Theater
2734 results
Page 211

Cathy Quigley's "Female Trouble' at the Fringe Festival
Profiles in courage
Who on earth would want to attend a performance about endometriosis? Let us now praise Cathy Quigley, who brought this painful condition to the stage with a combination of courage, aplomb and ingenuity.

Articles
3 minute read

"Aspects of Love' at the Walnut
Oh, grow up!
Aspects of Love is a musical about love among the incurably immature. It's impossible to take it seriously, as Andrew Lloyd Webber intended. But it almost works as a Gallic sex farce.

Articles
4 minute read

"Wars & Whores' at the Fringe Festival
When Henry IV met Pete Seeger
Wars and Whores is an unpretentious musical version of Shakespeare's Henry IV, with the story performed straight and the songs composed in a hootenanny style, that nevertheless manages to remain true to Shakespeare's play.

Articles
3 minute read

"WHaLE OPTICS' by Thaddeus Phillips
Flights of underwater imagination
When it comes to communicating across space and time, humans can learn something from whales, and vice versa. In another of his unpredictable flights of imagination, Thaddeus Phillips breaks new ground as an artist.

Articles
4 minute read

Max Frisch's "The Arsonists' (2nd review)
Rod Serling, where are you?
Contrary to its promotion as an “absurdist romp,” Max Frisch's The Arsonists is a moral play with several morals. It deserved better than this heavy-handed trivialization.

Articles
3 minute read

Applied Mechanics' "Overseers' at Fringe Festival
Minding everyone else's business
Overseers concerns a revolt in a totalitarian society. Its creators at Applied Mechanics are themselves rebels against the tyranny of theatrical boundaries.

Articles
4 minute read

Luna Theater's "How to Disappear Completely' (2nd review)
You'll never get away
The British playwright Fin Kennedy's How To Disappear Completely and Never Be Found is not so much a primer on vanishing as a meditation on the cruel impossibility of oblivion, especially in a virtual Internet world where things and people live forever.

Articles
3 minute read
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Pig Iron's "Twelfth Night' at Suzanne Roberts (1st review)
Pig Iron plays Shakespeare (and passes the pickled herring test)
This rollicking production of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, an unusually mainstream choice for the customarily avant-garde Pig Iron, got a deservedly wild reception at this week's opening, from the pickled herring to the boisterous final dance.

Articles
4 minute read

Eric Singel's "The Wedding Consultant' at Walnut Studio 3
If you've seen one wedding….
Writer/performer Eric Singel rounds up every warmed-over wedding joke known to Western society to prove that weddings are indeed universally similar affairs”“ even gay weddings.

Articles
4 minute read

"The Method Gun' at the Fringe Festival
Eat your heart out, Jesus: What Stella Burden's disciples did for art
The obsessive acting coach Stella Burden once drew five young actors together for nine years to rehearse the bit parts of A Streetcar Named Desire. She went crazy in the process, but her method— as portrayed in The Method Gun— revealed the profundity that often lies behind madness.

Articles
3 minute read