Author Archives: Christopher Arnott

Theater Mystery Recommendation

Murder on a Hot Tin Roof By Amanda Matetsky (Penguin, 2006) A chick-lit mystery—not cozy; perky, cocktailed-fueled—which paints its historical backdrops so colorfully it had me reaching for the history books to check whether all the theater and film references could conceivably have lined up so beautifully in real life. At one point the crimesolver, … Continue reading »

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Peter Brook and Spike Milligan in the Midnight Penthouse

For free in a used book shop, I stumbled upon a copy of—don’t you love how people always excessively justify how they happened to get hold of potentially pornographic products?—The Midnight Penthouse, a demure hardcover compendium of interviews, stories and yes, a smattering of “Pets” portraits, from Penthouse magazine’s first three years of publication. Back … Continue reading »

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Another Play in a Day Completed

Another school holiday, another Play in a Day project. This time we managed to adapt Augustin Daly’s 1867 spectacular Under the Gaslight. This insanely popular Victorian melodrama created the enduring cliche of a damsel tied to railroad tracks as a speeding locomotive approaches. Another large cast; in fact, even larger than you see here, since … Continue reading »

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“New Arrivals” for Theater Geeks found on Netflix on Demand

Hard to look past all those Pierce Brosnan Bond films that have just popped up on Netflix, but they haven’t swayed me from compiling my latest occasional list of the some of the service’s new offerings which happen to have a theatrical aspect to them (however slight). My own random musings, in no particular order. … Continue reading »

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MacDuff 1969: An Interview with Barret O’Brien from the Long Wharf Theatre’s impending Vietnam-vet themed reworking of the Scottish Play

Eric Ting’s adaptation of Macbeth, which begins performances Jan. 18 at the Long Wharf Theatre, is a virtual moving forest of bold interpretative choices. Obviously, there’s the augmented title, Macbeth 1969, and the conceptual setting of the supernatural battle yarn in a Vietnam-era veteran’s hospital in the Midwestern U.S. But there are other directorial prophesies … Continue reading »

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Next Play in a Day Already Due

The eleventh Play in a Day project comes just eight days after the tenth. We pick one school holiday a month on which to operate, and Three Kings Day it shall be. Kids come at 2 p.m. to Never Ending Books, 810 State St., New Haven. I see who’s come, pick an appropriate theater classic … Continue reading »

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Strip Stage

Showtune and bloated dance spectacle references from recent installments of Charlie Podrebarac’s Fat Cats, Paul Gilligan’s Pooch Cafe and Eric Scott’s Back in the Day. Found on the comic strip trove gocomics.com.

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Bardy and Veronica

There’s a grating greeting-card-platitude poem called “After a While,” apparently by Veronica A. Shoffstall, which has been credited on websites and YouTube videos as being by William Shakespeare. It’s decidedly not. That’s one Veronica/Shakespeare mix-up. Here’s another: from Veronica #145, December 2003. Script and pencils by Dan Parent, inking by Jon D’Agostino, lettering by Bill … Continue reading »

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Shearer, Odets, Beckett

Harry Shearer had a concluding bit on the Jan. 1 “Year in Rebuke” episode of his radio spectacular Le Show mocking the Obama slogan “We can’t wait.” To a ‘60s jazz backing groove, Shearer intones: We can’t wait Although we’ve waited before Now the time is late We can’t wait anymore. Towards the end comes … Continue reading »

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Memphis, Connecticut

The national tour of the musical Memphis, coming to the Bushnell Jan. 10-15, is bursting with Connecticut connections—seemingly slight, some of them, but adding up to an intriguing mix which befits the show’s blend of old traditions, new musical concepts, old hands with long Broadway, nationally touring and regional resumes and precocious young talent who’ve … Continue reading »

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