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  • Michael Cristofer’s Man in the Ring

    Riveting Premiere at Chicago's Court Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 26th, 2016

    Michael Cristofer’s Man in the Ring, having its world premiere in Chicago, is a play about boxing with a dark and riveting under card.

  • The Cocktail Hour by A. R. Gurney

    Launches North Coast Repertory Theatre’s 35th Season

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 26th, 2016

    In ‘The Cocktail Hour’ A.R. Gurney hits the vanishing cultural nail of privilege right on the proverbial head.

  • Opera Philadelphia's Spiritually Lush Mazzoli

    Exciting New Wave in Opera

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 26th, 2016

    Opera Philadelphia is leading the way in America, as it presents adventuresome new operas by contemporary composers exploring subjects of interest. Breaking the Waves is the most ambitious in its complex subject matter. The director, composer and librettist have joined forces to present a wrenching work which is very much embedded in opera tradition, but stretches the form musically and dramatically.

  • Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

    August Wilson Play at Mark Taper Forum in LA

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 25th, 2016

    ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’ now on the boards of the Mark Taper Forum is fabulously acted and brilliantly staged by Tony winner Phylicia Rashad.

  • How Walt Disney Lost His Head

    Dark Comedy by Lucas Hnath in Ft. Lauderdale

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 25th, 2016

    “A Public Reading of an Unproduced Screenplay about the Death of Walt Disney,” by playwright Lucas Hnath, turns upside down the positive image of the man popular culture has ingrained in our minds.

  • Perennial Favorite The Fantasticks

    At Pasadena Playhouse

    By: Lisa Lyons - Sep 24th, 2016

    The Pasadena Playhouse has produced a lively version of the longest running musical The Fantasticks. Even if you have seen it this is a woderful chance to again be enchanted and "Follow, Follow, Follow."

  • Gloucester Author Peter Anastas

    Responding to Olson's Place as the Geography of Our Being

    By: Karl Young and Peter Anastas - Sep 24th, 2016

    During our recent visits including a residency at the Gloucester Writers Center we encountered the author Peter Anastas. He is an activist and author of novels based on Gloucster. In particular we are interested in his relationship with Charles Olson and his influence on the rich literary culture of Cape Ann. With permission we are reposting an excerpt of a long interview between Anastas and Karl Young.

  • Bag-In-A-Box Wine Is Perfect For Travel

    The Airtight Pouch Keeps The Wine Fresh

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Sep 23rd, 2016

    Traveling with friends is fun. So is stopping along the way and having spontaneous picnics and impromptu meals together. Wine is always important for these events. How do you determine what wine to bring with you when you travel?

  • Miller's A View from the Bridge

    Ivo Van Hove Directs at LA's Ahmanson Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 23rd, 2016

    The cutting edge, Dutch director Ivo Van Hove has transferred his stark and riveting production of Arthur Miller's A View from the Bridge from Broadway to LA. With cast changes there is the same stark staging that reworks a classic Miller play.

  • NY City Ballet Presents Fashion

    Walker Joins Jason Wu and Thomas Kitko

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 22nd, 2016

    Inspired by the presence of Fashion Week in Lincoln Center, the New York City Ballet inaugurated a Fall Fashion Gala. Fashion Week was kicked out of the arts center by the New York City Parks Department, complaining among other issues about the number of spike heels. Although the event left, the Fashion Gala continues. A wonderful case is made for the use of high fashion costumes in ballet.

  • Berkshire's Fiorello Comes to New York

    BTG Production Transfers With a Wallop

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 21st, 2016

    I happened on the Berkshire Theatre Company production on East 13th Street in New York and was entranced. Packed into a small stage and directed to perfection by Bob Moss, the intimate setting works perfectly for this musical portrait of an oversized man.

  • Boston Globe Shrinks Fine Arts Coverage

    Eliminating Cate McQuaid's Weekly Gallery Column

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 21st, 2016

    Bad news continues for the arts community. The Boston Globe has announced that it is elminating Cate McQuaid's weekly gallery column. Kington Gallery is circulating a petition to have the vital coverage reinstated.

  • Life Sucks by Aaron Posner

    Chicago's Lookingglass Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 21st, 2016

    Life Sucks is Aaron Posner’s sort-of adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya, that often-performed masterpiece in which members of the rural bourgeoisie loll about, falling in love with the wrong people and longing to change their miserable lives. What is the play about? Love, longing and loss, as the characters tell us in their prologue. The basic elements of the human condition.

  • St. Germain at Barrington and Theatre Works

    Revival in Pittsfield and New Einstein Play with Richard Dreyfuss in Hartford

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 20th, 2016

    Since 2009 when Freud's Last Session opened at Barrington Stage there have been annual meetings and numerous e mails with playwright Mark St. Germain. We met recently at Dottie's for brunch to talk about current projects. In Pittsfield there is a revival of Camping with Henry and Tom. At TheatreWorks in Hartford is a production of Relativity about Albert Einstein that stars Richard Dreyfuss. He is also adapting Freud, which has had 200 plus global productions, as a screenplay. He ranks at 14 on the 2016 list of most produced American Playwrights. That does not include his global productions.

  • Circle Mirror Transformation

    Annie Baker Play at Florida's Area Stage Company

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 20th, 2016

    The plays by the 35-year-old Pulitzer Prize winner, Annie Baker, can be long, and with their pregnant silences, exasperating for audiences. Patience, however, is rewarded by enduring Circle Mirror Transformation which is having its regional premiere at the renowned Area Stage Company in Coral Gables, Florida.

  • Gutenberg the Musical

    Florida's Sol Theatre

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 19th, 2016

    Audience members play a pivotal role in any show, but especially this one. That’s because the fate of a musical by characters Doug and Bud rests in the pocketbooks and banks of the producers.

  • Isabel Huppert is Phaedra(s) at BAM

    Triple Queen Seduces at the Harvey Theater

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 18th, 2016

    Phaedra is a character who has fascinated through time. Now the fascinating actress Isabel Huppert plays her. Racine best captured Phaedra's sense that neither lucidity nor sincerity is helpful in resolving emotional problems. Consciousness of failure is a noble human trait. Phaedra knows but her knowledge is useless.

  • Charles Giuliano Podcast

    Reading at Gloucester Writers Center

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 18th, 2016

    As a part of a week-long residence at Gloucester Writers Center there was a well attended reading. Introduced by multi-media artist, Jay Jaroslav, Charles Giuliano launched his third book of poetry Ultra Cosmic Gonzology. The reading was recorded by Center dirtector and filmmaker Henry Ferrini. We have a link to the reading which is archived by the Center.

  • Spanish Garnacha is Affordable

    Wines at $10 a bottle

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Sep 17th, 2016

    The Spanish grow tons of Garnacha grapes. The wines from the grapes are perfect, day to day wines, all at affordable prices. Some are as low as $8 a bottle on the shelf. Why not seek a bottle out from your local distributor?

  • Fortune's Ire by Ramon Guillermo

    At Miami's Storycrafter Studio

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 17th, 2016

    The captivating play Fortune's Ire by Ramon Guillermo is on stage in North Miami’s intimate Storycrafter Studio space, through September 25. It is a finely acted and directed production. It begins with an interesting but seemingly harmless premise: A woman who claims to be suffering from amnesia steps into a psychologist’s office to receive help in figuring out her identity.

  • Fresh Grass Festival: Day Two Line Up

    Lots Of Music At Mass MoCA

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Sep 17th, 2016

    The first day of the Fresh Grass Festival in North Adams, Massachusetts, was very lively with the appearance of several major blue grass bands. Day two is a full day of music, a day that will bring together many of the great performers from the industry.

  • '62 Center at Williams Announces Its Program

    Launching Twelth Season

    By: Williams - Sep 16th, 2016

    The ’62 Center for Theatre and Dance unveiled its twelfth season of diverse and challenging theatre and dance programming for the Williams College community and beyond.

  • Fresh Grass Festival's Friday Line-Up

    Weekend Festival At Mass MoCA

    By: Philip S.Kampe - Sep 16th, 2016

    The three day Fresh Grass Festival kicks off tonight at MASS MoCA with an outstanding line-up.

  • The Birds Updated for the Stage

    Du Maurier to Hitchcock to McPherson

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 15th, 2016

    The Birds comes to the stage via a Daphne Du Maurier story on which Alfred Hitchcock's classic film of the same title was based. Now it provides the basis for playwright Conor McPherson's innovative play at 59E59th Street Theatres. McPherson has moved his story into a setting that is more reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road than Du Maurier and Hitchcock.

  • Sam Shepard's True West

    Chicago's Shattered Globe Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 15th, 2016

    In Sam Shepard's True West the duality of emotion lies in wait in every aspect of our tense two hours with brothers Lee (Joseph Wiens) and Austin (Kevin Viol). They compete and collaborate, love and hate, drink and work, reminisce and prevaricate.

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