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Tony Frankel
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Los Angeles Theater Review: HAMLET (Los Angeles Women’s Shakespeare Company at the Odyssey Theatre)
THERE IS NOTHING EITHER GOOD OR BAD, BUT CASTING MAKES IT SO Can it really be twenty years now that I have admired Lisa Wolpe’s work? Time and again, the actress has impressed me with her ability to seamlessly inhabit male Shakespearean roles while bringing fresh significance to characters as disparate as Romeo, Iago and…
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Bay Area Theater Review: PLíCIDO DOMINGO (Greek Theatre at UC Berkeley)
DOMINGO DAZZLES What do world-renowned singers do once they have reached the age of retirement? On the strength of their name, they fill cabarets and concert houses across the land with nostalgia-filled patrons who seek a glimpse of their heroes live. Recent years have seen both opera and Broadway stars in just such concerts, and…
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Los Angeles / Regional Theater Review: DEATH OF A SALESMAN (South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa)
NOT MUCH LIFE IN DEATH The miracle of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman is that it contains so many themes relevant to today’s world’”the American Dream, the disconnect of father and son, a lifetime of work resulting in fiscal emptiness, self-deception’”that this 1949 play can truly be called timeless. Yet so lifeless and lacking…
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Los Angeles Music Review: ROMANTIC FAVORITES (LA Phil at the Hollywood Bowl)
A STUNNING TRIFONOV MAKES HIS HOLLYWOOD BOWL DEBUT It was both fascinating and distracting to watch 22-year-old Daniil Trifonov, the current Big Thing of the piano world, perform Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 (1897) at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday. Hunched over the keys and stroking them with a fierce tenderness, he consistently appeared to…
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Bay Area Theater Review: AFTER THE REVOLUTION (Aurora Theatre)
I SAY YOU WANT THIS REVOLUTION After the Revolution is a chewy new play about family dynamics and the difficulty of making moral judgments, especially after the fact. For audiences thirsting for a literate, intelligent, stimulating, and accessible new play, it will fill the bill nicely. The Amy Herzog 2010 drama premiered Off Broadway and…
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San Francisco Opera Review: MEFISTOFELE (San Francisco Opera)
HEAVEN OR HELL? I surmise that opinions will be all over the map for San Francisco Opera’s production of Mefistofele, Arrigo Boito’s 1868 take on the Faust legend. To begin with, this is a clunky, fragmented and uneven opera. There are a few memorable tunes, especially for the chorus, and there are some juicy parts. And while the…
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San Francisco Theater Review: MACBETH (We Players)
SOUND AND FURY INDEED The idea of site-specific theater’”theatre which is performed in unconventional spaces compatible to the script’”is nothing new, but it seems to be gaining ground. From New York (Then She Fell) to Los Angeles (The Manor) to Chicago (The Madness of Edgar Allan Poe) to Oregon Shakespeare Festival (Willful), theater practitioners are…
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San Francisco Theater Review: IN FRIENDSHIP: STORIES BY ZONA GALE (Word for Word)
A PRAIRIE THEATER COMPANION As many newer plays fail to grasp the art of storytelling, Word for Word Performing Arts Company offers compelling narratives via short stories which are performed literally, well, word for word. Their 20th anniversary production is a seamless compendium of Zona Gale stories which take place in the town of Friendship…
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Regional Theater Review: THE UNFORTUNATES (Oregon Shakespeare Festival)
THE TITLE SAYS IT ALL The most unfortunate thing about The Unfortunates is that a lot of talent (five writers, actually), having spent three years developing this new hybrid-musical, lacked a leader who could teach them how to tell a story. The show, directed by Shana Cooper and choreographed by Tiffany Rachelle Stewart, is consistently…
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Regional Theater Review: THE TAMING OF THE SHREW (Oregon Shakespeare Festival)
TO THINE OWN SELF BE SHREW What do you get when you cross Carl Perkins, a biker, and Chris Isaak? In David Ivers’ rendition of The Taming of the Shrew, that rockabilly man with a sympathetic sensibility and arm tattoos is none other than Petruchio, the man who comes to Padua to woo, tame and…
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Regional Theater Review: THE LIQUID PLAIN (Oregon Shakespeare Festival)
NOT PLAIN BUT TOO LIQUID In her tale of two slaves who seek passage back to Africa in 1791 Rhode Island, Naomi Wallace has constructed a compelling narrative based on true events and people. Yet in her personal voyage to examine the slave trade and those who profited from it and rebelled against it, Wallace…
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Bay Area Theater Preview: GOOD PEOPLE (Marin Theatre Company)
GOOD PEOPLE GETS BAY AREA PREMIERE Having seen productions of David Lindsay-Abaire’s Good People at both the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles and Steppenwolf in Chicago, I can attest that this is the playwright’s best work (it is currently the most produced play in America). Knowing the quality and professionalism of Marin Theatre Company, whose…
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Regional Theater Review: MY FAIR LADY (Oregon Shakespeare Festival)
A LOVERLY LITTLE LADY The 1956 musical My Fair Lady, based on George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, was so transplendent in production values that the myriad subsequent revivals all strive for the same glorious sets and highly ornate costumes, even going so far as to emulate Cecil Beaton’s original costume design. While the prohibitive costs involved…
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San Francisco Music Preview: SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY 2013-14 OPENING NIGHT GALA (Davies Symphony Hall)
AUDRA MCDONALD MAKES A RARE VISIT TO SAN FRANCISCO As if San Francisco Symphony’s (SFS) annual opening night galas were not the most anticipated events of any year, SFS and Music Director Michael Tilson Thomas have announced that singer and actress Audra McDonald will join the orchestra to perform selections from the American Songbook for…
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Bay Area Theater Review: NO MAN’S LAND (Berkeley Repertory Theatre)
A PRODUCTION OF, AND IN, NO MAN’S LAND It seems that people are forever cursed by their feeble attempts to make their lives neat and tidy. Whatever illusion of structure is created’”a calendar, a grocery list, a mortgage, a marriage license’”life is constantly changing. Humankind uses religion, science and the arts to explain away this…
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San Francisco Theater Review: CAN YOU DIG IT? THE –˜60’s – BACK DOWN EAST 14TH (The Marsh)
YEAH, I CAN DIG IT The third installment of monologuist Don Reed’s autobiographical coming-of-age trilogy has been extended yet again at the Marsh, and following on the heels of this San Francisco run, Can You Dig It? The ‘60s – Back Down East 14th will move to the Marsh Berkeley. The first installment, East 14th,…
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Bay Area Theater Preview: LADY WINDERMERE’S FAN (California Shakespeare Theater)
CAL SHAKES’ BIGGEST FAN The titular character in Oscar Wilde’s play Lady Windermere’s Fan is a vivacious young woman, married only two years, who never coughs or displays any other signs of illness. At one point in the play, she refuses to shake hands with a visitor. “My hands are all wet with the roses,”…
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San Francisco Theater Review: HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH (Boxcar Theatre)
EXTRA INCHES East Berlin expat Hedwig was forced to leave a rather important bit of himself’”later herself’”behind the Wall in order to pass physical exams and immigrate to America with the G.I. of her dreams. Move ahead one year: impoverished, divorced and the casualty of a distortedly bungled gender removal procedure, creator John Cameron Mitchell’s…
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San Diego Theater Review: DOUBLE INDEMNITY (Old Globe in Balboa Park)
STAGE NOIR In many ways, the stage adaptation of James Cain’s novel, Double Indemnity, is a radical departure from the iconic film from director/writer Billy Wilder. The film’”co-written by Cain’s contemporary and rival Raymond Chandler, who was known to deride Cain’s novels’”contains deliciously noir dialogue that Wilder and Chandler used to get past the censors….
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San Francisco Music Preview: JESSYE NORMAN IN CONCERT (Davies Symphony Hall)
NORMAN’S CONQUESTS For those who haven’t heard, Soprano Jessye Norman’s July 31 concert with pianist Mark Markham at Davies Symphony Hall was postponed so that Ms. Norman could perform in Washington, D.C. at a ceremony of the U.S. Congress to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington. The San Francisco concert has been…
Theater Review: MEN OF SOUL (Black Ensemble Theater / Chicago)
by Mitchell Oldham | July 1, 2026
in Chicago, TheaterWHY A BOX OFFICE HIT CAN STILL LOSE MONEY
by Leslie Rosenberg | July 1, 2026
in Extras, FilmTheater Preview: PROOF (El Portal Theatre / North Hollywood)
by pwsadmin | June 30, 2026
in Los Angeles, Theater

















