Theater

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Birdsong, biscuits, and Beyoncé are among his brilliant things. (Photo by Matthew Murphy)

Jonny Donahoe in 'Every Brilliant Thing'

Theater as therapy

Jonny Donahoe, a young British comedian and the solo actor/host/narrator of the evening, engages us instantly, which is in his best interest, since he’ll be asking many of us to participate in the telling of his story, playing various parts and serving various functions.

Carol Rocamora

Articles 4 minute read
Cooper, Nivola, and Clarkson in "The Elephant Man." (Photo by Joan Marcus, © Broadway.com)

'Elephant Man' and 'Side Show'

God's mistakes

Two current Broadway productions, The Elephant Man and Side Show, challenge the cruelty of the term “freak.”

Carol Rocamora

Articles 5 minute read

'Irving Berlin’s Holiday Inn' in Connecticut

Through the year(s) with Irving Berlin

A classic movie with songs by Irving Berlin provides engaging fun in its belated transfer to the stage.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 5 minute read
McNenny, Lawton: 'Moonstruck' in Ireland.

Two versions of ‘Outside Mullingar’ (2nd review)

Can a hardened pragmatist find romance?

John Patrick Shanley’s sensitive play about Irish families, Outside Mullingar, packs so much depth that it’s effective in two disparate productions.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 3 minute read
Langella as Lear

Looking back at 2014 in New York theater

Eighteen reasons (and more) to celebrate 2014

Four King Lears, six directorial coups, eight new plays, and the real stars of the 2014 stages.

Carol Rocamora

Articles 5 minute read
Emilie Krause as Belle and Matteo Scammell as the Beast. (Photo courtesy of Arden Theatre Company)

'Beauty and the Beast' at the Arden

For love or money?

A play about overcoming fears shows that true love can overcome even a witch’s spell. Why then is everyone in the play so concerned about money and success?
Naomi Orwin

Naomi Orwin

Articles 4 minute read
Distracted by motion.

Team Sunshine's 'Sincerity Project'

The thin line between sincerity and artifice

The Sincerity Project takes the notion of sincerity as timeless, self-evident, decidedly apolitical, and fully accessible via performance, which makes the show feel a lot like a game of Truth or Dare at a sleepover: Amusing to an extent, if not slightly phony, and occasionally revealing of a juicy tidbit, but overall limited to the provided guidelines.

Samantha Maldonado

Articles 3 minute read
Ella and Topher meet smart, not cute. (Photo of Faure and Jones by Carol Rosegg)

Rodgers & Hammerstein’s 'Cinderella'

A 21st-century fairy tale

The script of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella is barely recognizable in this new production, but the 1957 music is wonderful and augmented with other gems from those prolific songwriters.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 3 minute read
Everything's great, as far as I can see: Hunter, Schnetzer, and Ullman.

Revival of David Rabe’s 'Sticks and Bones'

Vietnam: Look back in anguish

This timely revival of Sticks and Bones pours salt in open wounds, as we welcome scores of soldiers home from the recent Iraqi and Afghanistan Wars and then find, to our incomprehension, that they are suffering from PTSD. Are we as blind to their suffering as David’s family is to his?

Carol Rocamora

Articles 4 minute read
Kate Czajkowski as Estella, Sally Mercer as Miss Havisham, and Josh Carpenter as Pip. (Photo by Mark Garvin)

'Great Expectations' at the Arden Theatre (2nd review)

An unexpected hit at the Arden

For many readers, Great Expectations was an enthralling and transformative epic, while for others it was boring required reading that was filled with convenient coincidences. Whichever your opinion, the Arden’s production provides fast-moving entertainment.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 2 minute read