tony-winning play ends in 1987. Nothing could be further from the truth. Group Rep’s production, directed with a sure hand by Brent Beerman, proves Heidi’s journey from the late…
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Theater Review: ONE UP: THE MUSICAL (Actors Company)
ONE UP PLAYS TO WIN– WITH A CHEAT CODE FOR CHARM One Up: The Musical, which premiered at this year’s Hollywood Fringe and returns for encore performances, is a charming, if uneven, 80s-inspired tuner about an underdog game developer trying to make her mark. Set in 1987, the book by creator Mary Bonney and Weslie Lechner takes…
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Theater Review: IT’S A BIRD… IT’S A PLANE… IT’S SUPERMAN! (Foster Cat Productions at The Broadwater)
WHY CAN’T A SUPERHERO CATCH A BREAK? (OR A BROADWAY RUN) Foster Cat Productions is taking a gleeful leap off the tall building that is It’s a Bird… It’s a Plane… It’s Superman!, the 1966 Broadway musical that dared to blend comic book heroism with musical theatre razzmatazz. The result? A full-out, knowingly ridiculous, intriguingly…
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Album Review: HIGH STANDARDS (The Billy Lester Trio)
STANDARDS, UNSTANDARDIZED With High Standards, pianist Billy Lester reminds us that reinvention isn’t just possible in jazz — it’s the point. You may not need high standards to listen to this joy-filled album, but you will certainly have high standards after! Joined by bassist Marcello Testa and drummer Nicola Stranieri, Lester plunges into the American…
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Album Review: WOODLAND SONGS (Dover Quartet; Music of Jerod Impichcha̱achaaha’ Tate, Pura Fé, and Dvořák)
STRINGS OF THE SPIRIT: DOVER QUARTET’S WOODLAND REVERIE Woodland Songs is a wondrous, deeply American musical journey that feels both timeless and urgently of the moment. The Dover Quartet—never content to coast on their accolades—has once again pushed boundaries with a moving and masterfully performed album that connects Chickasaw and Tuscarora traditions to the classical…
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Theater Review: MÉNAGE À QUATRE (LA LGBT Center)
MÉNAGE À MEH, OR BOB & CAROL & DEAD & AIRLESS Last Saturday, I caught the world premiere of Ménage à Quatre, a play that seems to promise a farce but instead delivers a muddled mess. Written by Peter Lefcourt and directed by Ryan O’Connor, the show is a guest production at the Davidson/Valentini Theatre…
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Theater Review: THE FANTASTICKS (Ruskin Group Theatre)
THE KIND OF SEPTEMBER YOU’LL WANT TO REMEMBER With the original opening Off-Broadway in 1960 and running an astounding 42 years, The Fantasticks is a veritable classic amongst the repertoire of musical theater. This perennially popular piece by composer Harvey Schmidt and librettist & lyricist Tom Jones is a two-act chamber piece—an eight-character, minimalistic, melancholic, commedia…
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Highly Recommended Concert Theater: BYRD SONG (Concert Theatre Works and Gesualdo Six in L.A., S.F., Chicago, Ireland)
BYRD SONG IN SHADOW: CONCERT IN CANDLELIGHT, THEATRE OF DEFIANCE Hark! Attend, ye lovers of sacred sound and clandestine devotion, for the international tour of Secret Byrd—an evanescent glimpse into a hidden past—cometh to The Americas but ten times—16th-21st of July—in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago. In the flicker of candlelight within the vaults…
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Theater Review: THE NINA VARIATIONS (Broadwater Studio)
SEAGULL INTERRUPTED An extraordinarily well-written play—and a perfect choice for the Hollywood Fringe—Steven Dietz’s 75-minute one-act, The Nina Variations, takes the final scene of Chekhov’s The Seagull—that charged, heartbreaking reunion between Nina and Treplev—and explodes it into 43 compact riffs, each a new lens on longing. Dietz isn’t attempting parody or pastiche; instead, he digs…
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Theater Review: BECKY’S NEW CAR (Theatre 40)
Have you ever wanted to run away from your own life? In Becky’s New Car, now playing at Theatre 40, playwright Steven Dietz takes that midlife fantasy and drives it straight into a quirky, comedic romp filled with detours, breakdowns, and a few surprisingly sharp turns. Becky Foster (a charming and wonderfully grounded performance by…
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Obituary: CHARLES STROUSE (American Composer of Broadway and Film Dies at 96)
Charles Strouse, 96, the celebrated and multi-award-winning American film, television, and Broadway musical composer, responsible for such legendary songs as “Put on a Happy Face,” “Tomorrow,” “Those Were the Days,” and many others, died at his home in New York City on May 15. His remarkable career spanned over seven decades, during which time he…
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Recommended Theater: SEVEN & THE KELLOGG MURDERS (Palm Springs Young Playwrights Festival on June 8)
Palm Springs Young Playwrights Festival Announces 2025 Winners “Never be afraid to sit a while and think.” The words of playwright Lorraine Hansberry remind us of the quiet power of reflection and storytelling. This spirit of thoughtful, bold creativity comes to life again as the Palm Springs Young Playwrights Festival (PSYPF) announces the two winning…
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Theater Review: BEST DAD. NEVER. (Hudson Theatre Backstage, Hollywood Fringe Festival)
Coming to Hollywood Fringe: A Fatherhood Story You Didn’t Know You Needed Fatherhood isn’t always what you expect — and Best. Dad. NEVER. proves that’s exactly where the magic happens. Haig “Hike” Chahinian didn’t set out to write a feel-good story about fatherhood. Good thing, because this one-man outing is something better: honest, funny, and…
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Broadway Review: JUST IN TIME (Circle in the Square Theatre)
BEYOND THE SEA AND STRAIGHT INTO YOUR HEART Well, ring-a-ding-ding, folks — Broadway’s got itself a bona fide, velvet-voiced heartthrob lighting up Circle in the Square, and his name’s Jonathan Groff. In Just in Time, Groff doesn’t just croon — he glides, he grins, and he’s got more razzle-dazzle than a sock hop under a…
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Highly Recommended Concert: CÉCILE MCLORIN SALVANT (Royce Hall at UCLA, May 8, 2025)
CÉCILE MCLORIN SALVANT IS PRECISELY WHAT YOU’VE BEEN LOOKING FOR Hooray and hallelujah! Long before her CDs Ghost Song and Dreams and Daggers — a live double-CD set that won the 2018 Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Album — I have always been a fan of jazz vocalist and song interpreter extraordinaire Cécile McLorin Salvant….
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NOMINATIONS ANNOUNCED FOR THE 42ND ANNUAL ELLIOT NORTON AWARDS (Boston Theater Critics Association)
More than 140 nominations in over two dozen categories of outstanding actors, directors, designers, choreographers, musicians, and productions and 5 awards for visiting productions were announced today by the Boston Theater Critics Association (BTCA) for The 42nd Annual Elliot Norton Awards. The awards ceremony will be held on Monday, June 2, 2025 at 7 PM,…
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Dance Review: THIS REMINDS ME OF YOU (BODYTRAFFIC at The Joyce Theater in NYC)
LIGHTNING STRIKES TWICE: BODYTRAFFIC DAZZLES AGAIN, THIS TIME AT THE JOYCE Some performances linger in the body long after the curtain falls. I caught L.A. Dance Company BODYTRAFFIC at The Wallis in Beverly Hills last December and left the theater nearly giddy, unsure if I’d just witnessed lightning in a bottle. As luck would have…
Theater Review: I DO! I DO! (Palm Canyon Theatre)
by Stan Jenson | January 18, 2026
in Palm Springs
(Coachella Valley), TheaterTheater Review: EUREKA DAY (Dezart Performs)
by Jason Mannino | January 16, 2026
in Palm Springs
(Coachella Valley), TheaterOff-Broadway Review: THE DISAPPEAR (Minetta Lane Theatre)
by Rob Lester | January 15, 2026
in New York, TheaterTheater Review: YOUNG PLAYWRIGHTS FESTIVAL 2026 (Pegasus Theatre Chicago)
by Mitchell Oldham | January 14, 2026
in Chicago, TheaterTheater Review: LIBRARY LION (Adam Theater)
by Lynne Weiss | January 13, 2026
in Boston, TheaterTHE ROLE OF FAITH-INSPIRED LITERATURE IN CHILDREN’S STORYTELLING
by Susan Hall | January 13, 2026
in Books, ExtrasBroadway Review: BUG (Manhattan Theatre Club)
by Carol Rocamora | January 12, 2026
in New York, TheaterAudition Announcement: BEACHES, A NEW MUSICAL (Are You a Little Cee-Cee?)
by Connor McCormick | January 12, 2026
in New York, Theater



















