REVIEW:  Her struggle for power in Apollinaire Theatre’s ‘Hedda Gabler’

It’s becoming quite a day and Hedda Gabler has just about had enough.

Intolerant, impatient, and excruciatingly bored, Parker Jennings brings spark to Hedda Gabler, an entitled general’s daughter who settled for her husband because she felt like she was running out of options.  Some of Parker’s best moments depict the phony and tight smile forcing its way across her lips in public before glowering when no one is looking.

Directed by Danielle Fauteux Jacques, Apollinaire Theatre Company continues Hedda Gabler live and in person at Chelsea Theatre Works in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 16.   Henrik Ibsen’s classic psychological thriller runs approximately one hour and 45 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

The cast of Apollinaire Theatre Company’s ‘Hedda Gabler’ Photo: Danielle Fauteux Jacques

Gazing out into Hedda’s world from one solitary angle, it becomes clear that the audience is limited exclusively to Hedda’s single-minded perspective in this dark tale.  Set in the 1890s, Hedda Gabler focuses a full day inside the drawing room of the Tesman villa in Kristiania, Norway.  Joseph Lark-Riley’s tense and chilling sound design infused with a mix of ominous and soft flickering lights by Danielle Fauteaux Jacques enlivens some of the idle chatter and gossip exchanged during the production.  Lark-Riley also delivers a sophisticated set full of dainty flowers, bookcases, and a vintage piano sitting center stage as cast members alter the set from scene to scene.  Elizabeth Rocha’s delicate and finely detailed costumes reflect the Victorian era in distinguished three piece suits, florals, silks, and extravagant lace.

Parker Jennings as Hedda and Conall Sahler as Tesman in Apollinaire Theatre Company’s ‘Hedda Gabler’ Photo: Danielle Fauteux Jacques

Each character is either onstage or sitting on the sidelines, but the most significant impact is Parker as Hedda’s constant presence even prior to making her first appearance.  She is always looming in the background within the audience’s vantage point needing our constant attention.

After just returning from a six month honeymoon, newlyweds Conall Sahler as sweet and well meaning yet tedious academic Tesman and Parker Jennings as Hedda are hosting a visit with Paola Ferrer as kindly and uncomfortably intrusive, but perhaps not by societal standards, Julianna.  Earnest, kindhearted and generous, Julianna has a strong bond with her nephew Tesman and strives to make him happy. 

Paola Ferrer as Julianna and Conall Sahler as Tesman in Apollinaire Theatre Company’s ‘Hedda Gabler’ Photo: Danielle Fauteux Jacques

Having never read or seen this Ibsen classic before, Hedda Gabler takes a bit to get going, but nothing quite prepares you for Parker’s instantly unsettling entrance.  In a white ruffled sundress, Parker is certainly a vision as Hedda and can barely muster a smile for Ferrer’s Julianna even in the face of Julianna’s warm generosity. 

Hedda Gabler is a psychological thriller from the perspective of Hedda Gabler who sees her world as monotonous and it seems the most scandalous parts of the production take place outside this villa and merely discussed by members of the cast.  Ibsen’s classic is a brilliant portrait of a selfish and shrewd narcissist and the show has suspense, but if the audience is witnessing Hedda’s world from her perspective, the production’s more stagnant scenes seem meant to appear that way.  Even with Cristhian Mancinas-Garcia as cunning Brack and Joshua Lee Robinson as impressionable Lovborg, the stakes do not seem as convincingly high as they should be. 

Cristhian Mancinas-Garcia as Brack, Joshua Lee Robinson as Lovborg, and Ann Carpenter as Berta in Apollinaire Theatre Company’s ‘Hedda Gabler’ Photo: Danielle Fauteux Jacques

A juggernaut of outbursts and fury, Parker’s Hedda is pivotal to this role because she carries the brunt of the tension and Parker has quite a challenge to keep this tension teetering and unstable.  Disappointed in Tesman and their life together, Hedda longs for an act of spontaneous beauty and will stop at nothing to stir up thrills in her life, whatever the cost.

Parker Jennings as Hedda and Kimberly Blaise MacCormack as Thea in Apollinaire Theatre Company’s ‘Hedda Gabler’ Photo: Danielle Fauteux Jacques

This period piece squarely delves into the limitations of a Victorian woman.  Expected to get married, have babies, and settle down into a subservient existence, Hedda wishes for something more and sets her own path way ahead of her time.  

Apollinaire Theatre Company continues Hedda Gabler live and in person at Chelsea Theatre Works in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 16.   Henrik Ibsen’s classic psychological thriller runs approximately one hour and 45 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Far from home in American Repertory Theater’s innovative world premiere of ‘The Odyssey’

Ten years have passed and Penelope holds onto hope her King will return while life marches on.

Actress and playwright Kate Hamill has offered new perspectives to various works including Jane Austen’s beloved novels Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility and Emma.  Hamill darkly re-imagines Homer’s epic Greek mythology poem and plays an exciting role in American Repertory Theatre’s world premiere of The Odyssey which is as innovative as it is thought provoking.

Directed imaginatively by Shana Cooper, American Repertory Theater continues its world premiere of Kate Hamill’s The Odyssey live and in person at the Loeb Drama Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 16.  This epic production has adult themes, violence and runs three hours including two intermissions.  Click here for more information and tickets.

Members of the cast in A.R.T.’s world-premiere production of The Odyssey. Credit: Nile Scott Studios and Maggie Hall.

I’m not a big fan of mythology, but who could forget the treacherous and conflicted journey of war-addled Odysseus as he perilously embarks on his journey home consumed by nightmares and at one point, even forgetting himself. 

Three hours may sound like a lengthy stretch of time, but this gripping tale picks up immediately into Odysseus’s perilous and monumental journey. It is a good idea to get a refresher on the tale before attending the production.  Homer’s The Odyssey is considered one of the most influential and most read mythological works of all time and Hamill’s reimagining mixes classic with the contemporary that delivers not only occasional moments of relatable humor but enhances the poem’s universal moral focus.

Members of the cast face Polyphemus in A.R.T.’s world-premiere production of The Odyssey. Credit: Nile Scott Studios and Maggie Hall.

The Odyssey unfolds with Sibyl Wichersheimer’s dual level, Grecian and ship-inspired set featuring beige textured walls, hanging buoys, colorful and stylistically embroidered artwork, wicker and wood set pieces, and pristine tensile structured sails scattered throughout the stage.  Lighting and projection designer Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew with puppeteer Abigail Baird take inspiration from Greek illustrations for luminous shadow projections  who are often larger than life and transforming the set from a ship teetering in a storm to Hades itself or skillfully navigating shadows to augment a powerful giant and its threatening eye.

Wayne T. Carr, Kate Hamill, Alejandra Escalante, and Nike Imoru in A.R.T.’s world-premiere production of The Odyssey. Credit: Nile Scott Studios and Maggie Hall

Led by Wayne T Carr, who is impressive as traumatized, tormented and yet resourceful commander King Odysseus of Ithaca, sacrifices, betrayals, and illusions are just a tip of the iceberg in Odysseus’s treacherous journey to find his way home as the Moirai, portrayed by Alejandra Escalante, Kate Hamill, and Kristian Espiritu, visit Odysseus’s dreams, nightmares and eat away at his conscience.  The Moirai have great chemistry and share a few darkly comical moments while they advise, taunt, discern and engage the audience while guiding Odysseus in his next step depending on his prideful wrongdoings.  The trio takes on  several roles throughout the production ranging from pivotal characters to adorable wild animals.

Alejandra Escalante, Kate Hamill, Nike Imoru, and Wayne T. Carr in The Odyssey. Credit: Nile Scott Studios and Maggie Hall.

Overwhelmed and weighed down by his past, Carr illustrates Odysseus’s harrowing conflict through tragedy and despair after fighting in the Trojan war while agonizing over seeming impossible choices and yet, it is difficult not to root for him even as he follows the wrong path.  Jason O’Connell portrays a number of roles including Odysseus’s right hand man, Pilates and they share an intense and notable moment about prayer, miracles and blessings in Odysseus’s struggle as Odysseus looks on helplessly.  Carr manages to keep Odysseus’s plight sympathetic throughout his journey which quite literally includes the stuff of Hades.

Kate Hamill and Wayne T. Carr in A.R.T.’s world-premiere production of The Odyssey. Credit: Nile Scott Studios and Maggie Hall.

Kate Hamill relishes her role as legendary trickster and temptress sea witch Cerce and is one of the most fascinating characters in the production.  Candid and condescending, Hamill brings to life Cerce’s provocative nature and possesses sharp and darkly comic timing as she tows the line between deceit, truth and cruelty while pushing others to the brink.

Keshav Moodliar, Chris Thorn, Wayne T. Carr, and Nike Imoru in A.R.T.’s world-premiere production of The Odyssey. Credit: Nile Scott Studios and Maggie Hall.

Army vests, cargo pants, boots, fatigues, furs, sunglasses, embroidered capes, detailed gowns and majestic shawls are just a portion of An-Lin Dauber’s edgy and dynamic wardrobe.  Chris Thorn, Benjamin Benenfant and Kesev Moodliar portray a trio of raunchy, rugged and power hungry reveler suitors who relentlessly pursue Andrus Nichols as Penelope as they think the king is dead.  However, Moodliar as Amphinomus is kind to conflicted Penelope, as she raises Carlo Albán as her son Telemachus to become a warrior, despite his misgivings.  Nichols depicts a raw strength, shrewdness and fortitude as Penelope and she holds onto hope for her King’s return.

Andrus Nichols and Wayne T. Carr in A.R.T.’s world-premiere production of The Odyssey. Credit: Nile Scott Studios and Maggie Hall.

American Repertory Theater continues its world premiere of Kate Hamill’s The Odyssey live and in person at the Loeb Drama Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 16.  This epic production has adult themes and runs three hours including two intermissions.  Click here for more information and tickets.

REVIEW:  Oscar nominated documentary shorts ‘Instruments of a Beating Heart,’ ‘Death by Numbers’ and ‘I am Ready, Warden’ at Coolidge Corner Theatre for a limited time

The repercussions of two horrific and devastating crimes and a quiet lesson in discipline are just a few of the 2025 documentary shorts nominated for the 97th annual Academy Awards which took place on Sunday, March 2.  All of these shorts are available online and now playing at the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline, Massachusetts through Thursday, March 6.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Sam Fuentes in ‘Death By Numbers’

 Please note that this review does not include Netflix’s The Only Girl in the Orchestra who took home Best Documentary Short or the New Yorker’s Oscar nominated documentary short Incident.

A beautifully engaging documentary from the start, Ema Ryan Yamazaki’s 23 minute Japanese short film Instruments of a Beating Heart, presented by Op-Docs, is a tender and endearing piece about an audition held for first graders for a part in a musical performance Ode to Joy in Tokyo 2022.  The film’s cinematography is bright and inviting offering an inside look at these adorable, excitable and impressionable children learning about discipline amid competition.  Their teacher is wise and firm with the students to help them grow.  The film specifically focuses on intimidated Ayame who longs to play a particular instrument in the performance.  The hidden meaning behind the title will not revealed here, but it is worth seeing this wonderful and tender film.

Ayame in ‘Instruments of a Beating Heart’

 “Forever will always be yesterday.”

The classroom frozen in time, the warning signs and so much more encapsulate Parkland School horrific school shooting.

Written by Sam Fuentes and directed by Kim A Snyder, Death by Numbers dives deep inside case #26 from the perspective of traumatized survivor Sam Fuentes and the nature of what it is to live through this unimaginable loss.

The numbers represent not only the facts of the case, but what they know about the shooter through evidence of his mindset and sticks to Sam’s exclusive outlook on the case while tracing a fraction of her long and incalculable road to healing.

Death by Numbers also examines the unimaginable loss, guilt, forgiveness, grief, death, and mortality as well as an agonizing and riveting encounter with the shooter.  It is a unique and chilling film that is humanized by Sam’s dynamic perspective.

‘I am Ready, Warden’

In 2022, Texas Inmate John Henry Ramirez counts down the days until his execution after being convicted of the murder of Pablo Castro in 2004.  

MTV Documentary Films presents I am Ready, Warden, a stirring 37 minute documentary set in Livingston, Texas that impressively covers just about every perspective of this heinous and unplanned act, its aftermath, and a snapshot into Ramirez’s background.  It is mainly told from Ramirez’s perspective, but contains interviews with the godmother who supported Ramirez when his family left, the victim’s family, Ramirez’s son born when Ramirez was on the run, and takes a deeper look at Texas’s death penalty.  I am Ready, Warden also examines the complicated emotions of everyone involved in this case including what results when Ramirez tries to reach out to the victim’s son, Aaron.

All of these shorts are available online and now playing at the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline, Massachusetts through Thursday, March 6.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  From loneliness to lovestruck:  Oscar Animated Short films Nina Gantz’s ‘Wander to Wonder’, Loïc Espuche’s ‘Yuck (Beurk)’, Nicolas Keppens’s ‘Beautiful Men,’ ‘In the Shadow of the Cypress’ and Daisuke Nishio’s ‘Magic Candies’

Please note that the Academy Award for Best Animated Short film winner was In the Shadow of the Cypress announced at the 97th Academy Awards on Sunday, March 2.  All the Academy Award nominated films including the winner are available online and now playing at the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline, Massachusetts through Thursday, March 6.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

From loneliness to love struck, this year’s Oscar nominated Animated shorts mixed lighthearted comedy and tragedy covering a wide range of issues including the effects of trauma, bullying, and PTSD.

Nina Gantz’s dutch and international stop motion animated short Wander to Wonder is a poignant and strange reflection of days past.  It runs 14 minutes.

Though the short is about a children’s show, it is not for young children and features some disturbing content. 

Nina Gantz’s ‘Wander to Wonder’

Flies swarm as a group of tiny performers are trapped inside an old studio and fighting for survival where 80s Belgium children program Wander to Wonder was filmed after its originator Uncle Gilly, depicted by Neil Savage, passes away.  Wander to Wonder has a sorrowful and dank feel to reflect how much time has passed since the gleam of this beautiful and eccentric, if not widely watched children’s show was on the air.  Delivering moments of wacky humor, Toby Jones as Fumbleton, Amanda Lawrence as Mary and Terrance Dunn as Billybud express an inherent yearning as they reflect upon the fond memories of the program and make an awkward attempt to recreate some of them while trying to survive which can be bereft, odd and gruesome.  I felt for their sad situation, but didn’t find myself invested enough in the characters as they struggle to adapt.

Written and directed by Loïc Espuche featuring bright and inviting two dimension animation, French short film Yuck! (Beurk)  is a 13 minute long sweet tale about discovering first love.

Loïc Espuche’s ‘Yuck (Beurk)’

A group of children revel in spying on others at summer camp and are disgusted as they watch couples kiss.  However, Leo discovers he has a crush on his friend Lucie.  Yuck explores the discovery, joy, confusion and heartache of life through the eyes of a child.  It is a brief and endearing tale that is worth every minute.

What if you can learn the truth about life around you?

Daisuke Nishio’s ‘Magic Candies’

Written by Baek Heena and directed by Daisuke Nishio, Magic Candies is an insightful 21 minute Japanese CGI animated short about a lonely boy named Dong Dong who purchases a pack of mysterious candies and runs 21 minutes.  However, these colorful candies have a compelling and unexpected power that takes Dong-Dong by complete surprise. 

With the exception of the distinctive characters, the settings are incredibly realistic.  From Dong-Dong’s textured jeans to each detailed strand in the dog’s fur to the layered patterns in Dong-Dong’s wrapped blanket to sweeping fall foliage, Magic Candies unfolds is an aesthetically pleasing manner and is a must see film that is funny, moving, silly, clever and heartwarming.

‘In the Shadow of the Cypress’

Directed by Shirin Sohani and Hossein Molayemi, Iranian short film In the Shadow of the Cypress, winner of the Academy Award for Best Animated Short, delves into the strained relationship between a father who suffers from PTSD as the result of war and his daughter which is nearing a breaking point.

Both live together in an isolated seaside house.  The two dimensional 20 minute animated film boasts finely delicate details that enhance the rippling waves, the slender and stylized design of each of the characters right down to the father’s long striped beard.  Its remarkable sound design embellishes a storm of seagulls, an alarming ship ablaze, and the subtle triggers that set the father off as he struggles with his harrowing conflict within.  It can be slow at times, but it is worth watching for its captivating conclusion.

How far would you go to look your best?

Nicolas Keppens’s ‘Beautiful Men

Balding brothers Steven, Bart, and Koen travel to Istabul to have hair transplants.  However, it is quickly discovered that only one appointment is available.  It traces each character’s nature, insecurities, and how they handle the situation as this error becomes known.

Nicolas Keppens’s Beautiful Men is a two dimension 19 minute international comedy drama short which combines cut out stop motion and white board animation and contains some adult content and nudity.  It is at times a candid short that explores just how far one would go for self improvement.    

Each of Academy Award nominated films including the winner is available online and at the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline, Massachusetts through Thursday, March 6.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  From comedy to complication in Erin Moughon’s ‘Escape (The Pina Colada Song), Kevin Cheng’s ‘Dear Diary,’ Pascal Phoa’s ‘Last Train to Nevada’ and Kevin T. Durfee’s ‘Between the Wired Fence’ at NYC’s The Chain Theatre One Act Winter Festival

From traumatic to comical to poignant, Program #9 explores a variety of struggles among two people from strangers to spouses including grief, circumstances or growing apart.

Chain Theatre’s One Act Winter Festival continues both live stream and in person at the Chain Theatre in New York, New York through March 2. Erin Moughon’s Escape (The Pina Colada Song), Kevin Cheng’s Dear Diary and Pascal Phoa’s Last Train to Nevada are 15 minute One Act productions Kevin T. Durfee’s Between the Wired Fence runs 45 minutes. Click here for more information and for tickets.

Aren’t most breakups complicated?  However, this particular one is on another level.

Claire Shiell and Matthew Menendez in Erin Moughon’s Escape (The Pina Colada Song) Photo courtesy of Chain Theatre

Candidly directed by Perryn Pomatto, Erin Moughon’s Escape (The Pina Colada Song) shares too small a snapshot into a relationship with quickly building tension as a woman breaks the news to her boyfriend that she wants to break up with him.  What ensues is outside the expected as Claire Shiell and Matthew Menendez share some humorous moments unleashing frank relationship truths along the way building to a fascinating revelation.  Escape leaves more questions that beg for a prequel or a sequel to this one act.

Elizabeth McBryde and Kevin Cheung in Kevin Cheng’s ‘Dear Diary’ Photo by Genda Lin @gendalin

With ruminating direction by Emily M. White, the cherry blossoms are in bloom as Elizabeth McBryde as reserved Josie settles on a Central Park bench to verbalize her thoughts in her daily journal entry in Kevin Cheng’s Dear Diary.  However, her sensible thoughts are interrupted by an encounter with Kevin Cheng who is memorable as optimistic and cheerful Pablo practicing a speech. Dear Diary is poignant and funny with more to the story that Josie can reveal as disarming Pablo charms her into helping him out and they discover more about one another.

Elizabeth McBryde and Kevin Cheng in Kevin Cheng’s ‘Dear Diary’ Photo by Genda Lin @gendalin

What if escape is your last hope?

Pascal Phoa’s Last Train to Nevada focuses on a couple who are running out of options in 1942.  Their only hope of being together requires a drastic change that is sure to change both their lives.  With stirring direction by Yibin Wang, Pascal Phoa portrays an uncertain Freddy and Gwyneth Benitez-Graham as a despairing Ida from different countries in a dangerous and intolerant climate.  Phoa and Graham bring complexity to their character’s motivations as time is running out and they are in urgent need of an answer.

Pascal Phoa and Gwyneth Benitez-Graham in Pascal Phoa’s ‘Last Train to Nevada’ Photo courtesy of Chain Theatre

At some point, something has to give.

Written and directed by Kevin T. Durfee, Between the Wired Fence reflects on timing and aspiration as a couple metaphorically stares at one another from two sides of a figurative fence.

Elisa Falanga and Shannon Adams-Gray in Kevin T. Durfee’s ‘Between the Wired Fence’ Photo courtesy of Chain Theatre

Shannon Adams-Gray offers a thought provoking performance as overwhelmed but successful financial adviser Sawyer who was once an aspiring actress.  Daniel Bishop portrays Odie, Sawyer’s spontaneous and intuitive husband who tries to help her cope as he pursues a career in performance art.  Bishop as Odie’s outlandish and over the top persona is a seeming contrast to Adams-Gray as Sawyer’s forced sensibilities, but there lies an underlying charm and clear bond in their brief stage time together.

Daniel Bishop Kevin T. Durfee’s ‘Between the Wired Fence’ Photo courtesy of Chain Theatre

When Elisa Falanga delivers a mysterious package, it springs forth an eye opening reckoning for Sawyer and a new understanding on how they can both move forward.

Between the Wired Fence offers humor and insight on both sides of the fence into life’s delicate timing while touching upon the anxieties and pressures of the world and what it means to succeed.

Chain Theatre’s One Act Winter Festival continues both live stream and in person at the Chain Theatre in New York, New York through March 2.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  ‘Driving in Circles’ a winding and resilient concert journey at Boston Playwrights’ Theatre

Now here is something refreshingly different.

Directed with energizing flair by Sam Plattus, innovative sound design by Gage Baker and cleverly written and performed by Jay Eddy, Boston Playwrights’ Theatre presents Driving in Circles live and in person at Boston Playwrights’ Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts through Saturday, April 6.  This new, deeply personal concert-style work is 100 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Jordan Palmer Zach Fontanez and Jay Eddy in Driving in Circles Photo credit to Scornavacca Photography

Infusing storytelling, relatable humor, and a fascinating blend of hard hitting and uplifting original music, Everett-born Jay Eddy as Jill/Bill is a witty individual who has faced a daunting set of physical and emotional challenges at a young age.  Eddy is raw, honest, funny, and self deprecating tackling trauma at its core as well as the aftershocks of these events demonstrated in a catchy opening number that explains how to survive an earthquake.  Eddy counts backwards in time at the prevalent ages in which Eddy endured these hardships.

Jay Eddy on guitar in ‘Driving in Circles’ Photo credit to Scornavacca Photography

Scenic designer Danielle DelaFuente with set construction by Carly Stegall has fittingly set up a highway rest stop with a dart board, colorful vintage license plates and vinyl records.  A hanging pink bathrobe is just one of the significant Easter eggs shown on Eddy’s reflective journey.  Wearing red eye shadow and white boots, Jay Eddy, keyboardist Jordan Palmer, and guitarist Zach Fontanez sport similar blue uniforms by costume designer Eric Tran as they perform on a staged road while lighting designer Kevin Fulton sets an atmospheric vibe including twinkling lights and multicolored linear array lights that illumine each performer’s space.

Jay Eddy sharing a humorous weather report in ‘Driving in Circles’ Photo credit to Scornavacca Photography

Driving in Circles is essentially an emotionally-charged concert road trip through a variety of beautiful and traumatic events that have shaped Eddy’s life.  It is powerful, sad, and disturbing at times, but is also hopeful, charming and lighthearted on this unpredictable road to healing.  This is not lighthearted fare and the material is a bit too serious to be considered standup, but Eddy’s enthusiasm and interactive style is relatable, warm, sincere, and funny.  Sharing home movies creatively projected by Maria Servellón, Eddy is not limited to the stage and engages the audience in a compelling manner that makes you feel a part of her journey brimming with detours, twists and turns on past road trips and misadventures that include destinations such as Seattle, Nashville, Vermont and Maine.  Driving in Circles contains plenty of local references and Eddy shares a compelling and relatable tale getting lost on the road in what should have been a simple trip to the dentist.

Jay Eddy in ‘Driving in Circles’ Photo credit to Scornavacca Photography

Eddy’s original electronic music is performed on the spot as lead vocals in a three piece band.  Eddy is a master on the audio board expertly delivering vocals and sound effects while keyboardist Jordan Palmer and guitarist Zach Fontanez enhance this dynamic blend of lively songs.  Eddy is a powerful, edgy and expressive singer and it is amazing to listen to it navigated through the audio board, but Eddy’s bare vocals are also incredibly affective.  Shrill Woman, Time Traveler, Another Day, the soothing You’ll Feel Better with Fontanez delivering a notable guitar solo, uplifting The Dog Days of Summertime and hopeful The World is Ending Anyway are just a few highlights.

Jay Eddy in ‘Driving in Circles’ Photo Credit Scornavacca Photography

A perceptive work with plenty of heart, Driving in Circles is a powerful and original work about resilience and hope even through harrowing events.  Eddy demonstrates music’s healing power through art as well as the music that helped Eddy cope from artists such as Simon and Garfunkel and Tom Petty.   After all, Driving in Circles can still lead to beautiful destinations.

Jordan Palmer, Jay Eddy, and Zach Fontanez in ‘Driving in Circles’ Photo credit to Scornavacca Photography

Directed with energizing flair by Sam Plattus, innovative sound design by Gage Baker and cleverly written and performed by Jay Eddy, Boston Playwrights’ Theatre presents Driving in Circles live and in person at Boston Playwrights’ Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts through Saturday, April 6.  This new, deeply personal concert-style work is 100 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  The risk of depending on one another in SpeakEasy Stage Company’s tender ‘Cost of Living’

‘It’s just unfortunate that some people have already lived a lot of life before they meet other people.’

This introspective observance is one of several pearls of wisdom from Martyna Majok’s insightful and perceptive script focusing on four struggling individuals in two parallel and intersecting stories as SpeakEasy Stage presents Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Cost of Living live and in person at Calderwood Pavilion in Boston, Massachusetts through Saturday, March 30.  Sensitively directed by Alex Lonati, this thought provoking production contains strong language, adult themes, and runs 1 hour and 40 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Scenic director Janie E Howland’s muted colored set includes blocks of windows stacked in various sizes as shadows of individuals glow in pastel illumination by lighting designer Amanda E. Fallon.  We are the observers of these two pairs of individuals and Fallon infuses subtle and colorful lighting on Howland’s muted colored set seemingly to illustrate not only the other tenants in the building, but the art of observing. 

Lewis D. Wheeler as Eddie in ‘Cost of Living’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Cost of Living focuses on the journey of living itself including the kindnesses and the sufferings people can endure externally and internally.  These four individuals have been through different degrees of hardship and find themselves having to depend upon one another for some relief as they each attempt to make a new start in life.  With easygoing demeanor and insightful charm, Lewis D. Wheeler is mesmerizing as a recovering alcoholic and unemployed truck driver Eddie.  Wheeler’s engaging opening and personable monologue pulls the audience into his consuming thoughts and complicated heartache.  Tough talking yet with penetrating vulnerability, Stephanie Gould movingly depicts Eddie’s estranged wife Ani who suffers from a shattered spinal cord as a result of a devastating accident.  Both lonely individuals in North Jersey, Gould’s dark wit with a dash of satirical humor as Ani blends intriguingly well with Eddie’s ease and their sporadically humorous banter and relatable conversations sharing their innermost thoughts, dreams, hopes, and fears reflect the nature of their longevity together.  Their tense familiarity is apparent even in their physical interactions.  As Anna Drummond’s adsorbing sound design delivers Erik Satie’s Gymnopédie in the background, this familiarity is exemplified in a rush of emotions as Eddie and Ani discuss the therapeutic power of music. 

Gina Fonseca as candid yet secretive Princeton graduate and immigrant Jess struggles to make ends meet in Brooklyn, NY and is being considered to care for Sean Leviashvilli as steadfast, cautious, and wealthy graduate student John who has cerebral palsy.  John needs someone who as he states ‘will keep me handsome’ such as shower and shave him daily.  Jess is driven and insistent that she is the person for the job, but John is hesitant because he has had other caretakers who have not worked out.  Fonseca as Jess and Leviashvilli as John share a chatty and awkward tension as they discover nuances about each other and at times strike up endearing camaraderie.

Stephanie Gould as Ani and Lewis D. Wheeler as Eddie in ‘Cost of Living’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Martya Majok’s Cost of Living not only explores surviving financially, but the risk and agony of putting trust in another person.  This show tackles some difficult and heartrending topics with a resonating message delivered with eloquence, humor and sincerity as unpredictable as life itself. 

SpeakEasy Stage Company presents Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Cost of Living live and in person at Calderwood Pavilion in Boston, Massachusetts through March 30.   Sensitively directed by Alex Lonati, this thought provoking production is 1 hour and 40 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Ambition and betrayal take center stage in Dream Role Players production of Shakespeare’s classic  ‘Othello’

Alarming what whispers and rumors can create.

With moving direction by Alan White, Dream Role Players continues William Shakespeare’s classic production, Othello live and in person at Chelsea Theatre Works at the Black Box Theatre in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Saturday, March 30.  This show is general admission with pay-what-you-can options and is not suitable for children.  It is their first play performed in an indoor setting and runs two hours and 45 minutes including one 15 minute intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Dayenne CB Walters and Luis Negrón in Dream Role Players ‘Othello’ Photo credit Sushmita Udoshi 

Set in Venice in the 1570’s, Shakespeare’s Othello focuses on General Othello, in a searing depiction by Vincent Ernest Siders, who is madly in love and secretly marries Elisabet “Lisa” Ober as Desdemona to Eric Cheung as Desdemona’s father Brabantio’s fury and dismay that she married a Moor.  Othello also promotes Dom Carter as Cassio to be his lieutenant instead of Dayenne CB Walters as Iago and thus begins stealthy acts of treachery.

Elisabet “Lisa” Ober and Vincent Ernest Siders in Dream Role Players ‘Othello’ Photo credit Sushmita Udoshi 

From distinguished uniforms decorated with silver and gold adornments and dapper suits to colorful flowing dresses, costume designer Atlas Mendoza carefully illustrates each character’s distinctive traits.  It was particularly notable to see Iago’s bright red socks hidden just underneath Walters’s suit to indicate that things are not all that they seem.  Lighting designer Richie DeJesus not only creates mood-induced lighting that hints at the mood of each scene, but the simple staging which includes four multipurpose chairs and later an elaborate bed leaves plenty of room for this interactive cast to shine in performances that are not limited to the stage.

Dom Carter and Vincent Ernest Siders in Dream Role Players ‘Othello’ Photo credit to Sushmita Udoshi 

Dream Role Players provide opportunities for individuals to perform their dream roles and Othello boasts an enthusiastic cast who skillfully sinks their teeth into their performances.  With a sly smile, Luis Negrón offers a fervent portrayal of Rodrigo particularly in heated discussions with Dayenne CB Walters as conniving Iago.  Walters epitomizes Iago with shifting eyes while displaying disquieting and calculated practicality.  Walters brilliantly plots and schemes while displaying masked charm and manipulative glee. 

Dom Carter and Dayenne CB Walters in Dream Role Players ‘Othello’ Photo credit Sushmita Udoshi 

Dom Carter is amiable as sympathetic and gentlemanly Cassio as he shares some mystifying chemistry with Vidisha Agarwalla as Bianca while Candis Hilton is impressive as mysterious and independent-minded Amelia.  It is endearing to watch Elisabet “Lisa” Ober as strong willed, adoring, and gentle Desdemona who shares boisterous and captivating chemistry with Siders as Othello, but the most riveting encounters occur between Siders as Othello and Walters as Iago.  Siders is a towering and charismatic presence as Othello with rich and powerful vocals who is as suave and lovable as he is intimidating.  Matched by Walters as elusive Iago, the two enact a game of cat and mouse with a mounting intensity that left me at the edge of my seat. 

Dream Role Players ‘Othello’ Full Cast Photo credit Sushmita Udoshi 

With moving direction by Alan White, Dream Role Players continues William Shakespeare’s classic production, Othello live and in person at Chelsea Theatre Works at the Black Box Theatre in Chelsea, Massachusetts through Saturday, March 30.  This show is general admission with pay-what-you-can options and is not suitable for children.  It is their first play performed in an indoor setting and runs two hours and 45 minutes including one 15 minute intermission.   Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Full of flash and dry humor, ‘The Cher Show’ turns back time with empowering style

This musical biopic seems by the numbers until three Chers infuse an original and adventuresome twist.

Much like Cher herself, The Cher Show is a limelight driven, bawdy, and spirited look at Cher’s upbringing and career and how Cherilyn Sarkisian busted out of her shy demeanor to become as she proudly calls ‘a warrior goddess.’ 

Morgan Scott in ‘The Cher Show’ Photo credit Big League Productions

Bathed under dazzling spotlight-soaked florescent lights by Charlie Morrison, Star, depicted with Cher’s pitch perfect dry humor and rich vocals by Morgan Scott, emerges in sequined black donning her signature high heels and risqué style, but she is definitely not alone.  Turning back time is a thrill when two other Chers share the spotlight and help to navigate her life based on all she knows now.

Distinctively directed by Casey Hushion with a mix of slinky and wistful choreography by Antoinette Dipietropolo, Big League Productions presented The Cher Show for a limited time live and in person through Sunday, March 17 at the Boch Center Wang Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts, but it is also on a national tour.  Outside this production, MassArt showcased Cher’s legendary looks.  The production was 2 hours and 20 minutes with one fifteen minute intermission.  Click here for more information and here to see where The Cher Show national tour will next take the stage.

Catherine Ariale, Morgan Scott and Ella Perez in ‘The Cher Show’ Photo credit Big League Productions

Cherilyn was not always one to bathe in the limelight.  As chatty and anxious Babe, depicted with a powerful belt and discomfort in her own skin naiveté by Ella Perez, Cherilyn was often shy and felt like an outsider due to her dyslexia, half Armenian heritage and her dynamic looks.  However, Lucy Werner as Cher’s confident firecracker mother Georgia who was always a source of strength, sage advice and beauty said, ‘The song will make you strong.’  Cher’s unique qualities are actually what set her apart.

Cher fulfills most people’s two fondest wishes through this musical.  Not only can Star turn back time, but accompanied by Ella Perez as Cher or Babe and Catherine Ariale as Cher or Lady, Star can turn to her other selves to revisit her past.  Three Chers that interact, are aware of each other, and support each other is not just a source for a wealth of humorous moments, but it breaks the pesky rules of a classic biopic in a lighthearted and spectacular way.  Perez, Ariale, and Scott have a fascinating bond where anything can happen in a life where Cher was required to grow up fast.

The cast of ‘The Cher Show’ Photo credit to Big League Productions

Kelly James Tigne’s visually spectacular set is an array of glitter and glitz which includes the bright lights of Hollywood and Vegas but also beautifully nostalgic photos of 50s California before Cher sets her sights on stardom and the set develops a more classic sophistication in black and white as Cher’s star power matures.    

Starting out with her own sewing machine, Cher always set her own bold and risqué fashion standard before later joining forces with the legendary visionary and equally daring fashion designer Bob Mackie, who originates the Broadway and tour costumes seen in this musical.  Tyler Pirrung, who depicts a trio of roles in this production, is memorable as Mackie complete with clever quips and a mischievous gleam in his eye, especially during Aint Nobody’s Business.  Magnets are used to accommodate the numerous fashion styles and quick changes throughout the production.  The Cher Show’s costume coordinator Janine Loesch and wig designer Roxanne DeLuna presents all these ostentatious costumes in all of its nostalgic, feathered, and sparkling runway glory.   

Tyler Perrung as Bob Mackie, Ella Perez, Catherine Ariale, Morgan Scott and cast Photo credit Big League Productions

Lorenzo Pugliese is full of magnetic charm and quirky sense of humor as Sonny Bono.  Fast talking with shrewd business sense, Pugliese shares some amazing chemistry with each Cher and one of the best moments of the production is their wonderful rendition of I’ve Got You Babe which was met with cheers from the audience.  He also shines in Little Man and later for All I Ever Need is You.

Ella Perez and Lorenzo Pugliese in ‘The Cher Show’ Photo credit Big League Productions

The Cher Show’s quick pace features a wide array of nostalgic hits over six decades including the catchy harmony of Da Doo Ron Ron, Be My Baby, and The Shoop Shoop Song as well as It’s All or Nothing, a stirring Bang Bang (He Shot Me Down), Believe and Heart of Stone.  Perez, Ariale, and Scott form a powerhouse trio as they recall Song for the Lonely as Perez flaunts a distinctive belt.  The Fosse-inspired The Beat Goes On is a sleek standout as well as sultry chorography featuring Emma Jade Branson of The Dark Lady in candlelight.

Lorenzo Pugliese and Catherine Ariale in ‘The Cher Show’ Photo credit Big League Productions

The Cher Show celebrates her remarkable career and her variety of hits, but is also an honest and frank depiction of her insecurity, challenges, and fears within her failures and triumphs.  No matter what, Cher shows the beat goes on.

Catherine Ariale, Morgan Scott and Ella Perez and cast in ‘The Cher Show’ Photo credit Big League Productions

Distinctively directed by Casey Hushion with a mix of slinky and wistful choreography by Antoinette Dipietropolo, Big League Productions presented The Cher Show for a limited time through Sunday, March 17 at the Boch Center Wang Theater in Boston, Massachusetts, but it is also on a national tour. The production was 2 hours and 20 minutes with one fifteen minute intermission.  Click here for more information and here to see where The Cher Show national tour will next take the stage.

REVIEW:  Karin Trachtenberg’s ‘My Mother Had Two Faces’ examines the woman in the mirror

They say beauty is only skin deep.

My Mother Had Two Faces explores beauty in all of its forms and how to accept the person in the mirror including the flaws on both the outside and on the inside.

Written by Karin Trachtenberg in a heartfelt performance and directed and developed by Jessica Lynn Johnson, The Rockwell presented the one woman self reflecting play, My Mother Had Two Faces:  Reflections on Beauty, Aging, and Acceptance live and in person at The Rockwell in Somerville, MA through Sunday, March 3, but this production is currently touring.  Karin will make her next stop at the United Solo Festival at Theatre Row on March 14 in New York City. The show is approximately 60 with no intermission.  Click here for more information and here for further details and for tickets.

Karin Trachtenberg in ‘My Mother Had Two Faces’ Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

The magnifying mirror is beauty’s classic frenemy.  It stands out on a vanity counter strewn with jewelry, makeup and all the items it takes for a person to enhance their best features.  The magnifying mirror enlarges all the remarkable parts of the face, but is also unrelenting and unforgiving for all the parts that glaringly need improvement. For Karin’s Swiss mother, it was a beacon of hope and an essential part of her daily routine that gave into an illusion that goes back generations that women must look perfect in today’s society.  As the show most poetically asks, ‘What does it mean to be seen by the envelope and not the letter?’ 

This revelatory production is not just about beauty, but it is a memoir about healing.  As a ritual for Karin’s Buddhist faith, it is a therapeutic journey into the past to get better insight into Karin’s struggles in order to achieve enlightenment.  My Mother Had Two Faces delves into important moments for Karin, her mother, and her family’s history while masking family trauma.

Karin and Lindt chocolate Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

Offering free Lindt chocolates as a tribute to Karin’s family heritage, My Mother Had Two Faces is an engaging, bare, honest, and sincere portrayal of the good, the beautiful and the horribly ugly with humor, joy, fear, grace, and anguish in the sting and string of life’s revelations.  Accompanied by slideshows, photos and much more shared through a multimedia screen by 3 Cubed, Karin shares some of her mother’s reflections in a thick and playful Swiss accent and an occasional lighthearted free spiritedness.  Dressed in black, Karin is a blank canvas for her mother and her own various idiosyncrasies, frustrations, hypocrisies, earnest dreams and more.  It is an eye opening journey accompanied only by the wise, sensible, and logical musings of the woman in the mirror exploring her most wonderful and toughest experiences.  Eric Bornstein’s expressive and finely-detailed masks are effective aides during the production with well timed lighting while sound and tech designer Bobby Raps rewinds the clock with a vintage soundtrack that includes the theme song to Mission Impossible and Edith Piaf’s Non je ne regrette rien (No regrets).

Karin Trachtenberg and Eric Bornstein’s masks Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

Karin paints a well rounded portrait of her enigmatic and glamorous mother and therefore making invaluable discoveries about herself and her family on this healing journey.  It is funny and moving and may encourage you to take a closer look in the mirror at what makes a person who they are.

Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

My Mother Had Two Faces:  Reflections on Beauty, Aging, and Acceptance will next be at the United Solo Festival at Theatre Row on March 14 in New York City. The show is approximately 60 with no intermission.  Click here for further details and for tickets.