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New York
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Broadway Theater Review: SIDE SHOW (St. James)
A TWIN/LOSE SITUATION Henry Krieger’s succulent score and the co-leads’ powerful, penetrating voices are among the few reasons to see Side Show, a dull bio-musical set in the first half of the 20th century, about a set of conjoined twins’”loosely based on the life of the British-born Hilton sisters’”who go from being exhibited in a…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: MAJOR BARBARA (The Pearl Theatre Company)
MAJOR TO MINOR The Pearl Theatre Company and Gingold Theatrical Group’s revival of George Bernard Shaw’s 1905 comedy Major Barbara feels like theater for people who go to shows for the same reasons many of us watch television programs’”not because they’re great but because they’re good enough, occasionally entertaining, and it’s something to do. Not to…
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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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Off-Broadway Theater Review: POWERHOUSE (Sinking Ship Productions at New Ohio Theatre)
SINKING SHIP SAILS IN UNCHARTERED WATERS My favorite element in Powerhouse, a delightful new devised play created by director Jon Levin, writer Josh Luxenberg and the Sinking Ship Ensemble, is the puppets: a cantankerous booby and a good-natured otter. The booby makes its first appearance when three 1940’s TV writers are brainstorming without success. Frustrated,…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: STICKS AND BONES (The New Group)
BRAWL IN THE FAMILY Ozzie (Bill Pullman) and Harriet (Holly Hunter) are living out the American dream. They have a house, a car, a TV, and two sons: happy-go-lucky high-schooler Rick (Raviv Ullman), and his older brother David (an intense Ben Schnetzer), who is off in Vietnam fighting for his country. The New Group’s revival…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: LIFT (Crossroads Theatre Company at 59E59 Theaters)
BETTER CROSS THIS OFF YOUR LIFT Nothing quite fits together in Walter Mosley’s flat, agenda-heavy and undisciplined Lift, about a young black man and woman who find themselves trapped in a skyscraper elevator after the building is hit by a terrorist attack; Marshall Jones III’s unfocussed direction doesn’t do the material or his actors any…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: JAMES DICKEY’S DELIVERANCE (Godlight Theatre Company at 59E59)
SEE THE MOVIE Imagine John Boorman’s film Deliverance staged, “panties” scene and all, as a piece of dinner theater, with all the performers looking very serious and projecting their voices, the way they believe real men should, as they mime handling things like paddles and bows, and describe scenes whose drama is supposed to be…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: JACUZZI (Ars Nova)
WARM TUB The lights come up on a couple, Helene (Hannah Bos) and Derek (Paul Thureen), reading in a Jacuzzi, inside a cozy Colorado skiing cabin one cold winter evening sometimes in the 1980s. They’ve made themselves at home, yet a certain unmoored quality about them suggests that they don’t quite belong. Suddenly a young…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: SHAKESPEARE’S SONNETS (Berliner Ensemble at BAM)
SHAKING UP SHAKESPEARE Shakespeare wrote 154 sonnets, only 25 of which are included in Berliner Ensemble’s Shakespeare’s Sonnets. But that is more than enough to make for an exciting theatrical event. What’s more, the sonnets are accompanied by Robert Wilson’s surreal staging and a score by singer/songwriter Rufus Wainwright. All this should make for a…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: LYING (Blessed Unrest at The Interart Theatre)
TRUTH IN LIES “I exaggerate,” states Lauren (Jessica Ranville) at the beginning of Lying, which gets a delightful staging by Jessica Burr and her company Blessed Unrest at the Interart Theatre. Matt Opatrny’s exciting and intelligent adaptation of Lauren Slater’s Lying: A Metaphorical Memoir follows Lauren from age ten into her twenties. She recounts her…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: TEMPEST (La MaMa)
TEMPESTUOUS AND TAME The Tempest offers a kaleidoscope of intrigue, betrayals, political shenanigans, murderous intent, monsters, masques, mayhem, magic, and romance. Julie Taymor’s disappointing 2010 big-screen, big-budget version proved that head-spinning CGI-candy is not enough to make all of these ingredients satisfying. Working with a stripped-down stage at La MaMa, director Karin Coonrod puts her…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: UNCANNY VALLEY (59E59 Theaters)
AN UNCANNY PERFORMANCE FROM ALEX PODULKE In Thomas Gibbons’ Uncanny Valley, directed by Tom Dugdale, Alex Podulke plays Julian, a sophisticated artificial human, who was created for the purpose of having his mind implanted with a dying billionaire’s consciousness in order that the billionaire may live on. Claire (Barbara Kingsley) is the neuroscientist tasked with…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: THE MONEY SHOT (MCC Theatre at Lucille Lortel)
SHOW ME THE MONEY Two couples are having aperitifs at a luxurious home in the Hollywood Hills (sexy stylish set by Derek McLane). They are Steve (Fred Weller), an aging action superstar; Missy (Gia Crovatin), his very young and ditsy wife of one year; Karen (Elizabeth Reaser), a movie star who’s quickly approaching middle-age and…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: CHINESE COFFEE (Roy Arias Theater; directed by Louise Lasser; starring Austin Pendleton)
WHEN BEING A STARVING WRITER IS NO LONGER ROMANTIC Austin Pendleton’s breathtaking performance and Ira Lewis’s penetrating script make Chinese Coffee, with all its flaws, a most worthwhile outing. In fact, at $18 a ticket, this show, directed by Louise Lasser, is all but mandatory viewing for lovers of personal, intimate theater, as well as…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: ILLUSIONS (Jerome Robbins Theater at the Baryshnikov Arts Center)
THE UNKNOWABLE WORLD THAT WE LIVE IN Is it possible for true love to be unrequited? Or, to put it another way, is it possible for unrequited love to be true? These questions, on the surface as deceptively simple as Ivan Viripaev’s story-telling framework, are at the core of his play Illusions, which uses the queries…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: ICEBOUND (Metropolitan Playhouse)
THE GOOD, THE LOST, AND THE VAIN Owen Gould Davis, Sr.’s thoughtful and masterfully crafted 1923 Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Icebound, which explores Puritan vanity and its many ironies, gets an admirable staging by Alex Roe and his all-around excellent cast at the Metropolitan Playhouse. Though not particularly startling or revolutionary, the show is good, solid…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: UNCLE VANYA (Pearl Theatre Company)
A MERRY APPROACH TO A MELANCHOLY CLASSIC These days when directors revive a classic, they have to decide whether their approach will be either to modernize the play or mount it as a period piece, true to the spirit of the times in which it was created. Sometimes, as in the case of the The…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: DAUGHTERS OF THE SEXUAL REVOLUTION (WorkShop Theater)
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLINTERED THING It’s after dark in Westchester County in 1976. Do you know where your parents are? Still under the spell of an ebullient consciousness raising meeting, two suburban Moms are sharing a joint and flirting. Joyce Horowitz (Christine Verleny) explains the marijuana was a gift for her big 4-0; she’s a…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: ROCOCO ROUGE (Company XIV)
A CABARET SHOW THAT GOES FOR BAROQUE Mae West, the sage and sybarite from Brooklyn, used to say, “Let joy be unrefined,” a point of view that also suits Austin McCormick, artistic director and choreographer of Company XIV. His latest extravaganza Rococo Rouge retools the roisterous risk-taking revelry he’s known for: bare skin, sultry ballet,…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: TRADE PRACTICES (HERE at Pershing Hall on Governors Island)
DRAMA IN THE MARKETPLACE Trade Practices, which launches HERE’s 2014-2015 season, takes the audience on a tour into the bowels of the corporate world where deals are negotiated, promises are broken, and fortunes are made and lost. It was created by director Kristin Marting (HERE artistic director) and set designer David Evans Morris, who were…



















