Showing posts with label Tracy Brigden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tracy Brigden. Show all posts
Thursday, September 25, 2025
"A Doll's House" at Guthrie Theater
Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen's classic 1879 play A Doll's House was ahead of its time in its exploration of gender roles and societal expectations, with its famous (or infamous) ending in which a wife walks away from her husband and children in order to save her own humanity. In 1879, can you imagine?! 146 years later we're still dealing with those very same issues; even though things have changed and women can now get a loan without a man co-signing (at least in this country we can, for now), women's place in society and in the family is still very much debated and talked about. The Guthrie is producing the regional premiere of Amy Herzog's new and very modern adaptation, which premiered on Broadway in 2023. It's riveting and stunning and so relevant, with fantastic performances from the six-person cast and gorgeous design. See it on the Guthrie's thrust stage now through October 12.
Thursday, March 27, 2025
"The Mousetrap" at the Guthrie Theater
The world's longest running play has arrived at the Guthrie! Agatha Christie's murder mystery The Mousetrap opened in London's West End in 1952 and has run continuously ever since (give or take a global pandemic). I first saw the play three years ago at Lyric Arts, so it wasn't too far into the Guthrie's delicious new production that I remembered whodunit, but that did not diminish my enjoyment of watching the mystery play out. If you've never seen the play before you are in for a treat, as Christie's well-plotted mystery has a plethora of quirky characters who all have a secret and could be the murderer. But even if you know whodunit, it's a pleasure to watch this dreamy and mostly local cast perform a beloved classic on this gorgeous set. See The Mousetrap on the Guthrie's proscenium stage now through May 13.
Friday, February 2, 2024
"Dial M for Murder" at Guthrie Theater
The Guthrie Theater is bringing a new adaptation of a classic thriller to their stage. Local prolific playwright and screenwriter Jeffrey Hatcher has applied his sharp wit and clever plotting to Frederick Knott's 1952 play Dial M for Murder (later adapted into a movie directed by Alfred Hitchcock). In an interview in the program, Jeffrey noted that the first task of adaptation is not to screw it up. He didn't. I've seen the play a couple of times before, but I'm not familiar enough to know what was changed or tweaked, other than the obvious ones noted in that interview - the murderous husband is a failed novelist rather than former tennis celebrity, and the American writer named Max that his wife has an affair with is a woman. Without taking anything away from the original, these slight changes add a whole new layer to the story and make it feel more modern. Homosexual relationships very much existed in the '50s, they just weren't talked about. Much like the new adaptation of the classic Western Shane last summer, this new adaptation adds back into the narrative the people that were erased. But rest assured, this Dial M is still a thrilling twisty delight! See it on the thrust stage through February 25.
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