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Spanish Nights
Reus is a surprising Spanish town. Though partly overshadowed by booming Barcelona, a mere 70 miles to the north, the hometown of architect Antoni Gaudi is no sleepy Mediterranean village. I arrived there in late October for Cos, the Eighth Annual International Theater Festival of Mime and Gesture (or however that best translates from Catalan). Artistic director Lluis Graells assembled 20 companies and performers from various regions in Spain as well as France, Israel, Belgium, Peru, Poland, Cameroon, England and Italy.
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Mart Crowley Revisits The Boys
In 1967, when "starving" writer Mart Crowley, "on the brink of destitution" but sitting in the lap of luxury, finished his play The Boys in the Band, he says he intended it to be controversial. But, having distanced himself from gay politics, he didn't set out to be a rights activist. "I probably didn't even know what that meant," he laughs.
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Cruz Control
The great grandfather's eyes seemed like pieces of gold to the young girl, who saw wisdom when she looked into them. Playwright Migdalia Cruz is talking about Isabel, the 13 year-old Puerto Rican girl, and the relationship she has with her 112-year-old great grandfather, the co-protagonists in her play, Yellow Eyes, now having its world premiere at Crossroads Theater Company. "The play," she explains, "is about two journeys.
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Rhythms Over Accents
Nilo Cruz, intense 44-year old Cuban playwright, says he was named after the Nile River. He is the first Hispanic playwright to win a Pulitzer prize (April, 2003, for Anna in the Tropics.) Two days prior, he was awarded the American Theater Critic Assocation's Steinberg Award for Best New Play.
When I spoke with him last week, he was preparing to go into rehearsal at Miami's Coconut Grove Playhouse for Anna which he is directing.
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Robert Cuccioli
He was in a rehearsal studio overlooking Times Square, but he didn't stand out. Cucc, as some fondly refer to him, was missing something. Robert Cuccioli of Jekyll & Hyde fame -- all six-plus strapping feet -- once whipped an incredible mane of hair onstage like an acid rock guitarist in the throes of hot licks. That look wouldn't work for his current metropolitan area gig, playing Captain Von Trapp in Rodgers & Hammerstein's endearing tale, The Sound of Music at Paper Mill Playhouse, Millburn, NJ [through December 14, 2003].
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The "New" Robert Cuccioli Sings Brel
Robert Cuccioli is back from his voyage of self discovery after taking Broadway by storm in Jekyll & Hyde, and he's landed in Paris...the Off-Broadway one of Jacques Brel.
Though he's been away -- and sometimes not that far away -- for almost six years, he returned quite invigorated about his life and career. He's sporting a new look with his cropped hair, but the voice hasn't changed; it's still a stellar attraction.
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John Cullum Lives in Sin
As an actor in Broadway musicals, comedy and classics and acting and directing on the big and small screen, John Cullum has had a varied career and the unique ability to move smoothly from one medium to the other. At a time when actors his age might be resting on their laurels (and Tony Award nominations and wins), Cullum's Off Broadway portraying a controversial prince of the Roman Catholic Church, Bernard Cardinal Law, in Michael Murphy's Sin (A Cardinal Deposed).
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Curtain Up One More Time for Kander & Ebb
"Audiences are howling from the start, and they never stop," says book writer, Tony Award-winning Rupert Holmes of Curtains, his and Kander and Ebb's musical comedy murder mystery which opens tomorrow. "There's more fun in this show than anything I've ever written."
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Curtains: What's Not To Like?
"I don't want to jinx it," says the book writer, Tony Award-winning Rupert Holmes of the world premiere production of Curtains, his and Kander and Ebb's musical comedy murder mystery, "but we have a 1,600-seat house, packed at every show, and audiences are howling from the start, and they never stop. There's more fun in this show than anything I've ever written. Oh, I know about standing ovations these days, but we're getting them at every performance. To say I'm thrilled would be a vast understatement."
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A Gala Night for the Dallas PAC
On March 4, 2002 the Dallas Center for the Performing Arts announced the first phase of its public building campaign at a gala event at the Meyerson Symphony Center. The planned new facilities are being referred to as "the jewel in the crown" of the downtown Dallas Arts District.
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Dame Edna's Back -- And Broadway's Got Her
There is nothing like a dame, goes that familiar refrain from Rodgers & Hammerstein's South Pacific, and certainly there's nothing like this dame: Dame Edna Everage, the wisteria-haired Aussie expatriate who claims to be British royalty. In appearances in venues around the globe, Dame Edna has always promised: "I will not disappoint." In her Broadway debut, Dame Edna: The Royal Tour, at the intimate Booth Theater, she never breaks that promise.
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The Dame Comes to Dallas
What Joanne Woodward did for the 1957 biopic, "The Three Faces of Eve," and Sally Field did for Sybil in the eponymous 1976 TV bio, Dame Edna Everage has been doing for Australian actor, Barry Humphries, since 1956. Unlike Eve's three personalities and Sybil's 16, Dame Edna Everage, the fearless, flamboyant Australian housewife, has only one other personality: her creator, Barry Humphries.
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New Theaters for Old in Sarasota, Florida
Golden Apple Dinner Theater of Sarasota city, which was forced to close a sister theater in Venice, south county, last year, will have a new one in 2005 to the north in Bradenton. Robert Ennis Turoff, owner of Coastal Productions, will also manage the indoor, cabaret-like theater in the Town Center of Lakewood Ranch, a mega-development. Along with an outdoor amphitheater, the Golden Apple will be at the center of an arts center styled after St. Mark's Square in Venice, Italy.
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The Challenge of Wit
It isn't every day that an actor prepares for a stage role by training for the triathlon. And it's hardly a prerequisite for a woman preparing to play a 50-year-old professor of 17th-century poetry who has just learned she has fourth stage metatastic ovarian cancer. But Suzzanne Douglas, who plays Vivian Bearing Ph.D. in the New Jersey premiere of Margaret Edson's play, Wit, met the challenge, as she says, "head on."
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Closer to the Sun
Never before has a producer had so many successful shows playing simultaneously -- Ragtime, Phantom of the Opera, Kiss of the Spider Woman, Show Boat, Sunset Boulevard, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. By the end of 1998 there will be four companies of Ragtime alone, playing simultaneously -- in New York, Chicago, Boston and Vancouver. And three of these four companies will be playing in theaters built and owned by that producer. This is in contrast to the normal practice of a producer renting theaters for each engagement.
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The 2004 Drama Desk Awards
New York theater's finest actors, directors, musicians and designers gathered May 16, 2004 for the 49th Annual Drama Desk Awards, which honored productions in the 2003-2004 theater season. The show was held at the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School at Lincoln Center.
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Practical Aesthetics & Just Say Your Lines
The first major revival of David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross, at New Jersey's McCarter Theater (February 15-March 5, 2000), brings together a praised director-exponent of the Mamet style, and one of the most impressive all-male casts to ever appear at the high-profile, Tony award winning theater. For Scott Zigler, working with a top-notch ensemble is the key to the success of a play like Glengarry.
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Susan Dworkin Creates the Musical of Candy
It wasn't until The Book of Candy" that anything I had written screamed back at me to be something else and more," says Susan Dworkin, who has adapted her own novel for the musical theater. In light of what is going on in the world, it is now definitely something more.
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Dreams Come True: Linda Eder & Frank Wildhorn
Linda Eder's career is full of contrasts. She's a farm girl from Minnesota who also loves opera. A soprano in her church choir, she ran off with a teenaged boyfriend to sing Top 40 duets in nightclubs. A statuesque Protestant beauty from the mid-west, Eder later fell in love with a shorter Jewish man with roots on the East Coast who was recently separated and the father of a one-year-old. He's gregarious; she's shy. He's a sports fan; she loves animals.
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Great Scots
Recently, My husband and I had the pleasure of attending The Edinburgh Festival, an international party where the distinctive sounds of bagpipes jauntily unfurl in the air, reminding us at all times that we are in Scotland. During the last three weeks of August (and until Sept 4, 1999), this historic city is joyously bursting with all forms of theater, music, dance, poetry, comedy and tragedy played out in the beautiful traditional red and gold theaters with names like the Royal Lyceum, King's Theatre, Usher Hall, The Queen's Theatre, and The Edinburgh Festival Theatre.
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The Edinburgh Festival: A 2006 Visit to the Fest and Fringe
The first thing to remember about the Edinburgh Festival is that it's a misnomer. The annual August arts jamboree in Scotland's capital city should really be called the Edinburgh Festivals, if only because eight festivals take place concurrently. The prestigious one is the International Festival, which, being heavily subsidized by public and private donors, concentrates on the "high" arts -- symphonies, operas, dance, theater, chamber music and solo recitals, presented by reputable companies and performers. It was launched in 1947 as an impetus for peace and unity in Europe after WW II.
Hard Times for EgoPo in the Big Easy
Adrift in more ways than one, the New Orleans-based theater company called EgoPo is planning a permanent relocation to Philadelphia.
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Michael Emerson's Bold Move
With the talent, versatility, excitement and strength he brings to his roles on stage and on TV, the part of the perennially excited and infatuated George Tesman, in the acclaimed Broadway production of Hedda Gabler, is perfect for Michael Emerson.
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Michael Emerson's Wilde Move
Like everything I've gotten in this town, said star-of-the moment Michael Emerson, "I got this job on my own." He didn't have much choice. Hard as he had tried for 13 years, Emerson, now acclaimed by critics near and far for his portrayal of the title role in Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde (Minetta Lane Theater), couldn't get an agent. Now, they're calling him!
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English Connections
The opening of the Complete Works of Shakespeare Festival at Stratford-upon-Avon prompted my recent trip to Britain, but the journey branched into an exploration of more theatrical connections, from David Garrick to Basil Rathbone and Sherlock Holmes, from Ivor Novello to the latest productions on the London stage. As each experience intertwined with the next, I found some surprising links.
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Eve Ensler Moves Up
Eve Ensler's newest play, The Good Body, opens on December 6, 2005 at the Majestic Theater as part of the Dallas Summer Musicals Broadway Contemporary Series. Ensler, who caused a minor sensation with The Vagina Monologues, a non-linear series of stories told to Ensler by women about their relationships with, to, and about their genitals, launched her V-Day movement worldwide to stop violence against women.
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Scott Alan Evans Directs
TACT, The Actors Company Theater, is a group of known professionals - including Kevin Conway, John Cunningham, Paul Hecht, Larry Keith, as well as celebrated guest stars -- stripping down the theatrical experience to its essence: the words, the actors, and the audience. The company was formed in 1992 by actors who wanted to perform without the stringent demands of Broadway. The first production was Twelfth Night. It soon became obvious that, though well-received, their plays were having the same problem that too often plagues Broadway -- lack of money.
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Morgan Fairchild: Texas Graduate
When "The Graduate" opened in 1967, the film, which won Oscars for director Mike Nicholas and actors Dustin Hoffman and Katherine Ross, contained "shocking" scenes of 22 year-old Benjamin Braddock (Hoffman) having an affair with his boss' wife, the much older Mrs. Robinson (Anne Bancroft). Kind of ho-hum today when we're bombarded with frequent updates of the lurid details of a former 34 year-old schoolteacher and her affair with her 12 year-old student.
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Fantastick!
The world's longest-running musical is back. And The Fantasticks is a show that all but the most hardened soul will love.
The story is schmaltzy -- the ageless one about boy and girl fall in love, boy and girl fall out of love, boy and girl fall back in love. Yet, for over four decades Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt's musical, by far their best known, has entralled millions in over 12,000 productions worldwide. Not bad for a show that was considered quite avant garde for its time.
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The Miracle On Sullivan Street
August 1959. Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt, who had been writing this "unique new entertainment" for a decade, and director Word Baker couldn't believe that just when they needed it most, the gods of comedy and tragedy were sending them an angel.
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Tovah Meets Golda
Tovah Feldshuh has made a career playing heroic women. She's portrayed Tallulah Bankhead, Sarah Bernhardt, Stella Adler, Sophie Tucker, Katharine Hepburn, Diana Vreeland (Full Gallop), Miss Jean Brodie, three queens of Henry VIII, (in a TV mini-series) a Czech freedom fighter, (in an Off-Broadway play) nine Jews who age from birth to death, a woman masquerading as a man, and (in a Broadway musical) a Brazilian bombshell fielding two husbands.
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The Fantasticks On Film
How many theater fans knew that a film version of the longest-running musical in stage history existed? Not many, which came as no surprise to Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt, composers of the granddaddy of all tuners, The Fantasticks, which began its 41st year at the Sullivan Street Playhouse in May. "It's been a well-guarded secret," noted Schmidt.
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A Format For Fermat
New York - The world of mathematics and science has found a welcoming host in Broadway. Witness the success of Copenhagen, and Proof. Now, it's composing team Joshua Rosenblum and Joanne Sydney Lessner's turn to get on the arithmetical track. Interestingly, they say "We actually had titled our show, `Proof,' before we even heard of the Manhattan Theater Club's Proof! Their own mathematics intoxicated musical, Fermat's Last Tango, has just opened Off Broadway at the York Theater.
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FIT for a King's Bath House
The Festival of Independent Theatres (FIT) returned to the Bath House Cultural Center at White Rock Lake in Dallas for its fifth season, July 10-August 2, 2003. FIT is a showcase for many of Dallas' smaller theaters, who put on a series of one-act plays of one hour or less. This year, 12 area theaters brought a cultural smorgasbord to Dallas' theater buffs, co-produced by David Fisher, manager of the Bath House (so named because it was originally a bath house for swimmers at White Rock Lake's beach in the 1940s and 50s) and Brenda and Michael Galgan, producers of Beardsley Living Theater.
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Minds and Ideals
The first time I saw Robyn (Baker) Flatt, founding artistic director of Dallas Children's Theater, she was onstage in the role of Dewey Dell in a production of Journey To Jefferson, an adaptation of the William Faulkner novel, "As I Lay Dying." The play was produced in 1964 at Dallas Theater Center and directed by Flatt's father, Paul Baker, who founded the DTC in 1959. Flatt also co-designed the lighting for that production with DTC company member, Randy Moore, now a long-time company member of Denver Center Theater Company.
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Flower Blossoms Anew
David Henry Hwang's updated version of Flower Drum Song inaugurated its national tour on September 2, 2003 at the Music Hall at Fair Park as the closing production of the Dallas Summer Musicals. In a pre-show conversation with Hwang, who attended the first Sunday matinee, he said, "I saw the potential for this show that had been on the shelf for 45 years. I approached Ted Chapin, president of the Rodgers and Hammerstein Organization, and said I wanted to make a musical I hoped would reflect the values of the original creators but be more relevant to a modern audience.
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The Light from the Forrest
Philadelphia's other celebrity patriot also has a significant anniversary in 2006 -- in addition to Ben Franklin. On March 9, the City of Philadelphia and area theaters commemorated the 200th birthday of Edwin Forrest, America 's first famous actor (1806-1872).
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Wild Life, Long Legacy
Edwin Forrest, the 19th-century Philadelphia actor, was arguably the first American superstar. Critics praised him, politicians wanted him to run with them and working men fought -- even died -- defending him.
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No Fools
Along with a small number of theater critics and reporters, I recently had the pleasure of spending an afternoon in a Manhattan rehearsal studio with the English actor Alan Bates -- yes, the very same revered star of stage and screen, who is presently one of the dazzling actors featured in the film, "Gosford Park." Also in attendance was the lovely Texas-born actress, Juilliard graduate Enid Graham, who appeared in Hartford Stage's Enchanted April and who won a Tony Award nomination for her role in Honour. They are a part of the cast of 13, which includes Frank Langella and Mr
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