Theater
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Page 184
"A Doll's House': the Geffers adaptation
Young Nora
This Doll's House is not a rewrite or a reinterpretation of the classic play. Rather, it's a one-hour introduction to the character who will grow up into the prototypical mother of women's liberation.

Articles
2 minute read

"Ajax' (2nd review) and "Heart of a Revolution'
Two dangerous men
Tucked away in pockets of this year's FringeArts Festival are gems of historical and literary discovery— in this case, about Karl Marx's adultery and the ancient Greek warrior Ajax's savagery.
Articles
6 minute read

Attis Theater's 'Ajax, the madness' at the Wilma (1st review)
The frenzy of war, then and now
In Ajax, the madness, Theodoros Terzopoulos strips down the Ajax legend from Homer's Iliad and the Sophocles tragedy to its barest essentials, probing the roots of violence that underlie war. For Philadelphia, it was a rare opportunity to experience first-rate experimental theater.

Articles
8 minute read

'Paperback Dreadful' at FringeArts Festival
Beyond Goosebumps: R.L. Stine gets his just desserts
What American kid of the ‘90s wasn't captivated by R.L. Stine's spine-tingling Goosebumps books, with their monstrous apparitions and sinister wishes granted? This send-up of Stine ventures a step further to focus on the real traumas of childhood.

Articles
3 minute read

Pig Iron's "Pay Up' at the FringeArts Festival (2nd review)
Pay Up again (for a show you've seen before)
Pig Iron's hilarious/heartbreaking exploration of how money affects us hasn't changed much since 2005. That's because, director Dan Rothenberg insists, things haven't changed much since then. I beg to disagree.

Articles
4 minute read

Jo StrÓ¸mgren Kompani's "The Society' at FringeArts
Beyond Monty Python
In barely an hour, director/choreographer Jo StrÓ¸mgren and his three gifted dancer/actors provide the most lucid, insightful— and funniest— overview of isolationism and global conflict that you're likely to find today.
Articles
3 minute read

Tennessee Williams's "Two Character Play'
A great playwright's dismaying final chapter
The Two Character Play is an agonizing glimpse into the darkness of Tennessee Williams's soul in decline. And yet I can't get the image of the playwright's smiling face out of my mind.
Articles
4 minute read

Pig Iron's "Pay Up' at the FringeArts Festival (1st review)
The uses and abuses of money, in one bizarre hour
The trouble with most “immersive theater” is that you remember the form rather than the content. Pig Iron's Pay Up, by contrast, is a razor-sharp, insightful investigation of how humans (and even animals) interact when it comes to money.
Articles
4 minute read

A man's guide to the 2013 Fringe Arts Festival
No music or feelings, please: A man's guide to the Fringe Arts Festival
Men may dominate the theater world, but women dominate the audience. So how can a male theatergoer enjoy this month's Fringe Festival? By choosing carefully and relying on the expert guidance of my weightlifting teammates and drinking buddies.

Articles
4 minute read
Mauckingbird's "Importance of Being Earnest'
Oscar Wilde gets the ‘post-gay' treatment
Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest is a Victorian comedy about men who lead double lives. The Mauckingbird Theatre Company's “post-gay” production overlooks Wilde's motivation for raising such a theme in the first place.

Articles
4 minute read