Theater
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Fringe Festival's "Thom Pain' and "Untitled'
Child as father to the man
Patrons sifting through the Philadelphia Fringe Festival's 180 acts could ease their confusion by trusting the proven talents of Luna Theater and the 11th Hour Theatre Company. Both refreshingly tackle an old theme: how a grown man deals with the lingering effects of childhood trauma.
Thom Pain (based on nothing). By Will Eno; directed by Gregory Campbell. Luna Theater Company production through September 19, 2010 at Upstairs at the Adrienne, 2030 Sansom St. as part of the Philadelphia Fringe Festival. www.livearts-fringe.org/details.cfm?id=13647.

Articles
3 minute read

"Freedom Club' and Fugard's "Statements' at the Fringe (1st rev
Myth vs. realism in political theater
Must political plays be preachy and boring? The verdict is mixed for these two Fringe Festival productions.

Articles
3 minute read

Mauckingbird's "Midsummer Night's Dream'
Shakespeare meets Lady Gaga
Mauckingbird's imaginative, gender-bending staging of A Midsummer Night's Dream offers a spectacle that the Facebook generation can sink its teeth right into, notwithstanding the limitations of Mauckingbird's scatterbrained approach to Shakespeare's text.

Articles
5 minute read

Iron Age Theatre's "Empress of the Moon'
Men conquer, women suffer. So what else is new?
Instead of delving into the remarkable story of a 17th-Century woman who wrote some of the most popular plays of her era, writer-director Chris Braak trots out the usual feminist complaints.

Articles
4 minute read

"La Cage Aux Folles' on Broadway
The film was so much better
The current Broadway production of La Cage Aux Folles won the 2010 Tony for best revival of a musical. So why was I constantly checking my watch through two hours and 40 minutes of this heavy-handed extravaganza?
Articles
3 minute read

Shakespeare vs. New York's Jews (2nd comment)
Jews 1, Shakespeare 0
I waited 18 hours to see The Merchant of Venice in New York's Central Park. Al Pacino's signature lion's roar was well worth the wait. But director Daniel Sullivan, by dumbing down the script and softening its anti-Semitism, subverted Shakespeare's clear intention.

Articles
5 minute read

Temple Repertory's "Three Sisters'
Fulfillment is out there somewhere
In a Russian garrison town far from the cultural capitals, three sisters dream of a better life. In three hours that end too soon, Temple's staging evokes a world throbbing with a pulse of hope and despair that still beats today.

Articles
5 minute read

Temple Repertory Theater's "Measure For Measure'
Is there a hypocrite in the house?
It's a wonder that anyone would take on such a complex and difficult work as Shakespeare's Measure For Measure. Yet director Douglas C. Wager and his new Temple Repertory theater team have navigated this riddle of a play with two original (albeit flawed) features.
Articles
4 minute read

Second City's 50th anniversary tour (2nd review)
It's the material, stupid
Great comedians can always elevate even bad material. But in this collection, it's the superb writing that ensures the show's hilarity.

Articles
2 minute read

Second City's 50th anniversary tour (1st review)
50 years of taking risks
After 50 years, Chicago's Second City still displays a distinct style of satirical humor that transcends its competitors. Its forte is spontaneous improvisation, but its real distinction is an indescribable weird, dark quality.

Articles
3 minute read