3 acts to catch at the Capital Fringe Festival
It unfurls all over again Thursday, the swarming arts and humanity carnival that is the Capital Fringe Festival. The anything-goes event is in its seventh summer season, headquartered for …
It unfurls all over again Thursday, the swarming arts and humanity carnival that is the Capital Fringe Festival. The anything-goes event is in its seventh summer season, headquartered for …
It used to be audiences knew the names of the people who wrote the shows: Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Andrew Lloyd Webber. Nowadays, the musicals that aren't ripping…
In less than 10 years, the Chesapeake Shakespeare Company has become a winsome local poster child for the classic outdoor, family-friendly theater experience. Before a recent Sunday night pe…
No clue why suburban Maryland's two big theaters are staging vintage mysteries at the same time, but plainly something's afoot. Bethesda's Round House Theatre is still in the clutches of the…
The Broadway musical "Memphis" may be strutting into the Kennedy Center's Opera House with the 2010 best musical Tony Award in its pocket, but it doesn't do much with the ancient terrain of …
Rapture comes naturally to playwright Tony Kushner, and in "The Illusion," he plants a big swoony kiss on the lips of the theater. At Forum Theatre, director Mitchell Hebert kisses right bac…
"Flora the Red Menace" is the rarely revived musical John Kander and Fred Ebb wrote immediately before breaking through with "Cabaret" in the mid-1960s, so hard-core musical theater buffs ma…
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The yin and yang of young Matthew Gardiner: â—He's precociously unrushed and composed, a slender dude in boots and jeans. Signature Theatre's 28-year-old associate artistic director sit…
The musical "Hair" turns out to be a good way to think about the largely wonderful staging of "The Bacchae," now at WSC Avant Bard's intimate Artisphere home in Arlington. Shaggy actors scam…
Atypical George Bernard Shaw woman, on love: "Change the subject, or I shall go to sleep." Another Shavian female, poor and uneducated, to a professional writer: "I'm never wrong when I see …
Eugene O'Neill's dog Blemie gets a monologue at the end of "Begotten: O'Neill and the Harbor of Masks," a workshop project in Arena Stage's Kogod Cradle that's part of the ongoing O'Neill fe…
Actress Francesca Faridany has never been through the kind of marathon she's running as Nina Leeds in Eugene O'Neill's "Strange Interlude." As the complex heroine at the center of what was o…
Why haven't Washington area theaters had more of a hand in making playwright Lynn Nottage a star? Arena Stage's production of "Ruined" earned top honors at the Helen Hayes Awardsthis week, b…
Signature Theatre's "Hairspray" stood a beehive above the rest of Washington theater during Monday night's Helen Hayes Awards at the Warner Theatre. The local revival of the popular show won…
In "God of Carnage," the comic belch of a play by the sensationally popular French provocateur Yasmina Reza, two upscale couples sit down for a civil conversation and quickly make each other…
Aticklish question: How to critique the Helen Hayes Awards process on the eve of the ceremony without smearing the accomplishments of the 153 nominees? It may not require such finesse. The i…
Puppeteer Basil Twist loves the old-fashioned business of raising the curtain. That's how each of the four eye-opening shows in this month's festival of Twist's work has begun, and in "Dogug…
Matthew Lopez's "The Whipping Man" is one of the most-produced new plays on U.S. stages right now, and watching the dark-and-stormy show that opened Wednesday at Baltimore's Centerstage, you…
Three years ago, "God of Carnage" was the biggest play on Broadway. The cast was killer: James Gandolfini, Marcia Gay Harden, Jeff Daniels and Hope Davis. French dramatist Yasmina Reza's dar…
It's hard to explain the magical pull of fabric and light in Basil Twist's puppetry spectacle "Symphonie Fantastique" except in terms of sheer charm. This clever blend of color and movement …
The only applause line during a 75-minute public forum with Mike Daisey on Tuesday evening at Woolly Mammoth came when the theater's artistic director, Howard Shalwitz, said, "We shouldn't b…
Start with a dead guy, or maybe not " maybe he's in purgatory, or the subway. Wait " he's alive, but he's a grieving liar-thief-coke fiend who needs to erase his identity and start fresh. …
When you make a success of a major arts institution for 25 years, you can choose your own special projects for fun. What's fun for Michael Kahn? Eugene O'Neill. "Strange Interlude," an intel…
"New Jerusalem: The Interrogation of Baruch De Spinoza" strides back into Theater J after its acclaimed 2010 run as an established hit, and the show's success is no mystery. The David Ives s…