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Theater
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Theater Review: AMADEUS (Pasadena Playhouse)
PATRON SAINT OF THE SECOND-RATE A rigorously intelligent and theatrically thrilling revival that restores Shaffer’s parable to full force Schopenhauer once drew a distinction between talent, which hits a target no one else can hit, and genius, which hits a target no one else can see. The remark could serve as an epigraph for Peter…
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Theater Review: HEDDA GABLER (Remy Bumppo)
IBSEN’S ICONIC ANTIHEROINE STILL MAKES A MESS OF POLITE SOCIETY A sleek, sharply acted production driven by a magnetic central performance, even at a lightning pace Redtwist Theatre may have “Defiant Femmes” as its seasonal theme, but headstrong, prickly, and complicated women are commanding stages all over Chicago at present. For its first production of…
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Theater Interview: ADAM KARSTEN (Director of “Guys and Dolls” at CVRep)
The Coachella Valley Repertory (CVRep) continues its 2025-2026 season by rolling the dice on one of Broadway’s most decorated masterpieces: Frank Loesser’s Guys and Dolls. Running from February 25 through March 15, 2026. This new production brings the colorful underworld of 1930s New York to the desert, blending high-stakes gambling with the unpredictable business of…
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Theater Review: COME BACK, LITTLE SHEBA (American Blues Theater)
MISERY, MARRIAGE, AND A MIDWEST LIVING ROOM THAT CAN’T HOLD IT ALL A powerhouse pairing turns Inge’s domestic ache into something bruising, intimate, and hard to shake It may be the season of love, but the zeitgeist in Chicago theatre seems to be the season of miserable couplings. There’s Strindberg at Steppenwolf and Court; Ibsen…
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Theater Review: MI CASA ES SU TEATRO (Mishpocha Woods Artist Compound in Austin)
The success of Hyde Park Theatre’s Mi Casa Es Su Teatro (A dangerously domestic DIY fringe fest) — lies in its ability to showcase the symbiotic relationship between art and community. The works presented this year — ranging from the polished dramaturgy of Bradley Michalakis to the improvisational spirit of Drew and Vivian’s Recommended For…
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Theater Review: THE HOBBIT (Young People’s Theatre of Chicago at Greenhouse Theater Center)
TOLKIEN’S CLASSIC QUEST BECOMES INVENTIVE ENSEMBLE STORYTELLING A clever, resourceful adaptation that turns theatrical minimalism into maximum adventure. Taking you “There and Back Again” in the best possible way, this sparkling production is a delight. The first thing that hits you when you walk into the upstairs theater at the Greenhouse is Jacqueline Penrod’s gorgeous,…
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Theater Review: IMPROBABLE FICTION (Masquers Playhouse in Point Richmond)
WRITERS RUN AMOK WHEN IMAGINATION TAKES OVER THE ROOM A nimble, high-energy ensemble comedy that turns creative frustration into gleeful theatrical chaos As hilarious today as it was when it debuted 21 years ago, Alan Ayckbourn’s Improbable Fiction is enjoying a terrific run at Masquers Playhouse in Point Richmond. Director Angela Mason draws a crisply…
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Theater Review: THE CIRCLE (Greenway Court)
A FAMILY REUNION TURNS INTO A PRESSURE COOKER A fascinating first act can’t survive a nearly three-hour drift into exhaustion Stacey Martino Rivera’s world premiere The Circle at Greenway Court Theatre begins with a smart framing device: a teenage presentation by Ana (Ava Rivera) on restorative culture that gestures toward indigenous healing circles—and then cuts…
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Theater Review: HAIR (Palm Canyon Theatre)
THE AGE OF AQUARIUS RETURNS TO PALM SPRINGS A vibrant production overcomes a frustrating book Palm Canyon Theatre’s (PCT’s) productions are always top-notch, with excellent singing, dancing, and acting. Hair, which opened last weekend, is no exception. The musical is a rollicking celebration of the hippie movement of the 1960s which took the theatre world…
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Off-Broadway Review: AN IDEAL HUSBAND (Storm Theatre at A.R.T./New York Theatres)
WITNESSING WILDE’S WONDERFUL WIT IS ALWAYS WELCOME Storm Theatre delivers elegance and precision, if not always sparkle Lurking under the characters’ control, courtesies and curtseys, calculated comments, formal wear and formalities, etiquette, etc., are their real feelings and fears that forced smiles with gritted teeth and British stiff-upper-lip mask. Mocking manners and marriage in the…
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Opera Review: ABDUCTION FROM THE SERAGLIO (Pacific Opera Project)
MOZART MEETS THE FINAL FRONTIER Pacific Opera Project boldly goes where singspiel has gone before Begin with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s 1789 complex and comic singspiel Die Entführung aus dem Serail, aka Abduction from the Seraglio, commissioned by the Habsburg monarch Joseph II, who famously complained to Mozart, “Too many notes.” Now take Gene Roddenberry’s visionary…
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Theater Review: HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING (San Diego Musical Theatre)
HOW TO SUCCEED IN PRODUCING A MUSICAL Offices tend not to be much fun, which is why they are ripe for exploring undertones of emotion and comedy in scripts like Office Space, Working Girl, 9 to 5, and NBC’s The Office. Throw in some music (okay, a LOT of music) and dynamic choreography and you’ve got a…
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Off-Broadway Review: THE MONSTERS (Manhattan Theatre Club at NY City Center)
BOXING, BLOODLINES, AND BURIED TRAUMA A smart, muscular, triumphant and thrilling two-hander that lands every blow What’s worse? The monsters we fight, the monsters we carry, or the monsters we are? Luckily for us, the emotional two-hander The Monsters, which opened tonight at Manhattan Theatre Club’s NY City Center Stage II, safely contains one such…
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Theater Review: HOLIDAY (Goodman Theatre)
A SAVVY, GLORIOUS UPDATE It took three productions, but Goodman’s Centennial Season has finally hit its stride. Pour one out for Richard Greenberg, one of the great American playwrights of the last several decades, who, even after his death last year, has graced us with a stellar update of a screwball gem from 1928. Philip…
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Theater Review: THREE COCONUTS (West Coast Jewish Theatre in Santa Monica)
SHABBAT, SLAPSTICK, AND THREE SUITORS IN 1968 CHICAGO The comedy cracks open plenty of laughs, then lets the shell sit too long. A domineering Jewish mother, her sharp-tongued teenage son, three oddball suitors, a hippie pimp, and two Chicago cops walk onto a stage. Chaos follows. The question is whether the play knows when to…
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Theater Review: THE DANCE OF DEATH (Steppenwolf)
It’s the little ways you try together; cry together; lie together—that make perfect relationships – Stephen Sondheim, Company Once upon a time, in a land far, far away, in a high stone tower, there lived a beautiful woman who hated her husband of twenty-five years and waited every day for him…
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Boston Theater Review: LITTLE WOMEN (Actors’ Shakespeare Project)
LITTLE PATIENCE FOR LITTLE WOMEN Girls interrupted, potential unrealized Actors’ Shakespeare Project is an esteemed local theater company here in Greater Boston and frankly one of my favorites. Kate Hamill, one of the most produced living playwrights in the United States, is also one of my favorite playwrights. Not everyone loves the way she applies…
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Theater Review: OF MICE AND MEN (Lamplighters)
HOPE WITH CALLOUSED HANDS: A QUIET MASTERPIECE REVISITED John Steinbeck’s play Of Mice and Men came quickly after the success of his novella by the same name. In fact, the play opened on Broadway in 1937 while the book was still on best sellers lists. In each telling, Steinbeck draws upon his own teenage experiences…
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Theater Review: MY LIFE AS A COWBOY (North American Premiere at Open Space Arts)
“A teasin’ squeezin’ pleasin’ kinda time.” — Shania Twain As drama goes, you can’t get more low stakes than the driving event of Hugo Timbrell’s My Life as A Cowboy, now playing at the tiny Open Space Arts theater in Uptown, and extended to March. Conor, a seventeen-year-old gay man in Croydon, a dreary suburb…



















