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  • Manahatta by Mary Kathryn Nagle

    World Premiere at Oregon Shakespeare Festival

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 05th, 2018

    In Manahatta, playwright Mary Kathryn Nagle has written an illuminating, provocative, disquieting, and totally entertaining play that depicts the early days of the white man’s arrival on Manhattan in concert with high finance and Lanape life in the 21st century.

  • Book of Will by Lauren Gunderson

    Oregon Shakespeare Company

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 04th, 2018

    Lauren Gunderson’s The Book of Will tells with comedic embellishment the true story of the publishing of Mr. William Shakespeare’s Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies, commonly known as the First Folio. Oregon Shakespeare Festival gives a fine rendering of the amusing play, appropriately at its outdoor Allen Elizabethan Theatre venue.

  • Hubbard Street Celebrates 40 Years

    Diverse Program at Jacob’s Pillow

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 03rd, 2018

    Hubbard Street Dance Chicago celebrated its 40th anniversary with yet another visit to Jacob's Pillow. At two and a half hours, with works by four choreographers, it was one of the longest, most diverse and best received programs of the Pillow season.

  • The Chinese Lady by Lloyd Suh

    Barrington Stage and Ma-Yi Theatre Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 02nd, 2018

    The Chinese Lady by Lloyd Suh with stutter steps, in a single 90 minute act, morphs from a side show curiosity to harrowing social justice theatre. It is a world premiere co production of Barrington Stage and Ma-Yi Theatre Company. It moves this fall from Pittifield to a run Off Broadway.

  • The Demon at Bard's Summerscape

    Anton Rubenstein Re-Introduced in America

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 31st, 2018

    Leon Botstein is presenting Anton Rubenstein’s The Demon at Bard’s Summerscape. Annually, he offers meritorious works, long buried or ignored by opera companies. He makes the case now for Rubenstein.

  • Legendary Boston Jazz Impresario Fred Taylor

    At 89 Writing Memoir with Dick Vacca

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 31st, 2018

    Now 89, legendary Boston jazz impresario , Fred Taylor, is busy booking one nighters for the Cabot Theatre in Beverly, Mass. Asked if it is time to retire he replied with the title of his memoir "What and Quit Show Biz." It's a work in progress with Dick Vacca. They hope to publish the book in spring, 2019. With typical wit and insight it recaps a career booking clubs like Jazz Workshop/ Paul's Mall, and Sculler's. He founded the Tanglewood Jazz Festival and produced concerts at Symphony Hall and other venues.

  • Marcus Gardley's The House That Will Not Stand

    New York Theatre Workshop Thrills

    By: Rachel de Aragon - Jul 30th, 2018

    The House That Will Not Stand, directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz at the New York Theater Workshop, is a lyrical journey through the last days of French Louisiana. Playwright, Marcus Gardley, gives us a lush and evocative script filled with humor, bite and innuendo. New Orleans Creole society developed the custom of Placage, which under French [and Spanish] law allowed a quasi- legal position for inter-racial unions and a legal status for the children. Families of mixed racial heritage held important social and financial positions. It is within this context that Gardley's drama unfolds.

  • Valpolicella the Whole Story

    The History Of Unique and Affordable Wines

    By: Philip S.Kampe - Jul 30th, 2018

    Valpolicella has always been a favorite wine of mine, probably due to my father. At a very young age, under ten years old, he introduced me to Valpolicella and Cream Sherry. Over fifty years later, my love for both wine varieties still lingers.

  • The Big Bang In Suburban Miami

    Musical-Comedy Send-up at Actors' Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 30th, 2018

    The Big Bang is presented as a backer's audition for a musical behemoth that's destined to be a sure-fire flop. This musical-within-a-musical returns by popular demand for the third time at Actors' Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre in Coral Gables. Two actors, accompanied by a talented musician on the keyboard, deftly play multiple roles in a whirlwind theatrical experience. The Big Bang is one of Actors' Playhouse' most loved shows in its 30-year history,

  • El Coronel No at Repertorio Español

    Gabriel Garcia Marquez Adaptation Delightful

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 29th, 2018

    Repertorio Español, the superb repertory company in Manhattan, is presenting El Coronel No based on a story by Gabriel Garcia Marquez adapted by Jorge Ali Triana and Veronica Triana. It is a Spanish version of Waiting for Godot. It is also a delicious take on insanity – for forty years, the Colonel has expected a letter each Friday acknowledging his pension. For forty years it has not come.

  • Seared by Theresa Rebeck

    Hilarious Foodie Spoof at Williamtown Theater Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 29th, 2018

    Seared by Therese Rebeck is her third play to permiere at Williamston Theater Festival. Set in a 16 seat boutidue Brooklyn restaurant Seared is a hillarious sendup of trendy foodie fanatacism.

  • West Side Story at Tanglewood

    Summer Long Bernstein Celebration

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Jul 29th, 2018

    With an up-to-date LED screen and a full house, 'West Side Story' , the movie version, was in synch with conductor David Newman and the Boston Symphony Orchestra at Tanglewood. The score and movie hold their original lure with flawless tour de force.

  • Sunday in the Park with George

    Sondheim at San Francisco Playhouse

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 29th, 2018

    James Lapine’s book of Sunday in the Park with George focuses on change, not just change in art, but in life. Stephen Sondheim is noted as perhaps the most intellectual among composers of musicals

  • Oliver at Goodspeed

    The Dickens of a Musical

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jul 29th, 2018

    Director Rob Ruggiero has done the same thing with this production of Oliver! now at Goodspeed Musicals through Sept. 13. Perhaps you have forgotten or never knew the basic plot of the show. Oliver Twist is a young orphan who escapes from a workhouse where food was scarce and love non-existent, into an underworld of pickpockets and worse.

  • Wayne Hopkins and Cathy Wysocki at Eclipse Gallery

    Cuckoo's Call on View In North Adams

    By: Eclipse - Jul 28th, 2018

    Cuckoo's Call, is an exhibition of paintings and sculpture by Wayne Hopkins and Cathy Wysocki that reflects on the sea of humanity, ever restlessly heaving up and down. It opens at the Eclipse Mill Gallery in North Adams on August 3 and runs through September 3.

  • Roland K. Brown/EVIDENCE

    With Music of Arturo O'Farrill at Jacob's Pillow

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 28th, 2018

    New Conversations (live music world premiere) choreography, Roland K. Brown with music by Arturo O’Farrill & Resist was developed during a residency of the Roland K. Brown/Evidence company at Jacob's Pillow. It was founded in 1985 and this was their first Pillow peformance in more than a decade.

  • Naumkeag Garden Party

    A National Historic Landmak Celebrates

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Jul 27th, 2018

    The historic home of the Choate family, Naumkeag, located in the beautiful Berkshires of Massachusetts hosts their annual Garden Party, this Saturday. With beautiful grounds, a historic 34 room house and tours daily, this gem in Stockbridge is the place to be on July 28th.

  • Lempicka an Art Deco Musical at Williamstown

    World Premiere by Carson Kreitzer and Matt Gould

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 26th, 2018

    Fleeing the Russian Revolution Tamara Lempicka (born Maria Gorska, 16 May 1898-18 March 1980) settled in Paris. Initially the couple with an infant girl survived selling the last of family jewlery. Her husband, Tadeusz Lempicki, a lawyer and aristocrat at first refused to get a job. She took up painting society portraits as a means of supporting their daughter. During the 1920s she was a leading exponent of the Art Deco style. It fell out of fashion during the depression and war years. Williamstown Theatre Festival has a world premiere musical about her life and career.

  • Was Strindberg a Proto Feminist

    Creditors at Shakespeare & Company Provokes Questions

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 25th, 2018

    As magnificently performed by Kristin Wold, her Tesla, in Strindberg's Creditors is a strong, complex, progressive woman. For the first time Shakespeare & Company in Lenox is producing the modernist Swedish playwright. In his own words, however, he stated that "... a woman is a scaled down man, a form whose development was arrested between adolescence and full manhood. ...Woman is inferior to man.”

  • Lawrence Brownlee Rocks The Crypt

    Myra Huang and Damien Sneed Collaborate

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 25th, 2018

    Lawrence Brownlee names his performance in July "Up Close and Personal". Brownlee is a singer who feels up close and personal on the stage of the great opera houses of the world, because his voice is warm and inviting. As we listen to a program which begins the iconic ‘single tear’ from L’Elisir d’Amour of Gaetano Donizetti, we too have "our hot pulses beating", like Adina, whose tear is addressed. Andrew Ousley of Unison again produces a gem.

  • Pericles Is Rarely Performed

    At Marin Shakespeare Company

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 24th, 2018

    The storyline of Pericles is the odyssey of the title character. It shares devices with other Shakespeare comedies, such as Twelfth Night’s shipwreck separation of characters then thought dead. But in the clever opening challenge, opera lovers will find what may have been the inspiration that ultimately led to Puccini’s Turandot.

  • White by James Ijames

    By Berkeley's Shotgun Players

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 24th, 2018

    Based on a real life incident, the informal push for diversity or inclusion in the arts motivates James Ijames’s (pronounced I’ms) complex, provocative, and entertaining play White.

  • Handel's Atalanta at Caramoor

    A New Opera Initiative

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Jul 24th, 2018

    Nicholas McGegan and his San Francisco-based Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra performed Handel's Atalanta at Caramoor. The pastoral opera was written to commemorate the marriage of Frederick, Prince of Wales and son of King George II to a German princess. This is Handel the craftsman at his best, with enchanting melodies, cascades of inventive orchestration and vocal fireworks.

  • Five Women Wearing The Same Dress

    Comic Drama near Miami

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 23rd, 2018

    Five Women Wearing the Same Dress speaks to today's male-dominated society, while also producing laughs.The Alan Ball comic drama runs through Aug. 12 at Miami Lakes' Main Street Players venue. Despite some flaws, the company turns in a solid production of a play that unites a group of women.

  • Creditors by August Strindberg

    Mid-summer Dark Comedy at S&Co.

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 23rd, 2018

    The Swedish realist/ naturalist playwright, August Strindberg (1849-1912) published Creditors in 1889. Some 129 years later it is the first play by the Swedish modernist to be produced by Shakespere & Company. Since it is a must see play of the Berkshire season you wonder what took them so long?

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