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1,308 stories by "Charles McNulty"

Alfred Molina, Jane Kaczmarek and the slow burn of a 'Long Day's Journey Into Night' by Charles McNulty

America's widespread opioid crisis has sadly made a crucial part of Eugene O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey Into Night" more relatable.  Mary, the strung-out mother in the play's alcoholic …

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 2:15pm on February 10, 2017

'Every Brilliant Thing' approaches suicide with touching comic sincerity by Charles McNulty

Something miraculous happens in "Every Brilliant Thing." Something you might want to include on your own list of life-enhancing pleasures should you follow the lead of the protagonist, who i…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 4:35pm on February 5, 2017

'Beckett 5' at the Odyssey: five plays, two hours, one sinister ending by Charles McNulty

Just as the short stories in collections by Anton Chekhov, Flannery O'Connor, Grace Paley and Alice Munro are meant to be savored one small masterpiece at a time and not gobbled up indiscrim…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 6:40pm on January 31, 2017

At South Coast Rep, a stunning, gravity-defying stab at 'Moby Dick' by Charles McNulty

There's no avoiding politics these days. Not even a thrilling stage adaptation of the great American novel set on the high seas can offer complete escape. At Saturday's matinee of "Moby Dick…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 7:10pm on January 30, 2017

In 'Adler & Gibb,' the business of art - painted with familiar brushstrokes by Charles McNulty

Last week an artistic leader greeted an opening-night audience with a spiel about why supporting theater is more important now than ever. She was referring to the new political reality, and …

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 5:00pm on January 19, 2017

The love of her life, and the lies that came with him: Singing '13 Things About Ed Carpolotti' by Charles McNulty

Penny Fuller plays a well-coiffed widow in "13 Things About Ed Carpolotti," a charming cabaret-scale one-act musical in which her character finds out that the husband she's mourning had been…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 4:50pm on January 13, 2017

Notes on a truly Shakespearean year: An enlightened boldness brings out the best in the Bard by Charles McNulty

For better or worse, 2016 has been a truly Shakespearean year. It has also been the year of Donald Trump, a figure who could no doubt hold his own in one of Shakespeare's ruthless history pl…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 12:00pm on December 19, 2016

The off-kilter charms of 'Amelie,' made musical at the Ahmanson by Charles McNulty

"Amélie, A New Musical," which began at Berkeley Repertory Theatre last year, has brought its whimsical magic to the Ahmanson Theatre, where a retooled production starring Phillipa Soo (lat…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 3:00pm on December 17, 2016

Hotel Room Theater: Richard Maxwell's 'Showcase' at the Millennium Biltmore by Charles McNulty

I'm not sure how you spent your Saturday night but I spent part of mine in a hotel room with a bunch of strangers looking at a naked man sprawled out on his bed like T.S. Eliot's "patient et…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 9:00pm on December 11, 2016

London theater forecast after Brexit and Trump: Overcast skies with a chance of apocalypse by Charles McNulty

"Is this the promised end?" Kent mournfully asks as King Lear carries Cordelia's corpse on stage at the close of Shakespeare's most harrowing tragedy. "Or image of that horror?" Edgar, more …

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 9:00am on December 10, 2016

A tale of two Lears: Glenda Jackson and Antony Sher scale Shakespeare's mightiest tragedy by Charles McNulty

Two major productions of "King Lear" are taking place on opposite sides of the River Thames, but for London audiences this embarrassment of Shakespearean riches is as normal as autumn's gunm…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 2:50pm on November 30, 2016

After another brave attempt, Sondheim-Furth musical 'Merrily We Roll Along' remains a rutted road by Charles McNulty

"Merrily We Roll Along," the Stephen Sondheim-George Furth musical with a checkered record in the theater, is like a safe stuffed with jewels waiting for a director who can finally crack the…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 11:45am on November 29, 2016

'Harry Potter and the Cursed Child' reminds us of the power of courage in the face of evil by Charles McNulty

The sorcery behind "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child" - the eighth story in the J.K. Rowling series, this one written as a stage play - is of vintage pedigree. The epic tale of two boys mak…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 5:55pm on November 28, 2016

Let the power of 'Hamilton' speak louder than a Twitter feud by Charles McNulty

Forgive me if I don't take this moment to congratulate the theater community on its self-congratulatory outcry against our new tweeter-in-chief Donald Trump, who used his megaphone this week…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 8:40pm on November 20, 2016

Mother vs. daughter in the emotional showdown of 'Beauty Queen of Leenane' by Charles McNulty

Martin McDonagh, the British-born playwright of Irish heritage and humor, made a sensational debut in 1996 with "The Beauty Queen of Leenane," his bruising comic melodrama that announced the…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 11:15am on November 18, 2016

Broadway's fall revivals: Why big stars can't make up for a lack of artistic vision by Charles McNulty

In a Broadway season heavy on revivals, shows from another era have been given starry makeovers. But everything old isn't new again. Classics aren't created by crowded marquees. Pla…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 9:00am on November 17, 2016

'Miss You Like Hell,' an immigration musical for the new Trump era by Charles McNulty

California may still be counting votes, but already there's a musical responding to the new Trump era. "Miss You Like Hell," which is having its world premiere at La Jolla Playhouse, was …

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 12:35pm on November 14, 2016

'An Invasion of Decency!': A wild pop-up performance in search of meaning by Charles McNulty

A few eccentric hors d'oeuvres are served before the main surrealist dish in John Sinner's "An Invasion of Decency!" " a wild theatrical spree that makes a direct appeal to the unconsc…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 5:30pm on November 1, 2016

Looking for the lighter side to a nasty election? Playwright Jon Robin Baitz delivers it in 'Vicuña' by Charles McNulty

A play about Donald Trump set to open a little more than a week before the presidential election seemed like perfect timing " this summer. Oh, but how these last weeks of the campaign have a…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 7:15pm on October 31, 2016

A spooky 'Midsummer Night's Dream,' just in time for Halloween by Charles McNulty

Independent Shakespeare Co., the group behind the popular Griffith Park Free Shakespeare Festival, has taken "A Midsummer Night's Dream" indoors, which might seem strange given that…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 5:45pm on October 25, 2016

Telenovela as live theater: 'Destiny of Desire' is a zany, funny delight by Charles McNulty

Playwright Karen Zacarías was tired of the way so many dramas written by Latino authors were dismissively compared to telenovelas. Her response was to write a play that celebrates, sends …

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 6:25pm on October 24, 2016

With his first new play in nearly a decade, Tom Stoppard aims to 'stretch your mind just a little bit' by Charles McNulty

Tom Stoppard reflect on a his long playwriting career

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 1:44pm on October 21, 2016

In 'Model Apartment' at the Geffen, family scars are skin deep - and to the bone by Charles McNulty

The word trauma originally referred to a physical wound or defeat. Later usage, influenced by Freud, stressed an injury of the mind " invisible but no less real for being unseen. Unseen but …

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 9:20am on October 21, 2016

With his first new play in nearly a decade, Tom Stoppard aims to 'stretch your mind just a little bit' by Charles McNulty

"I don't think I've ever spent half an hour in my life doing research," said playwright Tom Stoppard when asked about the impressive erudition behind his intellectually dazzling comedies. "I…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 8:00am on October 21, 2016

Comedy for hypochondriacs: It's A Noise Within's 'The Imaginary Invalid' by Charles McNulty

The chief reason to see A Noise Within's production of Molière's "The Imaginary Invalid" is Apollo Dukakis' delightfully cranky portrayal of the play's tyrannical hypochondriac, a patriarch…

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times at 5:10pm on October 17, 2016
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