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San Francisco Theater Preview: SHAKESPEARE’S R&J (New Conservatory Theatre Center)
REIMAGINING THE REIMAGINED AT NCTC No one can deny why Romeo and Juliet has achieved cult status. Not only is Shakespeare’s comic tragedy one of the most enduring stories ever told, but it is a miracle of construction, containing highly relatable and seemingly countless universal themes and motifs that magically intertwine: War, bad timing, kinship, honor,…
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Los Angeles Music Review: LE SALON DE MUSIQUES (Fifth Season Opener: Hanson, Bridge, and Ireland)
GREEN IRELAND, HANDSOME HANSON, AND A BRIDGE TOO FAR Le Salon de Musiques, the most cultivated, accessible, pleasant, exciting and educational chamber concert outfit in, well, anywhere I have been, opened its fifth season with a concert of its usual riches: contextual insight, perfect performances, rarely heard but astounding selections, hobnobbing, and gourmandizing. The three…
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Los Angeles Theater Preview: THE OLD WOMAN (Mikhail Baryshnikov & Willem Dafoe at Royce Hall)
RUSSIAN AVANT-GARDE AS SURREAL BURLESQUE Delightful wouldn’t be a word I’d expect to use when describing a Robert Wilson show. But The Old Woman, adapted by Darryl Pinckney from an absurdist story by Daniil Kharms, and performed by Mikhail Baryshnikov and Willem Dafoe, is just that. Whimsical, darkly funny, and disquieting throughout, Wilson’s striking spectacle…
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L.A. Music Preview: THE CZECH PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA (Valley Performing Arts Center)
THE HEART OF THE MATER Decca just released a 6-CD box set by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra (CPO) of the complete symphonies and concertos of Antonín Dvořák, and I don’t remember when I’ve been quite so taken with any interpretation of Dvořák’s work. Not only is the recording quality impeccable, but Maestro Jiří BÄ›lohlávek clearly has…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: A OR B? (Falcon Theatre)
SLIDING BORES A or B? The question of Ken Levine’s title refers to the choice between two parallel universes set forth in his two-act two-hour two-hander. Played out simultaneously with flip-flopping scenes that last anywhere from 30 seconds to a few minutes or longer, this seriously regrettable dumbed-down rom-com concerns a comely woman who interviews…
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Los Angeles Dance Review: L.A. DANCE PROJECT (Theater at Ace Hotel)
COOL AS A CUCUMBER BUT NOT AS REFRESHING In Boys in the Band, the character of Harold states: “Although I’ve never seen my soul, I understand from my mother’s Rabbi that it’s a knock-out. I, however, cannot seem to locate it for a gander. And if I could, I’d sell it in a flash, for…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE KING AND I (Marriott)
WE SHALL DANCE! It’s no puzzlement why this sumptuous reclamation of Broadway greatness, Marriott Theatre’s The King and I, is such a grand night for singing, an enchanted evening, and, like its song, “Something Wonderful.” Rodgers and Hammerstein’s semi-historical domestic drama’”the unlikely alliance between a Siamese monarch in the 1860s and a British governess/tutor’”shows how…
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Chicago Opera Review: IL TROVATORE (Lyric Opera)
A TREASURE TROVATORE There’s nothing subtle about Verdi’s ambitiously conceived Il Trovatore (The Troubadour). Grandly realized and magnificently staged by Lyric Opera, it is one of the three triumphs of Verdi’s “middle period.” Preceded by Rigoletto, the composer followed it with La Traviata, with which it shares more than just a similar-sounding title. Both are…
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Regional Music Preview: THE CZECH PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA (Segerstrom Concert Hall in Costa Mesa)
A NEW WORLD OF DVOŘíK AT SEGERSTROM Decca just released a 6-CD box set by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra (CPO) of the complete symphonies and concertos of Antonín Dvořák, and I don’t remember when I’ve been quite so taken with such an utterly certified interpretation of Dvořák’s work. Not only is the recording quality impeccable,…
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Theater Review: PIPPIN (National Tour)
I’M NOT SAYING YOU SHOULD BE SKIPPIN’ PIPPIN, BUT: Prepare yourself. After all the rave reviews and buzz from New York, Diane Paulus’s Tony-winning revival hits the road filled with enough high-flying frivolity to bedazzle even the most jaded of theatergoers. But for all its extraordinarily magical moments it ends up being a soulless circus…
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S.F. & L.A. Theater Preview: ARGUENDO (Elevator Repair Service at Z Space and REDCAT)
NUDITY IS AS NUDITY DOES For the sake of argument (“arguendo”), let us consider G-strings as tools of oppression, and pasties as violations of our First Amendment rights. This was the perspective presented by some exotic dancers from South Bend, Indiana, in the 1991 United States Supreme Court case Barnes v. Glen Theatre. Elevator Repair…
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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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Chicago Theater Review: TITANIC (Griffin Theatre Company at Theater Wit)
PRIDE COMETH BEFORE AN ICEBERG Griffin Theatre Company’s total triumph is a strange success. It’s odd that a more intimate version of a musical called Titanic can so succeed. The cast is reduced from 45 to 20, and Jonathan Tunick’s original orchestrations, updated by Ian Weinberger, are closer to the actual ship’s itinerant band. Not…
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Chicago Opera Review: GLI EQUIVOCI NEL SEMBIANTE (Haymarket Opera Company)
EXCELLENT BY ALL APPEARANCES It is rare enough to find early operas staged in the U.S., so to find a whole company devoted to their performance is truly extraordinary. Haymarket Opera Company performs them authentically, too, using baroque instruments and staging techniques current at the time of composition. Haymarket opens their short 2014-2015 season with…
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Chicago Theater Review: THE HUNDRED FLOWERS PROJECT (Silk Road Rising)
FACELESS FOLLOWERS OF TWITTER AND MAO There’s a fascinating paradigm shift in the middle of The Hundred Flowers Project, Christopher Chen’s cautionary stage and video thriller. Whether you can believe it or not, the first-act rehearsal of a play about Mao Tse Tung’s propagandistic “Hundred Flowers Project,” “Great Leap Forward,” and Cultural Revolution becomes, in…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: WHAT OF THE NIGHT? (The Vagrancy at Studio/Stage)
WHAT INDEED The title of María Irene Fornés’ 1989 quartet of one-acts recalls a two-verse Old Testament passage in Isaiah. The wandering Jews cry out from the midst of war, famine, every calamity: “What of the night?”, i.e. “What are our prospects?” The prophet returns: “The morning cometh, and also the night” – things will…
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Chicago Dance Review: GIORDANO DANCE CHICAGO (Fall Engagement at the Harris Theater)
LEAPING BIPEDS! There’s one more chance’”tonight’”to see five intriguing dances on display at the Harris Theater, exciting work from the reliable 52-year-old Giordano Dance Chicago troupe. Kinetic and percussive both in sound and steps, these are go-for-broke showcases of stamina as much as grace under literal pressure. The stand-out, as much for style as notability,…
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Regional Music Review: CATHEDRALS OF SOUND (Pacific Symphony in Costa Mesa)
HERE’S YOUR CHANTS A concert for the ages’”and all ages’”arrived at the stunningly gorgeous Segerstrom Concert Hall last night. The tremendous spirit of Pacific Symphony’s presentation of Ottorino Respighi’s Church Windows (1925) and Maurice Duruflé’s Requiem (1947) was more than matched by the sheer size of the event. Written for SATB choir and soloists, there…
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Los Angeles Theater Review: BROOMSTICK (Fountain)
STAY FOR DINNER, WON’T YOU? She’s an ancient crone who lives in a tiny cottage deep in the forest, feared by those near and far. She brews strange elixirs and ointments, and is rumored to have turned little boys into piglets to feed on during her midnight feasts. Her rivals end up drowned in the…
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Los Angeles Opera Preview: DIDO AND AENEAS & BLUEBEARD’S CASTLE (Los Angeles Opera)
KOSKY’S QUEEN AND CASTLE On the surface, there isn’t much that unites Henry Purcell’s 1688 Dido and Aeneas and Béla Bartók’s 1918 Bluebeard’s Castle, except perhaps that men are not to be trusted. But when you see Barrie Kosky’s fiery fabrication of these two short operas, presented by LA Opera beginning Saturday, expect to be…
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