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  • Amigos: Charles Giuliano, Robert Henriquez, David Zaig

    Exhibition Ends Season of Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 11th, 2018

    Amigos: Charles Giuliano, Robert Henriquez, David Zaig is the final exhibition of the season of Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams. The commonality of these Berkshire based artist friends is the scale and ambition of their work. The exhibition opens on Friday, November 16, 5 to 8 PM.

  • Phantom Limb Company at BAM

    Next Wave Festival Presents A Different Wave

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 10th, 2018

    The Phantom Limb Company presents Falling Out at BAM's Next Wave Festival. A decade after 9/11 in the US, an earthquake in Japan created a tsunami which swept over swept over Otsuchi, Japan. A terrorist attack and nature's own are comparable in the name dates by which they are remembered. The tsunami caused meltdowns at three nuclear reactors in the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power plant. Hundreds of thousand of residents were affected in what came to be called 3/11.

  • 3rd Annual Berkshire Theatre Awards

    27 Critics Voted for Prized Berkies

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 13th, 2018

    For the third annual Berkshire Theatre Awards, at the Zion Luteran Church in Pittsfield, it took two hours to present trophies in 21 categories. Some 27 critics voted on awards to companies in the Berkshires extending into New York, Connecticut and Vermont. The top honors went to Barrington Stage Company with nine awards and Williamstown Theatre Festival which took home five.

  • Ayn Inserto Jazz Orchestra’s CD Release

    At The Lilypad, Cambridge

    By: Doug Hall - Nov 14th, 2018

    Ayn Inserto delivered a tour-de-force performance with her personal journey Down the Rabbit Hole accompanied by an orchestra that was sharp and flexible. She is clearly at home in any environment, executing complicated orchestration of original jazz pieces in a small, tight venue for 17 plus musicians.

  • Queens of the Gold Mask by Carole Lockwood

    World Premiere at Ivoryton Playhouse

    By: Karen Isaacs - Nov 14th, 2018

    Playwright Carole Lockwood’s play while set in the past resonates much too much in today’s world.

  • King Kong as Spectacle

    But Is the Musical Spectacular Enough for Broadway

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 15th, 2018

    Yes size is definitely on the theatrical table for purposes of this “review/essay” of King Kong along with other observations. Perhaps, I should label this review with a sub-headline called “In Defense of Spectacle”.

  • Church and State

    A Timely Dark Comedy

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 15th, 2018

    “Church & State”, now on stage at the Pearl McManus theatre, in downtown Palm Springs, explores the hot button topics and issues concerning the role of guns, the Second Amendment, the NRA, and the role that God and religion play in our politics, but not necessarily in that order.

  • ATCA Focuses on Diversity

    Panel Discussions for NY Critic’s Conference

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 16th, 2018

    In order to survive and remain vital American Theatre Critics Association must become younger and more diverse. Intersectionality and inclusion is an ever greater driving force for producers, theatre companies and their critics. The dynamics of that synergy were explored through panels and programming of what has evolved as an annual New York conference.

  • Schoenberg in Hollywood by Boston Lyric Opera

    Emerson Paramount Center

    By: Doug Hall - Nov 17th, 2018

    As the mostly sold-out shows for the Boston Lyric Opera’s premiere of Schoenberg in Hollywood attest, the internationally acclaimed composer Tod Machover’s brilliant operatic treatment and modernist-like musical score shines. A minimal cast is “small but big.”

  • India Pale Ale at Manhattan Theatre Club

    By Punjabi-American Playwright Jaclyn Backhaus

    By: Anne Siegel - Nov 18th, 2018

    In a New York Times interview, the playwright, Jaclyn Backhaus, admits that the work is essentially an expanded autobiography. As it opens, an almost-30-year-old, single Punjabi-American woman is talking to herself while she’s digging into fistfuls of dirt in the backyard.

  • Kaija Saariaho Premiere at White Light Festival

    Lincoln Center Produces Only the Sound Remains

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 18th, 2018

    Kaija Saaariaho weaves live music, enhanced voices and electronically generated extensions of the orchestra through the Rose Theater in Only the Sound Remains. Her opera based on two Noh stories is having its US premiere at the White Light Festival of Lincoln Center. This is an intimate work which succeeds mysteriously in filling a large space.

  • Once On This Island

    Tony-Winning Revival Of Classic Musical

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 19th, 2018

    Audiences will feel like they're not in a theater, but really an island in the Tony-Award-winning Broadway revival of Once on this Island. A hope-filled message of unity and community pervades this marvelous mounting. Caribbean-flavored music, energetic dancing, singing and authentic acting are hallmarks of this vivid staging.

  • Rightlynd at Victory Gardens by Ike Holter

    All Politics Are Local

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 21st, 2018

    Rightlynd by Ike Holter begins with Nina’s awakening as a neighborhood activist and concludes two years later, as she learns what it takes to succeed in Chicago. The story line is blended with musical set pieces, dance numbers, Nina and Pac’s first date and its romantic consequences.

  • Judith Lorick CD Release

    The Regatta Bar, Cambridge

    By: Doug Hall - Nov 22nd, 2018

    For her CD release party at the Regatta Bar in Cambridge, Judith Lorick shared her soul, thoughts and beautiful voice, as she chose top-drawer selections from her 2018 release, The Second Time Around (JLJ, 2018).

  • Mother of the Maid by Jane Anderson

    Compelling Performance by Glenn Close

    By: Edward Rubin - Nov 23rd, 2018

    Mother of the Maid by Jane Anderson had its world premiere at Shakespeare & Company in 2015. Since then there have been revisions . Tina Packer as Mother was recast with the star power of Glenn Close. This transfer of a burn baby burn slice of medieval barbarity continues to be an incongruous tear jerker.

  • Disney's Frozen

    Magical Winter Wonderland

    By: Anne Siegel - Nov 24th, 2018

    Despite some critical pans, Frozen has a strong enough pre-sale to guarantee many weeks on Broadway’s turf. Thanks are due to all the little girls who can’t get enough of the tale of Elsa and Anna, two Scandinavian sisters who yearn to be close despite mysterious magic separating them.

  • Chelsea Opera's Josephine Baker, Gertrude Stein and Picasso

    Tom Cipullo's Opera Featured

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 27th, 2018

    Chelsea Opera is a vibrant company committed to presenting new opera as well as the classics. On 1 December they will mount two one act New York premiers by the gifted composer, Tom Cipullo. Cipullo is rightly known as a composer for the voice, as well as a dramatist who creates a sound world of apt harmonies and melodies which reveal deep character and emotion. Opportunities to hear his work in New York are eagerly anticipated.

  • Eve's Song at Public Theater

    Patricia Ione Lloyd Is Playwright in Residence

    By: Rachel de Aragon - Nov 26th, 2018

    The invulnerability of middle-class achievement is haunted. Spooked by the present staccato-like news flashes from the television tell of black men shot, killed, dead . “We” don't discuss that sort of thing at dinner. Dark phantoms, shadows of women slide along the corridor where fear is a weakness which is not part of who 'we' are.

  • Shakespeare & Company Mourns Dennis Krausnick

    A Founder of the Lenox Company

    By: S&Co - Nov 29th, 2018

    Dennis Krausnick was a leader of Shakespeare & Compan, in Lenox, since its inception. In 1976 he was awarded an M.F.A. in Acting from New York University. It was at N.Y.U. where he met Tina Packer. They married in 1998. In 1978 Dennis helped found Shakespeare & Company with Tina and Kristin Linklater.

  • Hello Girls at 59E59 Theaters

    Over There is Brought Here

    By: Rachel de Aragon and Susan Hall - Dec 01st, 2018

    Hello Girls takes a most serious context, the fate of the troops in the trenches of WWI, and tackles the still relevant issue of women's rights and equality. The play harvests an engaging, upbeat and energized performance. Interesting and visually meaningful use of overhead projections (Lacey Ebb) provides both context and mood. The set plays with use of wire and lines, telephone lines, stringed instruments, rail lines battle-lines, and lines of march, which work together remarkably well.

  • Chelsea Opera: Tom Cipullo One Acts

    Melissa Wimbish, Jennifer Beattie, Steven Eddy and Sara Paar

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 02nd, 2018

    Chelsea Opera is an enterprising company, now over fifteen years old. They presented two one-act operas by composer Tom Cipullo, a master of drama and the placement of notes in the voice. The setting in Christ and St. Stephen’s Church worked perfectly as staged by Dean Anthony, a singer who has spent the last decade successfully directing. A golden glow surrounds the now 68-year-old Josephine Baker who is being interviewed in her dressing room.

  • HeLa by J. Nicole Brooks

    Major Tom to Ground Control

    By: Nancy Bishop - Dec 06th, 2018

    Sideshow Theatre accomplishes a lot on a small stage in its world premiere production of HeLa by J. Nicole Brooks at the Greenhouse Theater Center. The scenes in HeLa go back and forth in time from 1951 to 1981-84 and finally 2001 when Suhaila, now an aerospace engineer, visits her Aunt Bird, who is suffering from cancer.

  • Kentridge at Park Avenue Armory

    African Carriers in World War I

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 05th, 2018

    The Head and The Load by William Kentridge was prepared at Mass MOCA and arrives full-blown at the Park Avenue Armory in New York. We come, if not to know, to appreciate the contributions of hundreds of thousands of Africans to the Western effort in World War I. Who knew that African men were forced into service?

  • Annie In South Florida

    Beloved Musical in Boca Raton's Wick Theatre

    By: Aaron Krause - Dec 07th, 2018

    Renowned performer Sally Struthers stars and shines as Miss Hannigan in regional production of Annie. The cast excels in a touching, but not overly cute mounting. Annie plays Boca Raton's The Wick Theatre through Dec. 23.

  • The Apple Boys by Jonothon Lyons and Ben Bonnema

    A Barbershop Quartet Offers Joy at HERE

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 07th, 2018

    Apple Boys bring the Barbershop Quartet into the 21st century. This musical form my have started as early as Beaumarchais in Barber of Seville in the 18th century. Both black and white musicians claim ownership. Every culture which discovered “harmony” in combined voices has used the four singer form.

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