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Theater

  • Theater Review: RADIO GOLF (A Noise Within, Pasadena)

    Close-up of two people sharing an emotional moment with 'Radio Golf' text overlay.

    GOLF IS ON COURSE, BUT JUST A BIT UNDER PAR Pittsburgh in 1997 is the setting for the last of renowned playwright August Wilson’s series of 10 dramas that highlight aspects of African-American life in the 20th century. His is a play about gentrification, but a fascinating aspect of the 2005 work remains a rare…

  • Theater Review: A PICTURE OF TWO BOYS (New Conservatory Theatre Center)

    Two men back-to-back with a cityscape below, symbolizing dual perspectives.

    San Francisco’s New Conservatory Theater is known for encouraging and developing new artists, actors and directors. This month the new Director in Residence Richard A. Mosqueda is debuting the World Premiere of A Picture of Two Boys by Nick Malakhow. Set in a small town in rural Pennsylvania it’s about the unlikely friendship between two…

  • Theater Review: INTO THE BREECHES (North Coast Repertory in Solana Beach, San Diego)

    Promotional banner with bold text and a stone statue for a San Diego premiere.

    WOMEN IN PANTS? WHERE WILL IT ALL END? It’s 1942 and most of the men in Rhode Island are off to war. As such, most theatres, especially those who focus on the heavily male casts of Shakespeare, are shut down. But Oberon Playhouse’s assistant director Maggie Dalton (Melanie Lora) has another idea. With her husband…

  • Theater Review: A FEW GOOD MEN (La Mirada Theatre)

    Poster for the film 'A Few Good Men' with the American flag.

    YOU WANT THE TRUTH? SEE THIS ASTOUNDING PRODUCTION. Many are familiar with A Few Good Men, the 1992 courtroom drama film starring Jack Nicholson, Tom Cruise, and Demi Moore, which uses clashes of egos and attitudes to bluntly raise provocative issues, including the self-justifying arrogance of power and the complacency of a society that assigns…

  • Theater Review: JOE TURNER’S COME AND GONE (Huntington Theatre, Boston)

    A colorful poster for August Wilson's play "Joe Turner's Come and Gone."

    JOE TURNER’S HERE TO STAY Don’t let this gripping production of August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone come and go without seeing it yourself. This is classic American theater essential to our collective understanding of who we are, but that doesn’t mean you won’t find moments of pleasure in this adept production. From the…

  • Theater Review: DAMN YANKEES (Musical Theatre West)

    Baseball with devil horns and lipstick mark next to bold red and white text.

    A THREE-HOUR HOME RUN Clearly and cleanly, tried and true director Cynthia Ferrer and choreographer Alexis Carra Girbés trust the heart out of Adler and Ross’s 1955 Broadway classic, Damn Yankees.  Musical Theater West’s fall treat at Carpenter Performing Arts Center in Long Beach is glowing and glorious fun. Their faithful recreation gets richly rewarded by…

  • Theater Review: BASKERVILLE (Lambs Players in Coronado)

    Poster for Ken Ludwig's comedic play "Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery."

    WHEN SHERLOCK ISN’T A SURE LOCK Arguably Arthur Conan Doyle’s most successful Sherlock Holmes mystery The Hounds of the Baskervilles was actually first run as a serial from 1901-1902. It drew excited readers to pick up the next issue of London’s Strand Magazine to find out what would happen next in the dramatic story. As…

  • Theater Review: THE INHERITANCE (The Geffen)

    Promotional image for the play 'The Inheritance' featuring three men and show details.

    WHAT WILL YOU INHERIT? That Matthew Lopez’s sprawling near-7-hour 2-part play, with 3 acts in each part, keeps us captivated is quite a feat. Beautifully written, funny, sad, and hopeful, The Inheritance — a remarkable if flawed piece of ensemble theater — is a fresh, realistic look at gay life in NYC with reflections on…

  • Theater Review: LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS (San Diego Musical Theatre in Kearny Mesa)

    A quirky poster for "Little Shop of Horrors" with a carnivorous plant.

    PLANT YOURSELF AT SDMT Let’s start with the fact that it’s a show about a plant that craves human blood. Oh, and there’s this nerdy botanist Seymour who raises him, whom the plant intimidates into fulfilling its needs. That shouldn’t work. That really shouldn’t work. Yet, oh, it does! The 1982 hit off-Broadway musical (based…

  • Theater Review: AUNT JACK (New Conservatory Theatre Center)

    Illustration of a woman opening a door with a surprised man behind it, titled 'Aunt Jack'.

    AUNTIE JACK MAME PANSEXUAL: relating to having, or open to sexual activity of many kinds. POLYAMOROUS: the practice of, or desire for, intimate relationships with more than one partner with the consent of all partners involved. FLUIDITY: the quality of not being solid and able to flow. Joseph Alvarado, Nick Trengove, and Jennifer McGeorge Joseph…

  • Theater Review: THE ELABORATE ENTRANCE OF CHAD DEITY (Chance Theater)

    A muscular man with arms raised under bold golden text.

    BOOM BOOM BOOM It’s no wonder that Kristoffer Diaz‘s The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in drama. The veneer is a hip-hop comic entertainment about the dynamics and crazy characters in the world of pro-wrestling (ya know, the kind where the outcome is known to the muscled performers, i.e.,…

  • Theater Review: NINA SIMONE: FOUR WOMEN (South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa)

    Vintage-style poster featuring a young man with a sunflower and bold text.

    FOUR-GET ABOUT IT While her career may be skyrocketing as a TV writer, Christina Ham has not mastered the art of playwriting. I felt terrible thinking that after seeing the opening of her world premiere Nina Simone: Four Women at South Coast Rep last weekend (right when the Orange County Museum of Art, OCMA, had…

  • Theater Review: SCENE WITH CRANES (REDCAT in DTLA)

    Poster for the play 'Scene with Cranes' featuring a silhouette and cityscape.

    CRANES HAS A CLIPPED WING Last night at REDCAT in downtown Los Angeles, CalArts presented a new play by Octavio Solis, and the story is magnificent. In East L.A., a teenager named Nico has been mowed down by a car outside his home, but it’s a mystery as to why. And this was a special…

  • Theater Review: HAMILTON (North American Tour)

    OUR FUNKY FOUNDING FATHERS A hip-hop Alexander Hamilton? A beat-box Father of His Country? A jumping James Madison and a jiveass Jefferson who disses bigtime in a poetry slam? The ten-dollar bill will never be the same (or the dollar note for that matter). A sassy-spunky 2015 blast from the past set to irresistible rhythms,  Hamilton  is…

  • Theater Review: YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN (La Mirada Theatre)

    Classic movie poster for 'Young Frankenstein' with a vintage horror theme.

    A BRAINDEAD MUSICAL REANIMATED TO GLORIOUS LIFE In 2007, the Mel Brooks musical Young Frankenstein opened on Broadway to largely dismissive reviews. Some say it opened too close on the heels of Brooks’s powerhouse, The Producers. But when the touring version visited Los Angeles years later with original star Roger Bart imitating the film’s star…

  • Theater Review: ANIMAL FARM (A Noise Within in Pasadena)

    Three people wearing pig masks and sunglasses on a FARM magazine cover.

    THE FARM-TO-FABLE REVOLUTION IS HERE In what is Los Angeles’s best season since well before the pandemic, comes along the best show of the season. Only in New York would one expect the caliber of talent and technical elements than in A Noise Within’s production of Animal Farm. Riveting, frightening, and entertaining, director Julia Rodriguez-Elliot’s…

  • Theater Review: SILENT SKY (Sierra Madre Playhouse)

    Poster for the play 'Silent' by Lauren Gunderson at Sierra Madre Playhouse.

    THE SKY’S THE LIMIT IN THIS LOVELY PRODUCTION Unless you are an astronomer or an astronomy buff, you likely have never heard of Henrietta Swan Leavitt. She was an American woman who made discoveries during the early 1900s that helped later scientists establish the present scale of the universe. Leavitt’s story attracted the interest of…

  • Theater Review: OEDIPUS (Deaf West Theatre at The Getty Outdoor Theatre in Malibu)

    A BLINDINGLY BRILLIANT PRODUCTION Since its premiere in c. 429 BC, Sophocles’ Oedipus the King has been considered the Mount Olympus of Greek Tragedies, largely because it humanizes the theme of fate, a subject that fascinated the Greek culture; personally, I warrant that a story which contains patricide, unholy incest, self-mutilation and not leaving well…

  • Theater Review: TROUBLE THE WATER (Theatricum Botanicum)

    SMALLS MAKES A HUGE STORY In January 2017, President Barack Obama issued an executive order establishing Reconstruction Era National Monument in Beaufort County, noting the significance of Robert Smalls to our national story. In 2019, the park was renamed Reconstruction Era National Historical Park with a visitor center located just a few blocks away from…

  • Theater Review: OKLAHOMA! (National Tour)

    OKLAHOMA! AS WOKELAHOMA NOT SO OK ON TOUR This ain’t your mama’s Oklahoma! While Daniel Fish’s completely rethought and stripped-down production of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s 1943 watershed musical comedy Oklahoma!, now at the 2000+-seat Ahmanson as part of a national tour, has moments which will provoke post-theater discussions, I can’t help but believe that something…

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