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Archive for October 2013

the road weeps, the well runs dry at L.A.T.C.

Deborah Klugman – LA Weekly

There are glints of the Oresteia in Marcus Gardley’s poetic, sweeping drama, the road weeps, the well runs dry, which takes place in a 19th-century Oklahoma town settled by fleeing African-American freedmen and their Native American cohabitants. The story’s tragic chain of events erupts around the searing rivalry between the community’s swaggering Native American sheriff, Trowbridge (Darrell Dennis), and his implacable enemy, Number Two (Demetrius Grosse), a dark and violent man.
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RoadWeeps

Photo by Ed Krieger

 

Now running through November 17.

WHEN YOU WISH: THE STORY OF WALT DISNEY at the Freud Playhouse

waltLes Spindle –  Frontiers L.A.

The world premiere of a new musical, When You Wish: The Story of Walt Disney—celebrating the life and career of the legendary animator/mogul Disney (1901-1966)—seems well-timed to the upcoming release of a holiday season film, Saving Mr. Banks. The eagerly awaited movie starring Tom Hanks as Disney is set during the making of his studio’s movie classic Mary Poppins in the mid-1960s. Meanwhile, this biographical stage tuner, co-produced by 1960s-era singing idol Pat Boone and Dean McClure (book and score writer) is apparently wishing upon a star of its own……   

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4000 MILES at South Coast Repertory Theatre

Bob Verini – ArtsInLA

herzog

Photo by Debora Robinson

Amy Herzog’s 4000 Miles comes to us with a considerable reputation as a Pulitzer Prize finalist, but whatever virtues this intergenerational seriocomedy may possess, they certainly don’t come through in South Coast Repertory’s version.
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Now running through November 17.

EVITA at the Pantages Theatre

evita

Bob Verini – ArtsInLA

“She didn’t say much but she said it loud.” That’s Eva Peron (1919–1952) as assessed by nemesis Che Guevara during the prologue of Evita. But as it happens, the accusation of saying very little, very loudly has dogged the Andrew Lloyd Webber–Tim Rice through-sung tuner ever since it emerged as a concept album in 1976, sweeping Broadway’s Tonys two years later.

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David C. Nichols – LA Times

It’s a newer Argentina than not on display in “Evita” at the Pantages. This glossy touring edition of director Michael Grandage’s 2006 revival of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s Tony-winning phenomenon doesn’t reinvent the popera, just gives it a shrewdly evocative makeover.

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Neal Weaver  – LA Weekly

This now-legendary musical began as a concept record album, later became a Tony-winning stage hit on Broadway in 1979 and then a film starring Madonna. It’s now receiving its first full-scale revival in more than 30 years (this production, which originated in London, closed on Broadway in January). The show tells the grim Cinderella story of Eva Peron (Caroline Bowman) and her spectacular rise from tango dancer in a rural Argentine cantina to ambitious social climber who slept her way to the top…….. Read more…

Now running through November 10.

MOSKVA at City Garage

David C. Nichols – LA Times

mosk

Photo by Paul Rubenstein

Mikhail Bulgakov meets Sergei Eisenstein at Andy Warhol’s Factory in “Moskva.” This ornate take on Bulgakov’s “The Master and Margarita” is a nobly ambitious, surreally unhinged deep-dish bowl of dramaturgical borscht.
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Pauline Adamek  – ArtsBeatLA

City Garage is known for staging edgy and provocative avant garde theater and their latest production, Moskva, is no exception. Written by Steven Leigh Morris, Moskva is a bizarre and satirical fantasy based on the (posthumously published) pre-WWII Russian novel The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov.
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Now running through December 15.

DON’T DRESS FOR DINNER at International City Theatre

Melinda Schupmann – Arts In LA

For all the purported sexual sophistication attributed to the French, Marc Camoletti’s cheeky farce about a married couple’s “liaisons dangereuses” at a French country house is less daring and more conventional than one might expect. Still, its romantic machinations make for amusing moments.
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Now running through November 3.

dd

Photo by Suzanne Mapes

 

CIVILIZATION at Son of Semele Theatre

Steven Leigh Morris  – LA Weekly

Among people of a certain age I’ve spoken with recently, let’s say 45 and older, there’s this sense — not so much a perception or even an intuition, rather a more vague tingle — that something is going numb.
This is not a physical sensation but a spiritual one. It has to do with having lived through an age in which the values of our culture included the promise, and the premise, that things were advancing, and would continue to do so. Read more...

Now running through October 28.

Photo by Matthew McCray

Photo by Matthew McCray

 

THE HOMOSEXUALS at Atwater Village Theatre

Photo by Sean Lambert

Photo by Sean Lambert

Neal Weaver – LA Weekly

Philip Dawkins’ comedy revolves around Evan (boyishly cute blond Brian Dare), who arrives in town as a naive, newly out greenhorn but soon joins a mildly incestuous circle of gay friends, including four guys and one girl, Tam (Kelly Schumann), a history teacher and sassy, self-defined fag hag. Collin (Matt Crabtree) falls for Evan on sight, and they become lovers.
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Now running through December 1.

FALLING at Rogue Machine Theatre

Steven Leigh Morris – LA Weekly

Tami and Bill Martin love their son Josh. Call it a difficult love. Josh is 18 and severely autistic. When Josh gets upset, which he does unpredictably, he can turn violent, pulling his mother’s hair and choking her. Soon after, he lies on the living room floor in a fetal position repeating “I’m sorry” as a mantra.
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falling-rogue-machine.9274887.87

Photo by John Flynn

 

Now running through December 1.

AWAKE AND SING at the Group Rep

Neal Weaver  – LA Weekly

The legendary 1935 production of this Clifford Odets play has been credited with establishing the Group Theatre’s reputation, electrifying the Broadway of its time, and changing the very nature of American acting for generations. It has become a high-water mark against which any subsequent production is measured. This rendition, directed by Larry Eisenberg, is a solid and respectable effort, if not an overly exciting one.

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Awake
Now running through November 3.

WAIT UNTIL DARK at the Geffen Playhouse

wait

Photo by Michael Lamont

Dany Margolies  -  Arts In LA

Suspense and suspension hallmark this sleek production. At the play’s climax, on opening night, no breathing could be heard among the audience members. No one shifted in his seat, no one crinkled her program, no critic dared jot down a note. Suspense reigned. At the top of the play however, one must suspend disbelief, giving up all thoughts of “natural” or “expected” behavior. The earlier each viewer passes that tipping point, the more immersive this theatergoing experience will be for that viewer. Read more…

Terry Morgan  -  LAist

For whatever reason, suspense is not something theatre does very well. Perhaps it’s the physical limitations of the stage space, but few plays attempt to be thrillers, and even fewer succeed at it. One of the notable exceptions to this truism is Frederick Knott’s Wait Until Dark, a Broadway hit that became an even more famous film. Read more…

Les Spindle – Frontiers L.A.

The 1966 thriller Wait Until Dark by Fredrick Knott (Dial M for Murder), now being revisited in a world-premiere adaptation by Jeffrey Hatcher, relies on a timelessly intriguing damsel-in-distress formula. In a tense showdown between a Greenwich Village housewife and some thugs who invade her home, the key twist remains the heroine’s blindness. This affliction proves both a weakness and a strength for her amid a battle of ingenuity and determination.
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Pauline Adamek  – LA Weekly

A hoary old thriller, Wait Until Dark still holds some scares for 21st century theatre audiences and can be seen at the Geffen Playhouse until Sunday, November 17.

The stage play by Frederick Knott—first performed in 1966—was famously filmed the following year and starred Audrey Hepburn. For this handsomely staged production, Matt Shakman directs Jeffrey Hatcher’s world premiere adaptation. Read more…

Now running through November 17.

THE LIAR at Antaeus Theater Company

Bob Verini – ArtsInLA

This production is a buoyant treat from first to last. Full disclosure, this is coming from someone with a lifelong antipathy to mistaken-identity plots—you know, the ones in which one opportune word from a character would set everything right immediately, but that word is arbitrarily withheld until the 11th hour. That’s exactly how David Ives’s rhymed couplet version of a 1644 Corneille play operates, and yet such is the magic of this production that it never feels labored .Read more…

Terry Morgan  -  LAist

The Antaeus Company has delivered a sparkling production of Pierre Corneille’s 17th-century play The Liar. It’s a brilliant modern adaptation by David Ives and is one of the wittiest things I’ve seen in years. The downside of being a theatre company that specializes in the classics, such as the Antaeus Company, is that, rightly or wrongly, it accrues a sense of gravitas that might not, to a random prospective theatergoer, imply fun. It’s admirable that even though Antaeus has long been one of the most lauded and entertaining theatre companies in town, they are still trying to be even more accessible to the general audience. Read more…

liar

Photo by Geoffrey Wade

Now running through December 1.