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Ro-mooo-o and Mooo-liet
Pop scholars alert: You can go on YouTube and find a variety of ukulele players strumming a variation of “Has Anybody Seen My Gal?” which goes “Has Anybody Seen My Cow?” Little do they know that there is a song from 1933 which uses that same line, “Has anybody seen my cow?,” non-parodically (though … Continue reading
On to the Cast of Into the Woods at Westport Country Playhouse
Westport Country Playhouse has announced who’s in its upcoming production of Sondheim & Lapine’s Into the Woods. How do we all get to know this so far in advance of the May opening? Because the show’s a co-production, and opens in Baltimore next month. Baltimore Center Stage, which has Into the Woods as the penultimate … Continue reading
More Recent Theater Comics
Go, Gocomics.com!And somebody really ought to do a dissertation sometime on the propensity for comic strips to reference live theater. (Seeing as comics and theater were the two preeminent popular art forms that ruled right up to the birth of electronic media, only to get pushed aside by radio & TV & movies & hi-fis, … Continue reading
King of High School Theater: 11/22/63′s Theatrical Momentum
It took me some time to dig deeply into the new Stephen King novel. Sometimes his novels are one-weekend affairs (whatever the size—I remember whisking through The Tommyknockers at spacecraft-speed so I could share it with the rest of the family one Christmas vacation). Other times (as with 2010’s Under the Dome) I can dawdle … Continue reading
Sweat the small stuff: political puppeteers Great Small Works are at Wesleyan this weekend
Be sure to sit up close for any Great Small Works show. They’re both small-scale and in-your-face. The progressive very-small-theater troupe, with New York radical roots and academic aplomb and great comic instincts, performs tonight (Friday, Feb. 3) and tomorrow (Sat. the 4th) at 8 p.m. in Wesleyan University’s CFA Hall, 287 Washington Terrace, Middletown. … Continue reading
The 1962 One-Act and the 1964 One-Act Change Places at Yale Cabaret
The Yale Cabaret has swapped the performance dates of two of the shows on their spring semester schedule. Funnily enough, they’re the two which stuck out from the sched already as being well-known works by world-famous American playwrights (amid the accustomed slate of obscurities and world premieres). Both scripts hail from the ’60s. Flipping Kopit … Continue reading
Arts & Ideas is Far and Lear
New Haven’s International Festival of Arts & Ideas is of course a summertime affair. This year the omnicultural fortnight occurs June 16-30. But for the impatient, the fun begins in late wintertime with a series of A&I announcements and fundraisers. One big event of the 2012 A&I festival is already known: a two-night stand of … Continue reading
The Penn is Mightier Than the Amazing Kreskin
I cringe at the memory of begging my parents to buy me the overpriced “Advanced Fine Edition” of Kreskin’s ESP. For their hard-earned money, I got a pendulum (with cards marked “Finance,” “Travel,” “Career,” and “Love”—this is science?), a board, some ESP cards, and a pamphlet—all junk. The pendulum, moved (ideomotor effect, like Ouija boards) … Continue reading
Goodspeed Afoots the Bill
Goodspeed Musical announced two-thirds of its 2012 Goodspeed Opera House season—namely Mame and Carousel—last November. This week they announced the third show, and it provides some cult-class balance to the famous crowdpleasers already on the sched. Something’s Afoot, which runs at the East Haddam-based theater from October 5 to December 9, is a well-liked … Continue reading
More Theater-themed Comics
…found in recent days on the wondrous gocomics.com. First is Steve Melcher’s panel This Is Priceless, which attaches funny captions to famous paintings. Then Dave Whamond’s gag-a-day Reality Check, followed by Frank Cho’s exquisite (and intelligent) Liberty Meadows. Then The Lefty Bosco Picture Show by Duquette, which reminds me of Bread & Puppet Theater graphics … Continue reading