Saturday, May 31, 2025
"Significant Other" at Lyric Arts
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
"Measure for Measure" by The Birth Play Project at A-Mill Artist Lofts
My favorite new theater company of 2022, The Birth Play Project, is back, this time with a new twist on a classic. Their new play with music Mary’s Wondrous Body, based on a so-bizarre-it-must-be-true story of a woman who claimed to give birth to rabbits, was indeed wondrous. Now this company whose mission is "to place birth in public memory by developing representational practices for staging reproductive stories" is presenting Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. If you're wondering, "what does this play have to do with birth?," you're not alone. I've seen this play a few times before, and it's always been Isabella's story, a soon-to-be nun who is offered a chance to save her brother Claudio from death, if she sleeps with his accuser Angelo. But so far in the background that I even forgot she was there, is Juliet, Claudio's not-quite-wife, who is pregnant with his child (the crime with which they're both charged). This adaptation by Madeline Wall and William Edson, who also direct the piece, puts the focus on this forgotten woman who is quietly (or not so quietly) giving birth while the other actions of the play swirl around her. It's an engaging and entertaining take on this classic that explores a hidden side of it, and makes one wonder what other birth stories are hiding in the background, waiting to be told. Click here to find out more about The Birth Play Project and to purchase tickets to one of their two remaining performances at Saint John the Evangelist Episcopal Church and Elision Playhouse.
Saturday, April 27, 2024
"Language Archive" by Theatre Pro Rata at the Crane Theater
Julia Cho's The Language Archive, which premiered in 2010, is a sweet, odd, and endearing little play. Park Square Theatre produced the regional premiere in 2015, when I called it "smartly written, funny, a bit fantastical but very grounded in reality... touches the heart as well as the mind and the funny bone." I described it thusly: "It's about the different languages that we all speak, not just the actual language, but also the more intimate informal languages that we develop in relationships with the different people in our lives. Even though the characters in the play all speak English, they struggle to communicate with each other on a deeper level, sometimes succeeding, sometimes failing, as we all do." It's a great choice for Theatre Pro Rata, which consistently makes interesting choices (this is actually one of the rare times when I've seen one of their play choices previously). They've employed a talented five-person cast (Park Square had seven), and an inventive design with some unique delights. You can see this little gem of a play now through May 4 at the Crane Theater.
Saturday, February 24, 2024
"Silent Sky" at Theatre in the Round
Sunday, November 19, 2023
"The Wickhams: Christmas at Pemberley" at Lyric Arts
Monday, May 22, 2023
"Antigonick" by Full Circle Theater Company at Mixed Blood Theatre
Sunday, March 19, 2023
"Eurydice" at Theatre in the Round
Thursday, June 23, 2022
"Romeo and Juliet" by Zephyr Theatre at Aamodt's Apple Farm
Thursday, May 5, 2022
"Miss Woodhouse Presents" by Aethem Theatre Company at Elision Playhouse
Sunday, November 28, 2021
"It's a Wonderful Life" at Lyric Arts
Thursday, August 12, 2021
Zephyr Theatre's ShakesFaire - "Shakespeare LOL" and "As You Like It"
Saturday, May 2, 2020
Park Square Theatre's Special Zoom Performance of THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK
Out of all the streaming theater performances I've watched at home in the past seven weeks, none has affected me as much as Park Square Theatre's special zoom performance of their annual production of THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK. This is their 21st year presenting this for student audiences, and I commend them for finding a way to get this ever more relevant and inspiring story out to students (and others) in such a uniquely moving way. It's really well done, with each actor emoting from their own separate little box, but somehow creating a cohesive story as if they were in the same room. The cast and creative team put much thought and care into their at-home costumes, lighting, and props, as well as the way actors appear and disappear from the screen. Anne and her family's horrific experience really puts our temporary isolation into perspective. I highly recommend it for your at home quarantimes (or anytime) theater viewing.