THE LION IN WINTER at the Colony Theatre

Neal Weaver  – Stage Raw “I guess all families have their ups and downs,” says Eleanor of Aquitaine in James Goldman’s perennially popular comedy drama about 12thcentury royals. But in most families, the ups and downs don’t come as fast and furiously as in this play, and certainly they’re never expressed quite so articulately, with … Read more

EVERYTHING YOU TOUCH at Boston Court Performing Arts Center

Margaret Gray – LA Times You may have seen your share of makeovers, but nothing like the one Sheila Callaghan inflicts on her heroine in “Everything You Touch,” her lushly written dark comedy world-premiering at Boston Court Performing Arts Center.    Read more… Pauline Adamek  – Stage Raw Sheila Callaghan’s compelling play examines the dysfunctional dynamic between … Read more

TASTE at Sacred Fools Theatre Company

BobVerini –   Arts In LA The premise of Benjamin Brand’s Taste, as the management of Sacred Fools Theater Company has been unabashedly eager to trumpet in preopening publicity, is a compact made between two men to meet for dinner, at which the guest is to be killed, butchered, cooked, and eaten by the host in what … Read more

SOVEREIGN BODY at the Road Theatre

Deborah Klugman – LA Weekly What happens when an illness of tsunami-like proportions lays waste to your life? In Emilie Beck’s family drama Sovereign Body, Anna (Taylor Gilbert), a chef and restaurateur, lives happily with her husband (Kevin McCorkle), mom (Bryna Weiss) and two daughters: 20-year-old Callie (Dani Stephens), bursting to be out on her own, … Read more

SHADES at Macha Theatre

Neal Weaver – Stage Raw Tom Hartley’s comedy concerns teenager Miguel (Armando Broncas) who’s in deep denial about his homosexual feelings, ‘till his girlfriend Nuria (Catherine Mersereau) gives him a mysterious pair of sunglasses through which he can see the aura of those around him. Straights, it seems, have blue auras, while gays have red … Read more

GOD ONLY KNOWS at Theatre 40

Terry Morgan – Stage Raw One thing the theater is particularly good at is exploring the ramifications of an argument, be it interpersonal, philosophical or political: Simply look at the works of George Bernard Shaw or David Hare. Hugh Whitemore’s take on the subject of the validity of Christianity or any religion is called God Only … Read more

WHITE MARRIAGE at the Odyssey Theatre Ensemble

Pauline Adamek  – Stage Raw That director Ron Sossi decided to remount White Marriage might be an attempt to recapture the hit production for the Odyssey Theatre Ensemble that Sossi almost 40 years ago. In the here and now, however, the urgency of the play’s point is muted largely by Sossi’s own re-staging. Read more… Neal Weaver  – … Read more

THE LAST ACT OF LILKA KADISON at the Falcon Theatre

David C. Nichols –  LA Times That rarefied place where craft, collaboration and content create theatrical poetry is everywhere in “The Last Act of Lilka Kadison” at the Falcon Theatre. Indeed, this delicately potent West Coast premiere, a co-production between the Falcon and Chicago’s Tony-winning Lookingglass Theatre Company, often seems to be composing itself before … Read more

B. FRANKLIN at the Stephanie Feury Studio Theatre

Neal Weaver  – Stage Raw For many years, America’s founding fathers were treated so reverentially by historians that they seemed like inhuman figures on a monument. But from the beginning, Benjamin Franklin was the saltiest of them all. Because of his fondness for the ladies, his behind- the-scenes intrigues, his advanced age, and the omnipresent … Read more

THE PETRIFIED FOREST at Theatre West

Deborah Klugman – Stage Raw In Robert E. Sherwood’s 1934 play, The Petrified Forest, a world-weary writer, Alan Squier (skillfully etched by John DeMita), happens into a remote café in the Arizona desert, and in the space of a few short hours has stirred the eternal ardor of the café owner’s starry-eyed daughter, Gabby (Leona Britton) … Read more