Theater

2734 results
Page 205
Nixon: Timeless woman-warrior.

Margaret Edson's "Wit' on Broadway

Triumph over cancer (with a little help from John Donne)

When a professor of metaphysical poetry encounters the ultimate metaphysical challenge, the result is a dazzling and unforgettably heroic struggle.

Carol Rocamora

Articles 4 minute read
Damron, Frey, Brennan: Unfulfilled, and never wondering why. (Photo: Arron J. Oster.)

Headland's "Bachelorette,' by Luna

Lost generation, still losing

At a pre-wedding party, three single women fast approaching 30 chase down their sour grapes with pot, pills, and champagne. Notwithstanding its lack of plot, Bachelorette scores some perceptive points about the “happiness gap” suffered by young professional women who lack traditional families.
Jim Rutter

Jim Rutter

Articles 3 minute read
Colman Domingo (left), Forrest McClendon: Liberals lampooned, too. (Photo: Paul Kolnik.)

Kander & Ebb's "Scottsboro Boys' by PTC (3rd review)

This time, the boys get a break

The Scottsboro Boys, a reminder of not so distant racial attitudes, deserves more exposure than it received on Broadway in 2010. In its focus on miscarriages of justice, it resembles Kander and Ebb's hit Chicago. But Scottsboro packs more substance.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 2 minute read
Spacey makes us his accomplices in murder and mayhem.

Kevin Spacey's "Richard III' in Brooklyn

Slithering to the throne

Anyone who complains about Kevin Spacey's larger-than-life, over-the-top performance as Richard III is just plain jealous. What makes Spacey's Richard so fascinating is the way he seduces the audience along with his amorous conquests onstage.

Carol Rocamora

Articles 5 minute read
Dancing all the way to the electric chair.

Kander & Ebb's "Scottsboro Boys' by PTC (2nd review)

An idea that's off the rails

What's that you say? You can't get into snappy tap dances and rousing cakewalks about racism and lynching? Hey, where's your sense of humor?
Jackie Schifalacqua

Jackie Schifalacqua

Articles 2 minute read
Rodney Hicks (left), Forrest McClendon: Tell it like it really happened?

Kander & Ebb's "Scottsboro Boys' by PTC (1st review)

The memory of injustice, or: Let's put on a (very different) show

This first-rate production of an ingenious musical appropriately recalls an American racial nightmare of the 1930s. Unfortunately, in its preoccupation with laughing at racism it overlooks or, worse, lampoons some of the real heroes of that Alabama tragedy.

Marshall A. Ledger

Articles 6 minute read
McDonald (left) with Norm Lewis: An operatic performer in a made-for-Broadway show.

"Porgy and Bess' on Broadway

Porgy, we hardly knew ye

Can you improve on a classic like Porgy and Bess, let alone Shakespeare or Chekhov? Diane Paulus thought she could make Gershwin's classic more relevant to modern audiences. The result is a merely entertaining show, bereft of the passion and grandeur of the 1935 original.

Carol Rocamora

Articles 5 minute read
Bob Horn was a flawed deejay, but he broke Philadelphia's color line.

"Memphis' and the real dawn of rock 'n' roll

Blacks, whites and rock ‘n' roll: Memphis vs. the real ‘Bandstand'

As rock 'n' roll musicals go, Memphis seems unnecessary. The subject of racial integration among music lovers was well covered ten years ago in Hairspray. A far more intriguing tale— how Bob Horn's “Bandstand” brought black music to white Philadelphia audiences in the early '50s— has yet to be celebrated on stage.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 5 minute read

"Ludwig Live' at Kimmel's Innovation Studio

And then in 1822 I wrote…..

Where did Beethoven go wrong? For one thing, he lacked catchy lyrics. For another, he lacked a vivacious sidekick adept at baton twirling and tap dancing. Now he has both.
Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen

Articles 2 minute read
Silvia Calderone as Antigone: A question of justice, then and now.

"Alexis': Political theater in New York

Where theater and politics meet

How can political theater bring audiences to their feet and change the course of history? Why does it happen in Europe and not here? Motus, a daring new Italian theater company, has provided a vivid model for Americans.

Carol Rocamora

Articles 4 minute read