Areas We Cover
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Los Angeles
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Los Angeles Theater Review: WORKING (Lex Theatre in Hollywood)
SOMEHOW, IT KEEPS ON WORKING For those who have never seen the 1978 musical Working, the Production Company’s current revival may be somewhat of a revelation. The subtitle of Studs Terkel’s brilliant oral history of the same name – adapted for the stage by Stephen Schwartz and Nina Faso – is People Talk About What…
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Theater Review: ROCK OF AGES (National Tour reviewed at the Hollywood Pantages)
ROCK & ROLL CAMP The cast of Rock of Ages is riotously hell bent on making you have a good time. They beat you into submission with energy, wide smiles, and hair’”lots and lots of great big 80s hair. It’s a jukebox musical, with a slender thread of a boy-meets-girl story piecing together some of…
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Los Angeles Theater Reviews: SHORT EYES and CAGES (LATC in Los Angeles and Stella Adler Theatre in Hollywood)
IMPRISONED BY ART Most literary intellectuals have as much business writing about life behind bars as incarcerated felons have teaching text analysis. In the last few months, Los Angeles has hosted two plays written by playwrights who have spent time, and set stories, in prisons. Miguel Pinero did his time as a thief and drug…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: THE SPIDEY PROJECT: WITH GREAT POWER COMES GREAT RESPONSIBILITY (Studio/Stage in Los Angeles)
OH WHAT A TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE While Theatre Unleashed’s cast and crew have a gloriously and unashamedly good time bringing The Spidey Project to the West Coast, it’s a shame that their source material isn’t the parody it promised to be in the press release. There are some very funny moments in this silly,…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: GROUNDLINGS ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE and LET THEM EAT SUNDAY (The Groundlings Theatre in West Hollywood)
GROUNDLINGS ZERO The best part about cleaning up my DVR last weekend was catching up on Raising Hope, the hilarious FOX comedy. It’s funny, surprising, naughty, sometimes dirty, and wholly original. In one episode they give Cloris Leachman a beautifully timed joke about how she could only have an orgasm with her late husband when…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: AMERICAN NIGHT: THE BALLAD OF JUAN JOSÉ (Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City)
AMERICAN NIGHT SUCKS, BUT IT SWALLOWS Juan José, a Mexican cop sick of being on-the-take, has crossed the border in search of citizenship, leaving his pregnant wife behind. Panicking over flash cards while studying for his U.S. citizenship exam, Juan falls asleep and the rest of this 90 minute, intermissionless, astoundingly uneven cavalcade of skits,…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: THE COLOR PURPLE (Celebration Theatre in Hollywood)
HATE THE MUSICAL, BUT LOVE, LOVE, LOVE THE PRODUCTION Whether you love or hate the musical version of The Color Purple, no one, and I mean no one, can or will deny that this is one of the finest productions ever staged in a small theater in Los Angeles. Director Michael Matthews has taken a…
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Los Angeles Theater Reviews: THE YELLOW HOUSE and SPECIAL DELIVERY (Katselas Theatre Company at the Skylight Theatre)
TWO MORE ONE-PERSON PLAYS AT THE SKYLIGHT Burke Byrnes’s The Yellow House (Fridays) and Harry Hart-Browne’s Special Delivery (Saturdays) both possess the virtues and weaknesses of one-person shows. Both have the bracing intelligence of their creators. Both are very well performed. Both are highly personal and yet avoid the narcissism that personal works are often guilty of….
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Los Angeles Theater Review: WHY WE HAVE A BODY (Edgemar Center for the Arts in Santa Monica)
WHY DO WE HAVE WHY WE HAVE A BODY? Every few years a vanity project comes along so appalling that one’s jaw hangs open for its entire running time, saliva connecting the lower lip to the floor in a single unbroken strand. The planets have to align very particularly for a travesty of this magnitude…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: THE SEAGULL (Antaeus Theatre Company in North Hollywood)
A GROUNDED SEAGULL In Chekhov’s The Seagull, the young, angst-ridden writer Tréplev maintains that “What we need are new forms! We need new forms, and if we can’t have them, then we’re better off with no theater at all.” Yet when Chekhov wrote this line in 1895, he was referring not to the interpretation of…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA (A Noise Within in Pasadena)
A NEGLECTED CLASSIC GONE AWRY The story of Antony and Cleopatra shares with Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet those two indispensable elements of tragedy: love and death. While Romeo and Juliet is perhaps Shakespeare’s best known play, Antony and Cleopatra is all but neglected. This is all the more surprising considering contemporary interest in its principal…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: BALM IN GILEAD (Coeurage Theatre Company at Actor’s Circle Theatre)
THRILLING HOPELESSNESS Go up into Gilead, and take balm, O virgin, the daughter of Egypt: in vain shalt thou use many medicines; for thou shalt not be cured. – Jeremiah 42:11. In 1964, Lanford Wilson wrote a play startling in its representation of a gritty present, and even more surprising now for its continued relevance. …
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Los Angeles Theater Review: SARAH’S WAR (Hudson Mainstage Theatre in Hollywood)
ACTS OF CONSCIENCE All theater is inherently political, in that a story is only as objective as its teller. But some plays go straight to the 24 hour news cycle definition of politics, addressing problems of international diplomacy divisive enough that only a stage may politely host them. Sarah’s War, Valerie Dillman’s play enjoying its…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: A FEW GOOD MEN (Sky Lounge in North Hollywood)
RISE ABOVE THEATRE MOVEMENT HANDLES THE TRUTH Just three years after Aaron Sorkin’s A Few Good Men (1989) was produced on Broadway, the play’s popularity was eclipsed by the film version with Tom Cruise. Revivals of the play are rare, but based on the vivid production by Rise Above Theatre Movement (RATMO), the courtroom drama…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: SLITHER (Chalk Repertory in Hollywood)
FANGS FOR THE MAMMARIES Carson Kreitzer’s 2003 play Slither conforms to a certain category of American text: the women’s empowerment monologue extravaganza. Hallmarks of the genre include plotless, drama-free speeches of subjugation, delivered by female figures unfettered by character; a monologue format occasionally and inexplicably interrupted by thematically related scenes also lacking dramatic tension; and…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: FIGURE 8 (Theatre of NOTE in Hollywood)
ORIGINAL SIN In their fevered exploration of the seven deadly sins, Figure 8 playwright/co-director Phinneas Kiyomura and co-director Jerry Kernion seem hell bent on making sin seem as original as possible. Visually, their approach results in moments of genuine power. Emotionally, it has its limits. Kiyomura rather enigmatically calls Figure 8 a collection of eight…
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Theater Review: NEW JERUSALEM, THE INTERROGATION OF BARUCH DE SPINOZA AT TALMUD TORAH CONGREGATION: AMSTERDAM, JULY 27, 1656 (West Coast Jewish Theatre, L.A.)
A LACK OF PHILOSOPHY Elina de Santos’ production of David Ives’ 2008 New Jerusalem, The Interrogation of Baruch De Spinoza at Talmud Torah Congregation: Amsterdam, July 27, 1656 is the play’s west coast premiere, although L.A. Theatre Works presented the show last year.* This incarnation, however, is almost certainly the first to contain no moments…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: THE COST OF THE ERECTION (Blank Theatre in Hollywood)
SUPER STRUCTURE The Cost of the Erection: The title of Jon Marans’ new play sounds like one of those gay shows where comely actors get naked to pump up the box office. There is some veiled nudity here’”integral to the plot’”but this isn’t a Naked Boys Singing knockoff. While the title may be two-edged, clever,…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: THREE YEAR SWIM CLUB (East West Players in Los Angeles)
THREE YEAR SWIM CLUB SWIMS UP STREAM Ever since mankind began telling tales, the “overcoming adversity” story has remained ever-popular. From cave wall pictures depicting a hunter’s prowess over the Woolley Mammoth to David overpowering Goliath to calculus teacher Jaime Escalante’s efforts with underprivileged students, these stories are meant to inspire. The heroes, most often…
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San Diego Theater Review: NEXT FALL (Diversionary Theatre)
IT’S THE SCRIPT THAT TAKES A FALL The main thing missing from Next Fall, Geoffrey Nauffts’ play about a gay couple with disparate religious beliefs, is credibility. No matter how much the playwright attempts to tackle some very serious modern issues – religion, gay rights, family values – it is difficult to take the play…



















