Couching Their Feelings

An opera based on a Russian silent film would seem the sort of artsy endeavor that invites dismissive sneers from musical and movie buffs alike. But with its abundance of artful understatement, a score that out-lilts most songfests and a touching story that examines age-old questions with modern frankness, Bed…

Encore

Dearly Departed. Most of the characters in David Bottrell and Jessie Jones’s off-Broadway hit behave as if they belong in a sketch on The Carol Burnett Show, and some of their collective yokeling is reminiscent of Hee Haw cornpone. And heaven knows that the two-hour exercise in escapism — welcome…

They’re in Deep

Megan is a New York actress who, in addition to not having worked in six months, discovers that she has an overwhelming need “to love and be loved.” Past her ingenue days but not yet matronly enough for prime time, the former Broadway performer must decide whether to take a…

Pig Out

The thunderous applause that typically greets a successful Broadway opening can hardly compare to the joyful noise made by children anticipating that Babe, the Sheep-Pig is about to get under way. And once the play begins, the peals of laughter and murmurs of delight that greet the beautifully costumed characters…

Grounded

Seven months after Arthur Kopit’s father suffered a stroke, National Public Radio commissioned the author of Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama’s Hung You in the Closet and I’m Feelin’ So Sad to write a play for NPR’s Earplay series. While Kopit longed for a deeper understanding of his father’s altered…

Too Close to Home

Midway through Act Two of The Laramie Project, a pair of performers reenact one of the 200 interviews they conducted with the people of Laramie, Wyoming, after the murder of Matthew Shepard, the gay college student who was robbed, beaten, bound and left for dead on a remote rail fence…

Hey, Hey, It’s the Fourth of July

1776 winds up being more — and less — of a history lesson than audiences might expect. Sherman Edwards and Peter Stone’s award-winning musical, which premiered on Broadway more than thirty years ago, is an enjoyable retelling of the events that led to the signing of the Declaration of Independence…

Trial of the Century

Atticus Finch is perhaps the only resident of Depression-era Maycomb, Alabama, who believes that it’s possible to live by high-minded principles. He doesn’t merely espouse empty eloquence — the Southern lawyer accepts “payments” of turnip greens, hickory nuts and firewood from a dirt-poor farmer who desperately needs legal help he…

A Moment to Reflect

Years before playwrights decided that raw emoting was preferable to shaded feeling and thought, Harold Pinter masterfully exploited the ambiguities of modern communication. Like Samuel Beckett, whose Waiting for Godot was described by one critic as a collection of “wordless meanings and meaningless words,” Pinter delved into the notion that…

The Winter of Their Discontent

The African Company Presents Richard III recounts events that, four decades before the Civil War, prompted the nation’s first African-American theater group to perform a Shakespearean tragedy next door to the Manhattan auditorium where a white company’s version was in production. Despite threats of civil unrest and objections from an…

It’s a Man’s World

Although most people might think of Romeo and Juliet as a lusty, melodramatic love story, Shakespeare’s play is more a tragic tale about the sometimes catastrophic clashes between parents and children. After all, the two lovers aren’t thwarted by bouts of jealousy, sexual incompatibility or even Romeo’s refusal to share…

The Icing

He had already written Othello to explore the jealous impulses that precipitate a great man’s tragic downfall, fashioned As You Like It to teach a few comic lessons about the strangely similar romantic yearnings of courtiers and country types, and penned a historical series about the Wars of the Roses…

Ladies, Please!

Generally regarded as two of the greatest performers of their day, French stage diva Sarah Bernhardt and English actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell played opposite each other in a 1904 London production of Maurice Maeterlinck’s Pelleas and Melisande. Although they weren’t ideally cast as the pair of young lovers — Mrs…

Down at the Heels

If the befuddled characters in Three Men in Search of a Pair of Shoes seem unusually eager to share their endless observations about life, that’s mostly because playwright and director Eric C. Lawrence has yet to compress his freewheeling comedy into a more succinct discussion about the male psyche. The…

Dirty Laundry

Like the rotting entrails of the butchered animal one of them has dumped in the backyard, a Queens family’s darkest secrets ooze with stultifying frankness as a holiday barbecue unfolds. Knit together by tears as well as blood, the Robinsons and the O’Conners have dutifully gathered for their annual Labor…

Power Lunch

A few years before Martin Luther King Jr. thundered his “I have a dream” speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, a quartet of black college students stood up for equality by sitting down at a “whites only” lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina. That singular act of courage,…

Out of Tuna

If contemporary Texas politicians were as endearingly funny as the small-town folk who bustle to and fro during Red, White and Tuna, then having a whole bevy of Texans in the White House someday might not seem so unsettling. It’s easy enough, for instance, to snicker at the small-minded observations…

Blood and Country

Near the end of Arthur Miller’s A View From the Bridge, an immigrant worker strides through the streets of Brooklyn in search of the drunken longshoreman who has wronged him. Waving away another’s placating pronouncements, the fiery man lifts his voice heavenward and cries, “He degraded my brother, my blood!…

Life in the Middle

No matter how dedicated they are to presenting plays that provoke as well as entertain, most independent theater artists face the same middle-of-the-road, bureaucratic issues that plague large, established companies. That’s especially true when a troupe earns acclaim and immediately sets its sights on becoming “the next Steppenwolf” — referring…

Let the Dog Lie

Sleeping Beauty — The Panto begins as five performers clad in medieval costumes flounce through a portal in the Nomad Theatre’s faux-castle setting and sing, “It’s a good day/How could anything go wrong?” Those words prove as prophetic as the merry goodbyes uttered by passengers boarding the Titanic. Indeed, a…

Meat Market

Decades before self-help books, therapy sessions and touchy-feely television shows complicated our understanding of relationships, playwrights like Samuel Beckett, Eugene Ionesco and Edward Albee were crafting absurdist dramas that illuminate the problems of human communication. These days, an absurdist outlook on life isn’t limited to artistic endeavors. In fact, that…

Everythings Relative

White Trash Family Reunion at the VFW, 7:30 p.m. Saturdays through February 19 at the VFW Post Number One, 955 Bannock Street, $39 includes dinner, 303-573-5931 (reservations required)