The Roommate review
If The Roommate is a conscious allegory for the decline of Western civilization, or a metaphor for arms buildup or something, then I’m OK with it. If, on the other […]
If The Roommate is a conscious allegory for the decline of Western civilization, or a metaphor for arms buildup or something, then I’m OK with it. If, on the other […]
Blew into the Humana festival of the Actors Theatre of Louisville in Kentucky yesterday and caught two shows thus far, with three more today and two tomorrow yet to come. […]
The Hartford Courant’s usual theater guy, Frank Rizzo, was in New Orleans last week at the American Theatre Critics Association convention, so I got to cover three opening nights in […]
Michael Rush died this week of pancreatic cancer. He and I had completely lost touch in recent years, and it’s been over 20 years since he last did any theater in […]
The Yale Rep has announced its next season, three days earlier than it did last year. Just like last year, they know the whole line-up up front, with no […]
The Mikado is such a hardy and virulent social satire that it seems it can never be staged without offending someone. That’s a remarkable achievement for a popular operetta […]
I’ve seen it, but it was in previews, so I will not even pretend to review. But can I just say what a thrill it is that On the Twentieth […]
OK. Two of the most prominent presentation houses in the state have announced their 2015-16 seasons and neither of them apparently have given a tumble to the tours of If/Then, […]
I don’t experience the Sat. mat. scene too often. Those performances are a different world from opening nights. The house for Familiar on Saturday Feb. 7 at 2 p.m. was […]
I reviewed Danai Gurira’s Familiar for the New Haven Independent, here. I was struck by how unabashedly old-fashioned the show’s first act is, and even compared it to You […]