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Tony Frankel
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Los Angeles Music Preview: STAGE AND CINEMA’S TOP HOLIDAY CHORALE CONCERT PICKS, 2014
TESTED AND APPROVED Whether amateur or professional, containing sacred pieces or hummable traditionals, a cappella or accompanied by orchestra or just piano, the list of worthy chorale holiday concerts in the Los Angeles area numbers more than 40 this year. Allow me to whittle down your choice of choral affairs by offering the Stage and…
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Los Angeles Music Preview: EXPRESSIONIST & IMPRESSIONIST (Le Salon de Musiques)
COME BE IMPRESSED BY WHAT’S EXPRESSED For the third concert of Le Salon de Musiques’ fifth season, Masters Rediscovered, French-American Pianist/Melodist and Artistic Director François Chouchan has selected the works of four composers, three of whom are mostly unknown but not because they lack genius. Chouchan’s carefully selected programs have proved time and again that…
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CD Review/Original Cast Opera: INVISIBLE CITIES (written by Christopher Cerrone)
IT’S ONLY INVISIBLE IF YOU KEEP YOUR EYES OPEN The first time I heard Christopher Cerrone’s opera Invisible Cities, based on Italo Calvino’s 1972 fictional novel, was during The Industry’s interactive theatrical experience at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles. Along with about 200 other patrons, I donned state-of-the-art headphones and followed singers and dancers…
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CD Review/Classical: MASTERPIECES IN MINIATURE (San Francisco Symphony)
MINIATURES MADE MONUMENTAL A confession: I’ve never been a fan of classical compilation CDs. Whatever the conceit’”The Greatest Hits of (fill in composer) or Romantic Favorites’”collections tend to consist of incongruous pieces, selected for no other reason than that the publisher had them lying around and didn’t know what else to do with them. In addition,…
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San Francisco Theater Preview: SOMETHING FOR THE BOYS (42nd Street Moon)
SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT Beginning November 26, 42nd Street Moon will revist one of its earliest hits, the mirthful 1943 farce Something for the Boys. This rarely performed boisterous musical is a fascinating look into a time when Broadway was about to undergo significant changes from silly book musicals into classier fare. Even though Cole Porter’s…
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San Francisco Theater Preview: PROMISES, PROMISES (San Francisco Playhouse)
PROMISING PROMISES, I PROMISE The premise of Promises, Promises is one you are probably familiar with even if you have never seen the 1968 musical, which opens in a splashy revival at San Francisco Playhouse this week. An ambitious junior executive, Chuck Baxter, wants to move up the corporate ladder. In return for promises of…
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Los Angeles Theater Preview: STEEL PIER (Musical Theatre West in Long Beach)
KANDER & EBB’S DANCE MARATHON MUSICAL FINALLY ARRIVES IN LOS ANGELES I can understand why you hear about a “Staged Reading” and want to bolt in the opposite direction. Don’t let that title fool you. Indeed, in the last year, some of the best nights in the theater can be found at these events. Especially…
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L. A. Music Preview: RENAISSANCE: REAWAKENED (Los Angeles Master Chorale)
AWAKENED AND REFRESHED Music was an essential part of civic, religious, and courtly life in the Renaissance. The rich interchange of ideas in Europe, as well as political, economic, and religious events in the period 1400–1600 led to major changes in styles of composing, methods of disseminating music, new musical genres, and the development of…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: A SILVER LINING (a Working Theater at Art Share L.A.)
SILVER DOESN’T EVEN GET A BRONZE It took fifteen actors, two writers, two directors, and three designers to create a Working Theater’s one-hour interactive theatrical experience, a Silver Lining (Matt Soson is co-director, co-writer, actor, and composer, so I assume it’s his baby somehow). With mannered acting, poor narrative-free writing, cheap-looking design elements, and bemusing…
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Music Review: VARÈSE’S AMÉRIQUES WITH MULTIMEDIA (Los Angeles Phil’s in/SIGHT series at Disney Hall)
THE LASERIUM OF THE 21ST CENTURY While the result of the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s first in/SIGHT offering last weekend was mixed, the experimentation itself was a resounding success. Visual Artist Refik Anadol’s brand new multi-media fantasia accompanied Esa-Pekka Salonen’s vigorous and explosive rendition of Edgard Varèse’s Amériques, the final piece of an eclectic program titled…
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Bay Area Theater Preview: BREAKFAST WITH MUGABE (Aurora Theatre Company)
HAUNTED BY POWER Aurora Theatre once again proves its might by presenting the West Coast Premiere of a great play. Opening this week and running through Dec. 7, 2014, Breakfast with Mugabe takes on one of the most vilified but fascinating characters in world politics: Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe. A polarizing figure on the world stage,…
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San Francisco Theater Preview: KURIOS – CABINET OF CURIOSITIES (Cirque du Soleil U.S. Premiere)
A CASE WHERE CURIOSITY WON’T KILL THE CAT Celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, the global phenomenon Cirque du Soleil arrives at San Francisco’s AT&T Park for the U.S. Premiere of its 35th production: KURIOS – Cabinet of Curiosities. Utilizing the Montreal-based company’s trademark astonishment and enchantment, KURIOS, which runs November 14 – January 18, 2015, has…
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Los Angeles Theater Preview: COMPLETENESS (Firefly Theater and Films & VS. Theatre Company)
COMPLETELY SMART The exciting and insightful writer Itamar Moses may be one of our brightest playwrights, yet he has astoundingly been given short shrift by the L.A. theater community. With over 10 produced plays (Bach at Leipzig) and musicals (Nobody Loves You and the upcoming The Fortress of Solitude with Michael Friedman at The Public), Moses…
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Los Angeles / Tour Dance Preview: BALLETBOYZ (Ahmanson Theatre)
LET’S HEAR IT FOR THE BOYZ Conquering the globe with appearances on stage and screen, BalletBoyz is one of the most audaciously unique and groundbreaking influences in modern dance. The distinctive style merges remarkable dance, both robust and nimble, with music and film. The UK company’s 2014 U.S.A. tour doesn’t make a lot of stops, but…
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San Francisco Opera Preview: LA CENERENTOLA (San Francisco Opera)
GRANTING YOUR WISH FOR A FUN OPERA Gioachino Rossini’s Cinderella (La Cenerentola) was written in 1817 during the bel canto era when operas were written to showcase beautiful singing, and Jean-Pierre Ponnelle’s charming witty, whimsical, and heartfelt San Francisco Opera production’”running November 9–26, 2014 at the War Memorial Opera House’”will showcase as Angelina (aka Cinderella)…
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San Francisco Theater Preview: SHAKESPEARE’S R&J (New Conservatory Theatre Center)
REIMAGINING THE REIMAGINED AT NCTC No one can deny why Romeo and Juliet has achieved cult status. Not only is Shakespeare’s comic tragedy one of the most enduring stories ever told, but it is a miracle of construction, containing highly relatable and seemingly countless universal themes and motifs that magically intertwine: War, bad timing, kinship, honor,…
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Los Angeles Music Review: LE SALON DE MUSIQUES (Fifth Season Opener: Hanson, Bridge, and Ireland)
GREEN IRELAND, HANDSOME HANSON, AND A BRIDGE TOO FAR Le Salon de Musiques, the most cultivated, accessible, pleasant, exciting and educational chamber concert outfit in, well, anywhere I have been, opened its fifth season with a concert of its usual riches: contextual insight, perfect performances, rarely heard but astounding selections, hobnobbing, and gourmandizing. The three…
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L.A. Music Preview: THE CZECH PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA (Valley Performing Arts Center)
THE HEART OF THE MATER Decca just released a 6-CD box set by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra (CPO) of the complete symphonies and concertos of Antonín Dvořák, and I don’t remember when I’ve been quite so taken with any interpretation of Dvořák’s work. Not only is the recording quality impeccable, but Maestro Jiří BÄ›lohlávek clearly has…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: A OR B? (Falcon Theatre)
SLIDING BORES A or B? The question of Ken Levine’s title refers to the choice between two parallel universes set forth in his two-act two-hour two-hander. Played out simultaneously with flip-flopping scenes that last anywhere from 30 seconds to a few minutes or longer, this seriously regrettable dumbed-down rom-com concerns a comely woman who interviews…
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Los Angeles Dance Review: L.A. DANCE PROJECT (Theater at Ace Hotel)
COOL AS A CUCUMBER BUT NOT AS REFRESHING In Boys in the Band, the character of Harold states: “Although I’ve never seen my soul, I understand from my mother’s Rabbi that it’s a knock-out. I, however, cannot seem to locate it for a gander. And if I could, I’d sell it in a flash, for…
Theater Review: ST. NICHOLAS (Black Button Eyes / City Lit / Chicago)
by Croydon Fernandes | July 3, 2026
in Chicago, TheaterFAST PAYOUT CASINOS USA 2026 — 5 BEST INSTANT WITHDRAWAL CASINOS RANKED
by Michael Carr | July 3, 2026
in ExtrasTheater Review: MEN OF SOUL (Black Ensemble Theater / Chicago)
by Mitchell Oldham | July 1, 2026
in Chicago, Theater

















