Share

Theatre

  • Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike

    Durang Off the Hook at Shakespeare & Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 16th, 2014

    Directed by our friend the late Nicholas Martin of Williamstown Theatre Festival Christopher Durang's serious comedy Vanya and Sonia and Macha and Spike won a Tony for Best Play. Since then it has been widely produced and now through September 14 by Shakespeare & Company. Matthew Penn has directed an awesome cast in this side splitting gonzo riff on Anton Chekhov. It's a fresh, fun, zinger that rounds off a top heavy summer of the Bard in Lenox.

  • The Marvelous Wonderettes: Caps & Gowns

    Fun and Frolics at Weston Theatre’s Second Stage

    By: Leanne Jewett - Aug 16th, 2014

    For pure, unadulterated entertainment the juke box musical The Marvelous Wonderettes: Caps & Gowns can’t be beat. It’s polished and professional while retaining the freshness of youth and good-natured fun. It is basically a family-friendly burlesque, a humorous exaggeration of the teen years and loves of four young women.

  • Reasons to Be Pretty at Geffen Playhouse

    Neil LaBute Play Through August 31

    By: Jack Lyons - Aug 15th, 2014

    In his latest play “Reasons to be Pretty”, directed by artistic director Randall Arney, now playing on the Gil Cates stage of the Geffen Playhouse, Neil LaBute introduces us to four characters in their mid-twenties, who are what some might label as border-line losers. The younger generation come off as spoiled, self-indulgent, and suffering from a lack of parental oversight when they were growing up. And, they’re still not grownups when we catch up with them.

  • Walldogs at Hatch Art Collective

    An Economy of Means by New Pittsburgh Company

    By: Wendy Arons - Aug 15th, 2014

    Hatch Arts Collective is a relatively new enterprise (they are in their second year of existence), and in this production of Walldogs director Adil Mansoor has made the smart choice to embrace and make a virtue of the company’s poverty of resources. The scene design is simple and spare, foregrounding the play’s “third character,” the wall, and the costume and lighting design are equally pared down.

  • Finding Neverland A Spectacular Journey

    American Rep Wows With Broadway Bound Musical

    By: Mark Favermann - Aug 15th, 2014

    Based upon the story of the creation of the 1904 now classic play Peter Pan, Finding Neverland at the American Repertory Theatre is a wonderful theatrical multigenerational event. With spectacular performances, magnificent stagecraft and beautiful music, this is a sight and sound treat. Already set for Broadway in 2015, getting a ticket might be difficult, but well worth the effort. Bravo Diane Paulus and A.R. T.!

  • A Chorus Line at The Weston Playhouse

    Vermont Production Highlights Turmoil of Broadway's Gypsys

    By: Leanne Jewett - Aug 15th, 2014

    Innovative when it was developed in 1975, time has stolen some of the sizzle from this intimate dance-centered musical. The dance and music are still entertaining and the heart and passion of the young characters carry the show. Weston’s production is solid and professional with a talented cast.

  • Dancing Lessons by Mark St. Germain

    Swept Off Our Feet at Barrington Stage

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 14th, 2014

    Dancing Lessons is the ninth play and eighth world permiere by Mark St. Germain at Barrington Stage Company. As a signifier of their long standing relationship the new play is directed by Julianne Boyd the founder of the company. In recent years his plays have gone on to successful tours of regional companies. Starring the astonishing John Cariani with a stunning dancing partner in Paige Davis this play has the potential to be on the road for years.

  • Breakfast with Playwright Mark St. Germain

    Discussing Dancing Lessons for Barrington Stage

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 11th, 2014

    Honoring his many contributions The Mark St. Germain Stage was named for him by Pittsfield's Barrington Stage Company. A number of his best known works- Freud's Last Sessions, Best of Enemies, Dr. Ruth- have premiered for the company of artistic director, Julianne Boyd. This week the latest Dancing Lessons will open. In what has become an annual ritual we met at Dottie's in Pittsfield for breakfast to discuss this new work as well as the challenges of a life in theatre.

  • WAM Theatre Fresh Takes

    reading of Seven Homeless Mammoths Wander New England by Madeleine George

    By: WAM - Aug 11th, 2014

    WAM Theatre will present the reading on Sunday, August 17 at 3:00 p.m. at No. Six Depot Roastery and Café, 6 Depot Street in West Stockbridge, MA. Seven Homeless Mammoths Wander New England is the fourth presentation in the new Fresh Takes play reading series, which offers new and reimagined works that tell women’s stories. The series has proven popular with audiences and the first three readings sold out.

  • A Midsummer Night's Dream

    A Signature Magical Piece for Shakespeare & Company

    By: Maria Reveley - Aug 11th, 2014

    A delightful comedy of love combining the world of reality with the unseen world of spirits and faeries, all with a backdrop of the Jazz Age of New Orleans.

  • Henry IV, Parts 1 & 2 at Shakespeare & Company

    Shorter and Sweeter in Jonathan Epstein's Adatation

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 09th, 2014

    Sitting through Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 can be a long slog on Elizabethan inspired cruel on the bottom benches at Shakespeare & Company. In a brisk, rich and often hilarious reduction and conflation by Jonathan Epstein to two long acts with intermission, clocking at three hours, through this delicious production mind prevails over matter. One's sore bottom in this case. During his 450th year S&Co. has been presenting Shakespeare up the wazoo.

  • Penny Arcade Returns to Joe's Pub

    Longing Lasts Longer at NY's Public Theatre

    By: Edward Rubin - Aug 09th, 2014

    Though Longing Lasts Longer had a limited run in June, it is being brought back, to Joe's Pub at the Public Theatre this coming October and November. For the past number decades, Penny Arcade, who worked with Warhol at the tender age of 15, has been taking her act around the world. And wherever she performs people line up to hear what she has to say.

  • The Old Man and the Old Moon

    PigPen Theatre Co. Anchors WTF Season

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 08th, 2014

    The original production of The Old Man and the Old Moon by PigPen Theatre Company ran for 100 performances Off Broadway. The company which was formed in 2008 twice won first prize for a new play during the annual NYC Fringe Festival. It arrives to end the Williamstown Theatre Festival's season on its Nikos Stage. This fairy tale for kids of all ages will primarily appeal to those under thirty.

  • Design For Living at the Unicorn in Stockbridge

    A Revival of Noel Coward by Berkshire Theatre Group

    By: Maria Reveley - Aug 08th, 2014

    Noel Coward wrote this play to be performed with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. They met in 1921 and became friends, often discussing their dreams of success. They made a pact that all three perform in one of Coward’s plays once they had all become successful.

  • Kander Ebb's The Visit at Williamstown

    Chita Rivera in Something Old with Something New

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 07th, 2014

    When it opened at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago the Kander and Ebb Broadway bound musical The Visit got nipped in the bud by 9/11. After mixed reviews for a 2008 production, also starring Chita Rivera, it gathered dust. With a revised book by Terrence McNally and judicious cuts to one act by director John Doyle it is enjoying a strong run and mostly favorable reviews at the Williamstown Theatre Festival through August 17.

  • Ronald Harwood’s Quartet at Old Globe

    Charming Comedy In San Diego to August 24

    By: Jack Lyons - Aug 06th, 2014

    Ronald Harwood’s deliciously sly comedy features four meaty roles for actors of a “certain age”, and those roles are filled by four actors who perform as though they were born for their parts: Old Globe favorite Robert Foxworth plays shy and introverted Reginald Paget, a fussy, classically trained singer, of the old school who bristles at the suggestive shenanigans and randy language of Wilfred Bond, portrayed by Roger Forbes who fancies himself as the retirement home lothario.

  • Buyer and Cellar at Mark Taper Forum

    Stars Michel Urie In Barbra Streisand Homage

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 31st, 2014

    The wacky 90 minute satire, is pure fiction when it comes to the narrative, however, celebrity super-stars like Barbra Streisand often become the subjects of faux stories, books and plays. Playwright Jonathan Tolins’ pays his homage to Streisand throughout in a tender way but doesn’t let her off the hook completely.

  • Julius Ceasar at Shakespeare & Company

    Tina Packer Directs Seven Actors in Forty Roles

    By: Maria Reveley - Jul 31st, 2014

    Seven actors masterfully play a modern version of Shakespeare's timeless tale of Julius Caesar. Packer got the idea of seven actors from Shakespeare himself, who used that number of actors when he took his plays on tour.

  • 'Cedars' World Premier starring James Naughton

    Berkshire Theater Festival hosts a World Premier

    By: Maria Reveley - Jul 30th, 2014

    A play with two characters, one comatose, that takes place in a hospital room. Though the setting is constricted, the play reveals the complexity of its main character, Gabe, and his relationships. James Naughton delivers a nuanced performance.

  • Cedars at Berkshire Theatre Group

    James Naughton Solos in Premiere by Erik Tarloff

    By: Maria Reveley - Jul 30th, 2014

    James Naughton, two time Tony award winner, brings his formidable acting skills to this one man play. We get to know him as a son, husband, father, lawyer and, at times, a complete wreck. Naughton’s voice is a true instrument, displaying anger, humor, despair, bitterness, weakness, fear.

  • The Orphan of Zhao at La Jolla Playhouse,

    BD Wong in Ancient Chinese Tale

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 29th, 2014

    “The Orphan of Zhao”, at La Jolla Playhouse, is receiving an intelligent and intense revival of the classic Chinese legend that has roots in the fourth century BC. Starring Tony winner BD Wong (M Butterfly) it runs through August 2.

  • Ether Dome by Elizabeth Egloff a Snore

    West Coast Premiere at La Jolla Playhouse

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 29th, 2014

    “Ether Dome” written by Elizabeth Egloff, and directed by Michael Wilson, is a fascinating subject for exploration regarding the subject of pain and the quest of medicine to conquer a condition that has afflicted human beings since the dawn of time. Compelling as the subject matter may be, the action of the piece comes off as sluggish; periodically engaging the audience, only later to “anesthetize” them (pun intended) by having the story wander to Paris, France, New York City, and then back to Boston.

  • Into the Woods at Old Globe

    Inventive Co Production with Fiasco Theatre

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 29th, 2014

    The musical has seen many script versions and hundreds of stagings by theatres all over the world in the last twenty-eight years. It’s considered to be one of the greatest musicals of all time. “Into the Woods” 2014 version, is once again a reimagined, inventive and energetic co-production this time Old Globe partnered with the critically acclaimed Fiasco Theatre that originated at the McCarter Theatre Center.

  • Sam Shepard’s Fool for Love

    Cowboy Chic in Williamstown

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 25th, 2014

    Now 70 Sam Shepard has created a riveting existential American theatre through a cowboy chic deconstuction of the mythology of the American West. In the manner of Beckett's theatre of the absurd the tense and tight drama of Fool for Love is confined to a motel room. There is a death struggle between Tony winner, the formidable Nina Arainda, and the desperate cowboy played by Sam Rockwell. Since 1970 it is the sixth Shepard production for Williamstown Theatre Festival.

  • The Golem of Havana

    Oi Vey Olé

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 24th, 2014

    Set in Cuba during the last gasp of the Batista regime a new musical for Barrington Stage company is a complicated balancing act between Jewish history and mythology and Cuba's Santaria tradition during the Revolution. The Golem of Havana mixes musical mataphors between Eurpoean Klezmer and Cuban Salsa

  • << Previous Next >>