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Tony Frankel
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Los Angeles Theater Review: PATERNUS (Rogue Machine Theatre)
FATHERS AND SONS The sensitive, expressive, and pensive son. The emotionally cool, impatient, and badgering father. Together, this family dynamic seen throughout history is so familiar that playwright Daphne Malfitano even titles her new play in Latin. Paternus, now receiving its world premiere at Rogue Machine, begins with pater Steve and his scion Stephen trapped…
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Los Angeles Theater Preview: LADY WINDERMERE’S FAN (Chalk Repertory Theatre)
L.A.’S BIGGEST FAN It surprises me that Lady Windermere’s Fan isn’t produced as frequently as the ubiquitous The Importance of Being Earnest. Beginning Friday, Chalk Rep is remounting last year’s sold-out, site-specific production, and I highly recommend you give it a visit. The titular character in Oscar Wilde’s play is a vivacious young woman, married only…
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Los Angeles Music Review: MICHAEL FEINSTEIN SINGS GERSHWIN (Pasadena POPS)
FEINSTEIN’S GOT PLENTY OF SOMETHING Charismatic, appealing, boyish, excited, and eager to please, Michael Feinstein appeared before a proliferation of people (and a pulchritude of peacocks) to gush out Gershwin songs at the L.A. Arboretum last Saturday. This consummate showman’s one-man tunefest began with a 1950’s educational-style film on two huge LED video screens on…
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Los Angeles Music Preview: DUDAMEL & BEETHOVEN (LA Phil at the Hollywood Bowl)
A TRIO AND A FIFTH While there are quite a few well-made recordings of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano, rarely will you get a chance to see it performed live. Often referred to as the Triple Concerto, it is a distinctive work in its category; it establishes an amalgamation between the…
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National Tour Review: ONCE (Pantages in Hollywood)
MORE THAN ONCE Ironically, the real-life love affair celebrated on screen about collaborators Glen Hasard, an Irish composer, and Markéta Irglová, a Czech songwriter, fizzled after John Carney’s 2007 film became a success (well, it’s not called Once for nothing). But the Tony-triumphant theatrical version, now at the Pantages in a soaring, enchanting, and lovely national…
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National Tour Theater Review: WE WILL ROCK YOU (Ahmanson Theatre)
WE WILL SCHLOCK YOU A huge West End hit for twelve years (just closing last May), this awful jukebox musical does for Queen what Mamma Mia! did for ABBA, Buddy for Buddy Holly and the Crickets, and Jersey Boys for The Four Seasons. But it’s much closer to the first example, if only because the…
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Los Angeles Music/Concert Preview: TAIKO NATION (hosted by TAIKOPROJECT at the Aratani/Japan America Theatre)
TAIKO TAKES LOS ANGELES BY STORM Ever since man could bang a stick on a rock, percussion has been a way for humans to express themselves. From the battlefield to the theater to your teenager’s bedroom, percussion has evolved from communicative and ritualistic purposes into an art form. We take for granted the use of…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: BUYER & CELLAR (Center Theatre Group/Mark Taper Forum)
HELLO, GORGEOUS Jonathan Tolin’s keen and tremendously funny new show Buyer & Cellar, performed by Michael Urie, imagines what it would be like for Alex More, a young gay man struggling to make it as an actor in Hollywood, to find himself working in the artificial mall Barbara Streisand built in the basement of her…
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Los Angeles Music Preview: I AM HARVEY MILK and CITY OF ANGELS: GMCLA’s 35th Anniversary Concert (Disney Hall)
GET READY TO BE MILKED In 1978, on the night of Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone’s assassinations, an unprecedented candlelight march brought mourners to San Francisco’s City Hall. The newly formed San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus canceled a rehearsal for their upcoming debut concert and opted to perform at the makeshift memorial service. It…
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Los Angeles Dance Review: ROMEO AND JULIET (National Ballet of Canada)
I DREAM’D A DREAM TO-NIGHT The National Ballet of Canada (TNBC), which presented its thrilling rendition of Christopher Wheeldon’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in 2012, returned to the Music Center last night with a gloriously Technicolor production of Romeo and Juliet, commissioned by TNBC’s artistic director, Karen Kain (the world…
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Los Angeles Music Review: JOSHUA BELL AND FRIENDS (LA Phil at the Hollywood Bowl)
BELL OF THE BOWL Violinist Joshua Bell has been known to hold old-fashion salon-type concerts in a performance space on the second floor of his renovated apartment in New York City. It had long been his desire to invite different kinds of artists and various friends and have an eclectic mix of people playing in…
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Los Angeles Theater Preview: AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY (L.A. Theatre Works at UCLA)
A HOT AUGUST CAST Having witnessed many Broadway hits at the beginning and end of their runs (and the touring companies they spawned), it is fair for me to say that the magic and crackling electricity accompanying subsequent casts is rarely the same. And so it has been for Tracy Letts’ August: Osage County, a…
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Los Angeles Music Preview: PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND & THE DUSTBOWL REVIVAL (Ford)
PRESERVED AND REVIVED I first visited New Orleans in August, 1978. I only had one night to spend in the French Quarter and swore I would take in every known debauchery in that short span. At that time, the legal drinking age was 18 in the Quarter (the federal government has since insisted it be…
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Bay Area Theater Preview: THE COMEDY OF ERRORS (California Shakespeare)
EXPECT NO ERRORS IN THIS COMEDY One of Shakespeare’s earliest plays, The Comedy of Errors is also his shortest and most farcical. In fact, while scholars argue over the classification of other Bard works, there is no denying that this play’”based on the works of Roman playwright Plautus, considered to be the inventor of low…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: THE CONDUCT OF LIFE (The Vagrancy at Asylum / Hollywood Fringe Festival)
DARK SUBJECT MATTER LEAVES US IN THE DARK Inspired by Theater of the Absurd, Cuban expatriate María Irene Fornés (b. 1930) cut her teeth during the Off-Off-Broadway avant-garde movement. She may have nine Obie Awards to her credit, but this feminist playwright’s deliberately dark and opaque style willfully obfuscates her narrative, which keeps the meaning…
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San Francisco Theater Preview: INTO THE WOODS (San Francisco Playhouse)
DELIVERING THE GOODS WITH INTO THE WOODS Somewhere between “Once Upon a Time” and “Happily Ever After” there is a very adult world of tests, losses, disappointments, and grief. Despite this, we assert our agency; or as a baker’s wife sings in Into the Woods, “If you know what you want, then you go and…
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CD Review: WEST SIDE STORY (San Francisco Symphony, First Ever Complete Concert Performance)
I HAVE A LOVE Conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony have just released a live recording of the first ever complete concert performances of West Side Story. I wanted to make sure that I gave the two-disc set four listens before writing a review. Why? I’m biased. The 1957 original cast album…
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Original Cast CD Review: HERE LIES LOVE (Nonesuch)
MEGALOMANIA WAS NEVER SO MUCH FUN Move over Evita, there’s another Queen of Hearts in town. And she likes diamonds too. I’m talking about Imelda Marcos’”she of the thousand pairs of shoes’”who is the centerpiece of a dazzling new pop operetta by David Byrne and Fatboy Slim. It’s currently the hottest ticket in New York….
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Los Angeles Theater Review: THE CAVE: A FOLK OPERA (Three Clubs Lounge / Hollywood Fringe)
CAVE-IN The press release refers to The Cave as being inspired by Beauty and the Beast and Persephone. In Greek mythology, Persephone was abducted by Hades, the god-king of the Underworld. But this Fringe entry takes place not in Hell but an imagined abode of souls who have departed life as we know it: The…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: SONGS FOR A NEW WORLD (A Cuppa Tea at The Complex / Hollywood Fringe Festival)
A WORLD APART FROM TYPICAL FRINGE FARE Like a breath of fresh air, Jason Robert Brown’s Songs for a New World far exceeded my expectations of both the Fringe and Brown’s uneven song cycle. This is an early work from the Tony-winner for Parade and Bridges of Madison County. “It’s about one moment,” Brown said….
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