Sunday, May 4, 2025
"Sickle" by Theatre Novi Most at Mixed Blood Theatre
Monday, March 10, 2025
"The Messenger" at Six Points Theater
Sunday, April 14, 2024
The History Plays: "Richard II," "Henry IV," and "Henry V" in rep at the Guthrie Theater
Saturday, November 4, 2023
"Say All the Truth" at the Jungle Theater, a co-production with The Moving Company
Saturday, March 25, 2023
"What / Washed Ashore / Astray" at Pillsbury House Theatre
In just 80 minutes, playwright Benjamin Benne succinctly writes about the experience of the death of a beloved family member with raw honesty and simple beauty. Despite the odd structure of the title, What / Washed Ashore / Astray is a very human story, with a little room for play and magic. Having recently gone through this experience, this play hit very close to home for me, and I was wiping away tears throughout the show. But it's quite lovely to see one of the most fundamental human experiences depicted on stage in such a beautiful way. Combined with wonderful performances from three of #TCTheater's best actors, an incredibly detailed set design that places us right there in the seaside cottage, and some delightfully inventive shadow puppetry, What / Washed Ashore / Astray is a must see for anyone interested in thoughtful human dramas (continuing through April 16 at Pillsbury House Theatre in South Minneapolis).
Thursday, October 22, 2020
"Flip the Script: The Great Divide IV" an audio play series by Pillsbury House Theatre
Saturday, March 16, 2019
"Roe" at Mixed Blood Theatre
Monday, February 11, 2019
"Stewardess!" at the Herstory Theatre
Saturday, July 21, 2018
"Hand to God" at Jungle Theater
Thursday, March 15, 2018
"The Great Divide II: Plays on the Politics of Truth" at Pillsbury House Theatre
Tuesday, February 13, 2018
"A Crack in the Sky" at History Theatre
Saturday, September 23, 2017
"≈ [almost equal to]" at Pillsbury House Theatre
Saturday, May 20, 2017
"Amy's View" at Park Square Theatre
Thursday, April 27, 2017
"The Great Divide" at Pillsbury House Theatre
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
A Reading of "Minneapolis/St. Paul" at the Playwrights' Center
The Ruth Easton Series concludes at the Playwrights' Center tonight, and I was fortunate to attend all five new play readings in the season. The final reading is a full circle moment for this theater blogger - the very first reading I attended at PWC was a reading of core writer Lee Blessing's Minneapolis/St. Paul, which the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers were invited to attend and discuss with the playwright. It's hard to believe that was less than a year ago, and since then I've attended as many readings as I am able to. As Lee himself said in an interview, "There's no more useful tool a playwright has to improve a play than the chance to watch it presented to an audience of willing victims." Consider me a very willing victim for this sort of experiment. It's been so much fun to experience these five plays in development (see also December's Wink by Jen Silverman, January's queens by Martyna Majok, February's Eden Prairie 1971 by Mat Smart, and January's The Sea at the Stars by Harrison David Rivers). If you've never been to a reading at the Playwrights' Center, I highly encourage you to pay them a visit and be a part of the great work they're doing in their 45th season.
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
A Reading of "queens" at Playwrights' Center
I attended my second "thrilling and intimate night of theater" as part of the 2016-2017 series last night (see also December's Wink by Jen Silverman). It was a clear, cold, snowy, moonlit night, perfect for gathering with fellow theater-lovers and theater-makers to experience a new work of theater. And what an exciting new work Martyna Majok's queens is. Although unfinished (the 3rd act has yet to be written and was described in a few sentences), it drew me right into the world of the play and made me care about these characters. I look forward to seeing the full work onstage sometime in the coming years, but in the meantime, it was a thrill to be a part of the play development process at Playwrights' Center, something they do so well.
Sunday, November 20, 2016
"A Christmas Carol" at the Guthrie Theater
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
"The Children" at Pillsbury House Theatre
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
A Reading of "Minneapolis/St. Paul" at the Playwright's Center
Saturday, August 29, 2015
"Extremities" by Dark & Stormy Productions at Grain Belt Warehouse
I don't want to say too much about the plot because you really need to watch it unfold unspoiled, but it centers around a woman named Marjorie who is attacked and nearly raped by a stranger in her home, until she's able to gain the upper hand with plans of enacting justice on her attacker. Her two roommates come home to find an injured man tied up, and aren't sure what to believe. The three women have very different perspectives on the situation, and it's fascinating to watch them struggle with what to do. Terry is scared, then becomes annoyed and doesn't want to sacrifice for Marjorie. Patricia applies her social work techniques to talk everyone through it and try to work out the best possible solution. Marjorie is just trying to survive in the only way she knows how. The attacker-turned-victim tries to sweet talk each of them in turn to get away, belying the monster we meet in the beginning of the play.
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Emily Bridges, Sara Marsh, and Tracey Maloney (photo by Heidi Bohnenkamp) |
The play is staged in Dark & Stormy's temporary new home in the Grain Belt Warehouse in Northeast Minneapolis. The stage is not so much a stage as a living room in a corner of the intimate space, with just a few rows of chairs on two sides. You're right there in the room with these characters and inside their dilemma. The attack scene is brutal and terrifying to watch, with intricate fight choreography (by Annie Enneking) well performed by James and Sara in a way that's almost too real, especially when viewed up close and personal. There are some nifty stage magic tricks that make the results of the violence visible in a very realistic way.
I'm not sure that the way we talk about rape has changed all that much in 30 years. Hopefully it's more acceptable to talk about it at all now (see also Bill Cosby), but unfortunately we still hear talk of blaming the victim because of how she dresses or acts around men, and the difficulties of getting justice through the legal system in what sometimes amounts to he said/she said. At its best, theater can start a conversation about important, relevant, difficult issues, and that's what this play does, without offering easy answers. Extremities continues through September 19 (Dark & Stormy shows tend to sell out in these small spaces, so get your tickets in advance).
This article also appears on Broadway World Minneapolis.