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  • Film Review: DO NOT RESIST (directed by Craig Atkinson)

    PRESENT THREAT While Do Not Resist only partly takes place in Ferguson, Missouri, several minutes of immersive, haunting footage place the film in the rare company of The Battle of Algiers and Bloody Sunday. But the civil unrest Pontecorvo and Greengrass filmed was staged. Accompanied by producer Laura Hartwick, Craig Atkinson filmed the Ferguson protests…

  • Chicago Theater Review: PIRANDELLO’S HENRY IV (Remy Bumppo at Greenhouse Theater Center)

    THE MONARCH OF MAKE BELIEVE The Truman Show or The Matrix have nothing on Luigi Pirandello’s puzzle play Henry IV, a double-edged blast from the past (both 1921, its inception, and the 11th century, its pretend era). Imagine a man who, after suffering a concussion falling from a horse under suspicious circumstances, has for the…

  • Film Commentary: BILLY WILDER’S OEUVRE TOTAL, PART I

    SOME LIKE IT WILDER [Editor’s Note:  Oeuvre Total is a film-discussion series between producer Michael Holland and critic Jason Rohrer, begun at Bitter Lemons  and continuing here at  Stage and Cinema. The first ten-part Oeuvre Total exchange concerns Billy Wilder. After we  run  the previously-published seven original entries, beginning with Part I below, new posts will appear in the coming…

  • Chicago Theater Review: WICKED CITY (Chicago Theatre Workshop at Edge Theatre)

    GUMSHOE GLORY It’s not as original a burlesque of film noir as City of Angels,  but in less than 90 minutes Wicked City, a musical parody  by bookwriter/lyricist  Chad Beauelin and composer  Matthew Sklar (creators of Elf and The Wedding Singer), delivers tough-talking, if overly clever, hilarity. Even better, the merry travesty shrewdly stuffs Raymond Chandler into Sophocles. A…

  • Los Angeles Theater Review: A TASTE OF HONEY (Odyssey Theatre Ensemble)

    EAU DE MANCHESTER Kim Rubinstein’s new Odyssey production treats Shelagh Delaney’s 1958 A Taste of Honey not as a Chippendale museum piece but, smartly, as a serviceable old Sears sectional sofa. Rubinstein tarts up Delaney’s experimental kitchen sinker-cum-jazz cabaret confessional with an abundance of style. These are the basic choices for a director almost sixty…

  • Los Angeles Music Preview: YO-YO MA PLAYS HAYDN AND BRAHMS (Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra)

    YO-YO MA JOINS LACO FOR ONE-NIGHT ONLY EVENT When classical music is performed correctly–a joyous amalgamation of proficiency and interpretation–it’s actually very difficult to put words on our experience. It’s best to  just wants to sit back and be swallowed up by the dreamy music.  As Jeffrey Kahane departs Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra (LACO)–the 2016-17 season is…

  • Chicago Theater Review: LET ME ENTERTAIN YOU: JULE STYNE’S GREATEST HITS (Light Opera Works)

    THE PARTY IS NOT OVER Whether the words flowed from the terrific team of Betty Comden and Adolph Green, the prolific and dynamic Sammy Cahn, or a very young Stephen Sondheim, Jule Styne was a composer for all lyricists. As supple in his melodies as his writers were in their verse and lifting as much…

  • Los Angeles Theater Review: DEAR WORLD (Valley Performing Arts Center in Northridge)

    WHAT A WORLD 1969. The final year in what was one of the most turbulent decades in American history. The battle between counterculture dissidents and the corporate establishment could melt lead, and in the middle the blood was drained from the ideal Ozzie and Harriet family and the U.S. was headed to a most uncertain…

  • Los Angeles Theater Review: THE TRUMP CARD (Mike Daisey at The Broad Stage in Santa Monica)

    DAISEY’S TRUMPETRY The virtues of monologist Mike Daisey are many. He’s gifted at societal critique; he creates awesome mental pictures; and he’s a wiz at diagnosing and dissecting our modern world. Part journalist, part storyteller, part embellisher, part memoirist, the corpulent and energetic Daisey performs his shows seated at a table–quite often mopping his brow–as…

  • Los Angeles Music Preview: JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA WITH WYNTON MARSALIS (Valley Performing Arts Center Gala)

    THE PRIDE OF JAZZ PURITANS Wynton Marsalis has received a plethora of awards from numerous countries, committees and academies for his talents and contributions to the world as a musician, arranger, composer, and cultural ambassador. In 2009, he received the  Insignia Chevalier  of the Legion of Honor from France; it’s the equivalent of attaining knighthood in the…

  • Film Review: THE LOVE WITCH (written and directed by Anna Biller)

    FEMIWITCH Men are definitely the outsiders in director and writer Anna Biller’s engrossing and increasingly strange film, a movie which frankly defies easy description; the  genre could very well be  designated as “feminist satire.” Set in the 1970s, and utilizing period costumes and sets, along with the wonderfully over-saturated colorful Technicolor hues of a Sirkian melodrama, The…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE ROOM (A Red Orchid)

    THE PAUSES THAT DON’T REFRESH Presaging more darkness to follow, The Room, the first play by the late Harold Pinter, is an hour-long psychological thriller from 1957. Full of dour portent, it’s further proof that Halloween only needs humans for horror. Creepily directed by Dado at A Red Orchid Theatre, this six-person one-act practically patents…

  • Film Review: THE HURT BUSINESS (directed by Vlad Yudin)

    MIXED BUSINESS Vlad Yudin’s provocatively titled informational documentary The Hurt Business feels like a cinematic version of a survey course on the sport of mixed martial arts (MMA). For those in the dark but curious about MMA, Mr. Yudin’s film, narrated by longtime MMA fan Kevin Costner, can serve as a useful introduction. But even…

  • Chicago Opera Review: DAS RHEINGOLD (Lyric Opera)

    LYRIC BRINGS HOME THE GOLD Wagner’s Ring Cycle has arrived in Chicago and it is magnificent. If you’re like me and you’ve never seen it before, then prepare yourself for an experience beyond imagining. Richard Wagner’s epic fantasy features a cast of gods, giants, dwarves, and nymphs, a plot contrasting love and beauty with power…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE LAST WIFE (TimeLine)

    THREE CATHERINES, YOU’RE OUT If you were one of his sextet of spouses, outlasting Henry VIII wasn’t just a feat of survival’”it became a political statement. The last and possibly least known of this Bluebeard’s six wives, Catherine Parr was the most learned and devout consort. A shrewd negotiator in domestic and foreign affairs, she…

  • Chicago Theater Review: THE MAGIC PARLOUR (The House Theatre at The Palmer House Hilton Hotel)

    FRIENDLY FOOLING Is stuff magical only because it can’t be explained? Perhaps it’s more than just the absence of logic, probability, or reason. There’s a presence too: Magic evokes a child-like sense of wonder in the oldest adults, rewarding their imagination more than their ignorance. At least that’s the working philosophy of House Theatre’s master…

  • Chicago Opera Review: THE LOVE POTION [LE VIN HERBÉ] (Chicago Opera Theater at the Music Box)

    LIEBESTOD WAS NEVER DARKER For three performances only, a beloved Chicago movie palace becomes  an opera house. Acoustically accurate but with sight lines that worsen toward the back, the Music Box Theatre, a Spanish Rococo treasure, is currently hosting Chicago Opera Theater’s local premiere of Swiss composer Frank Martin’s The Love Potion (Le Vin Herbé). Dissonant…

  • Chicago Theater Review: TONY N’ TINA’S WEDDING (Chicago Theater Works at Resurrection Church)

    T&T&T&T&T&T… There’s a reason why Tony n’ Tina’s Wedding, newly revived by the original New York producers, was a 16-year Chicago hit. Throughout the last century this fake pageant with real fun played to a million not so innocent bystanders. A huge hit showcased in three venues (a bar, chapel and reception room) in Pipers…

  • Chicago Theater Review: FLY BY NIGHT (Theo Ubique)

    BLACKOUT LOVE Winsome and warm-hearted, Fly by Night is an affecting chamber musical which premiered in 2014 at Playwrights Horizon. The two-act labor of love by Will Connolly, Michael Mitnick and Kim Rosenstock celebrates human connectedness, most pointedly in love. In their tender-hearted, tough-minded work’”an Our Town where the place is NYC–the connections are also…

  • Chicago Theater Review: TUG OF WAR: CIVIL STRIFE (Chicago Shakespeare Theater)

    KILLER ROSES AND A HUNCHBACK HORROR As disease follows famine, the 100 Years War succumbed to the War of the Roses. It makes sense that the titles of the two parts of Barbara Gaines’ massive compilation  Tug of War are “Foreign Fire” and, now, “Civil Strife.” Whether a ground-grabbing feud between 15th-century England and France or…

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