A dancer on stage moves in front of a crowd, many of which also seem to be dancing and moving and enjoying the show

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, September 11-17, 2025

Philly AIDS celebrates 20 years, Philly Fall Arts Fest, and more

A new exhibit inspired by Toni Morrison opens at TILT, Philly AIDS celebrates two major milestones, and festivals light up the final days of official summer. Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 3 minute read
15 people, all in black, sit in a circle on the floor facing outward, arms linked, a pile of cell phones in the middle.

Philly Fringe 2025: Nick Gillette presents Pennsylvania Semiconscious Liberation Army

Are we as polarized as we think?

An immersive theater experience from veteran Philly performer Nick Gillette and a large ensemble asks the audience pressing ethical questions about our American moment. Alaina Johns reviews.
Alaina Johns

Alaina Johns

Reviews 4 minute read
View of Sherald’s untitled six-story portrait mural of a Black teen in a yellow hat and striking black & white jacket.

Philadelphia proves that no executive order can stop the arts, or our courage

Amy Sherald goes to Baltimore, and stays on Sansom Street

Amy Sherald’s American Sublime was supposed to open in DC this month, but she withdrew it rather than face censorship. Meanwhile, Philadelphians can see Sherald right at home. Anndee Hochman considers.
Anndee Hochman

Anndee Hochman

Essays 5 minute read
Brock, in an orange dress, poses elegantly on a vintage couch while Zak stands in a brown suit. They point at each other.

The BSR Podcast: IRC's Painting Churches and the world premiere of Dogberry and Verges Are Scared

Go behind the scenes of two popular Fringe shows with Darnelle Radford

SEASON 10(!) of the BSR Podcast continues with this deep dive featuring the artists behind Painting Churches and Dogberry and Verges Are Scared. Tune in today.
Darnelle Radford

Darnelle Radford

Podcast 1 minute read
In a wash of reddish light, two female dancers face off with wide stances, gesturing as if playing Rock Paper Scissors.

Philly Fringe 2025: Carne Viva Dance Theatre presents Dame La Receta

Different “American Dreams”

Philadelphia/Miami art collective Carne Viva Dance Theatre brings Dame La Receta to the Philly Fringe, an interdisciplinary performance exploring immigrants’ experience of the American Dream. An Nichols reviews.
An Nichols

An Nichols

Reviews 3 minute read
Davis, a white man in a yellow tee and shorts, stands smiling in front of a clapping audience in the corner of a yoga studio

Philly Fringe 2025: Chris Davis presents The Presented

A calling, not a choice

Performer Chris Davis is back with an updated version of his engaging solo show, The Presented, which is not a Curated show in this year’s Philly Fringe. Alix Rosenfeld reviews.
Alix Rosenfeld

Alix Rosenfeld

Reviews 2 minute read
Lee, an Asian man, lies on a white bed, looking up and smiling. He wears a black shirt.

Philly Fringe 2025: Clayton Lee presents The Goldberg Variations

Bach meets the WWE in the spirit of the Fringe

Performance artist Clayton Lee defies “model minority” stereotypes with The Goldberg Variations, a funny, vulnerable, interdisciplinary original show that explores the greater meaning within his romantic exploits. Krista Mar reviews.
Krista Mar

Krista Mar

Reviews 2 minute read
The actors have a heated discussion on a stage dressed to look like the greenroom at a regional called The Cellar Theater

Philly Fringe 2025: Pier Players Theatre Company presents David Lee White’s Etiquette

The moment we all returned to the theater

With an incisive new satirical drama unfolding backstage at a nonprofit regional theater, Pier Players brings us back to the fall of 2021, when theaters were reopening in a whole new world. Stephen Silver reviews.
Stephen Silver

Stephen Silver

Reviews 3 minute read
Teshi, a Black woman with long curly red hair, stands grimly behind a table marked “Tihaira,” a misspelling of her name.

Philly Fringe 2025: Taahira Teshi presents The Silent Struggle (There, I Said It)

One woman’s mental-health struggle tells an important story for everyone

A new Fringe show by interdisciplinary artist Taahira Teshi mixes monologues, sing-alongs, and bluesy ballads to explore one college student’s mental-health journey and racial inequities in care. A. Lewis reviews.

A. Lewis

Reviews 3 minute read
Three teenage boys crowd around a bench in a run-down school bathroom, washed in blue light.

Philly Fringe 2025: Theatre by Development presents Daniel Burgess’s Urinal

Thrilling trials of adolescence

Theatre by Development, a new company founded by UArts grads, presents Urinal, a 2017 high-school period piece that thrills for its verisimilitude, even when it bites off more than it can chew. Kiran Pandey reviews.
Kiran Pandey

Kiran Pandey

Reviews 2 minute read
Lawton and Greer, with worried expressions, stand together in layered, detailed outfits reminiscent of vaudeville clowns

Slippery Trout Productions and Cincinnati Shakespeare Company present Dogberry and Verges Are Scared

Clowns in the spotlight

Part Shakespeare, part Stoppard, part Beckett, and part Dumb and Dumber, Philly Fringe offering Dogberry and Verges Are Scared is one of the festival’s must-see shows. Jill Ivey reviews.
Jillian Ashley Blair Ivey

Jillian Ashley Blair Ivey

Reviews 2 minute read
In puffy white shirts and ruffled bottoms, Portera points in Parker’s face while holding a grimacing Forbes by the ear.

Philly Fringe 2025: Indecorous Theatre presents The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)(Revised)(Again)

An enjoyable escape, Ren Faire style

Indecorous Theatre brings a mostly successful production of the popular Complete Works to a beautiful historic space with its Fringe production in the backyard of the Elfreth’s Alley Museum. An Nichols reviews.
An Nichols

An Nichols

Reviews 3 minute read
In an opulent house in blue light, Brock and Zack smile together, gesturing with their hands. Quinn is in shadow at right

Philly Fringe 2025: IRC presents Tina Howe’s Painting Churches

Absurdity is in the family

Reflecting on how to make absurd work in our absurd time, Idiopathic Ridiculopathy Consortium brings us home with its Philly Fringe entry, Tina Howe’s Painting Churches. Josh Herren reviews.
Josh Herren

Josh Herren

Reviews 2 minute read

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Five people in various outfits, including one in a lab coat; a Nirvana shirt; dresses—pose in front of a 'Red Rum; neon sign

Philly Fringe 2025: Without a Cue Productions presents And Then They Were Dead

Choose-your-own-murder

Without a Cue’s interactive And Then They Were Dead is more fun than it is good—which is, itself, a good thing. Jill Ivey reviews.
Jillian Ashley Blair Ivey

Jillian Ashley Blair Ivey

Reviews 3 minute read
Bridge, horizontal to the black stage, strikes a flowing pose with her body suspended over one hand on the ground.

Philly Fringe 2025: Rennie Harris presents Beautiful Human Lies: Chapter 4

A truthful partnership of hip-hop and modern dance

North Philly native and street dance pioneer Rennie Harris returns for this year’s Curated Fringe with his Beautiful Human Lies: Chapter 4, fearlessly danced by Megan Bridge. Eileen B. Fisher reviews.
Eileen B. Fisher

Eileen B. Fisher

Reviews 2 minute read
Against a black background, the actors sit together as if crowded in a car, with Presley in the back, wearing deer antlers.

Philly Fringe 2025: ArtSake Theatre Company presents Malcolm MacKenzie’s Roadkill Bambi: A Vaporwave Play

In the headlights of the future

ArtSake, a new Philly theater company using the performing arts to inspire climate activism, presents Roadkill Bambi in this year’s Fringe. Emily Esten reviews.
Emily Esten

Emily Esten

Reviews 3 minute read
Kitrosser, in floral, yellow, leopard-print drag, poses as if he’s searching, one foot on a keyboard on the ground.

Philly Fringe 2025: Dan Kitrosser is KAREN TENDERNESS in QUEER WINDOW!

Queer cabaret meets a Hitchcock send-up

Dan Kitrosser’s QUEER WINDOW! welcomes Karen, a repressed suburban wife who discovers a window that reveals unexpected desires in this campy, tender, and funny Hitchcock-inspired cabaret. Josh Herren reviews.
Josh Herren

Josh Herren

Reviews 2 minute read
Show logo. A person with thin white horns, silhouetted against a starry sky, stands between two rock faces.

Philly Fringe 2025: Applied Mechanics presents Severin Blake’s Labyrinth of the Other

Who is the monster?

In this Fringe production from Applied Mechanics, Severin Blake explores a new take on the myth of the Minotaur, asking what we need to forget and remember to move past childhood trauma. Camille Bacon-Smith reviews.
Camille Bacon-Smith

Camille Bacon-Smith

Reviews 3 minute read
Werbeloff, a white woman with auburn hair and yellow leather jacket, sits with hands clasped to her chest, a worried gesture

Philly Fringe 2025: Rushmore Labs presents The Waterfront Journals by David Wojnarowicz

Honoring one of America’s leading queer artists

A new production collaborative brings queer icon David Wojnarowicz’s opus, The Waterfront Journals, to the stage in an original adaptation for the Fringe. Evan Mitchell Schares reviews.
Evan Schares

Evan Schares

Reviews 3 minute read
Close-up on Fudim, a white woman, dancing while her long brown hair flies, wildly suspended in the air.

Philly Fringe 2025: Jessica Fudim presents Venomous: a mythical dance for a modern world

“Why didn’t you help me?”

Solo dance theater artist Jessica Fudim’s Fringe entry offers a modern take on Medusa, challenging the tragedy and rewriting her script. Camille Bacon-Smith reviews.
Camille Bacon-Smith

Camille Bacon-Smith

Reviews 2 minute read
Headshot of Moore, a smiling Black woman with luxuriant hair and an orange jacket, crossing her arms on her chest.

Philly Fringe 2025: Dr. Karen Moore presents Kindled by Nina: A Four-Women Requiem Multimedia Invocation of Black Womanhood

A love letter to Black women

Kindled by Nina is a new interpretation of Nina Simone’s iconic song “Four Women,” using spoken word, projected film, and music to honor historic and contemporary Black womanhood. A. Lewis reviews.

A. Lewis

Reviews 3 minute read
Giltner, a white person in a baggy gray sweatshirt, stands in front of a slideshow, holding a can of White Claw seltzer.

Philly Fringe 2025: John Miller Giltner and Gene Farbe present Family Vacation

A sly anthropology of family ties

A new multimedia Fringe show by John Miller Giltner and Gene Farbe mixes slideshow, singalong, and earnest confessions to explore the messy tenderness of belonging to a family. Josh Herren reviews.
Josh Herren

Josh Herren

Reviews 2 minute read
A photo of a glacier or icey area in black and white, with white lines marking over the photograph.

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, September 4-10, 2025

Fractured Lands, Every Brilliant Thing, Pyramid Club, and more

New exhibitions open for the fall from the Halide Project, Woodmere, Temple Contemporary; and a few shows and performances outside of Fringe introduce September. Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 3 minute read