September 2015

Past

Nightown-Sandbox Radio

Best Live Radio in Seattle

For one night only, Seattle’s home grown radio theater, Sandbox Radio, comes to Town Hall Seattle with a brand new show. The show will include new plays, poetry and adaptations of classic literature created especially for radio, all scored with live music, featuring: Willie Weir, the Seattle Women’s Chorus, Sensible Shoes, Elizabeth Heffernon, Peggy Platt of Dos Fallopia, Wayne Rawley and of course Leslie Law and Richard Ziman. I heartily recommend Sandbox Radio to everybody, because the audience participation is part of the show, which is an awesomely joyful experience.

Nighttown. Sandbox Radio. Town Hall, 1119-8th Ave (First Hill) Seattle 98101. Oct. 5th. 8:00 pm. Tickets: http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2188807, or at the door. info http://www.sandboxradio.org/sandbox_radio.html

Past

Book-It Presents 4 Stories by Raymond Carver

Book-It’s Repertory Theatre’s “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love” is a collection of stories that Raymond Carver wrote in different periods of his life encompassing the years 1964 to 1986. Adapter and director Jane Jones knows this material well, for she has worked with Carver’s stories before for this troupe. Book-It’s unique style of emphasizing the text’s language enables it to deliver a great deal of dramatic life into these dark tales.

Past

Seattle Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors

The Comedy of Errors is one of Shakespeare’s earliest and silliest plays. Slapstick and mistaken identities rule the day, as the Bard seems to just be starting to find his voice. There are flashes of his startling imagery entwined within the convoluted plot line and tortured puns. Seattle Shakespeare goes all out for the laughs here, filling their new venue at Seattle Repertory Theatre’s Leo K. Theatre with a robust energy.

Past

Bootycandy

Not Exactly Louise May Alcott

Part of the Intiman Festival, Bootycandy by Robert O’Hara opened at the The Cornish Playhouse Studio, also called the Alhadeff Studio Theatre, at Seattle Center on September 17. It is a series of connected and extraneous sketches more or less about growing up black and gay in New York in the 70’s and 80’s. However, the content focused on the more sordid experiences of promiscuous gay men, rather than on gay men in that specific ethnic sub-culture.

Past

Still Life-Every Day is the Same Until it isn’t

The Waiting Period before the Phone Call

In these days of terrorist attacks, much has been written about the terrorists themselves, the brave heroic rescuers, the victims, but little has been written about the horrible “waiting period” between the attack and THE PHONE CALL confirming the death of a loved one. Until now that is. Still Life, by Barbara Blumenthal-Ehrlich, produced by Florward Flux productions made a valiant attempt to present the angst of two relatives, a husband and his mother-in-law as they await the phone call, confirming that his wife, and her daughter have been caught up in a subway explosion in New York City.

Past

Green Whales

Not Everything Kinky is Unhealthy

Usually when I go to see a show with a small cast, in the back room of a café, I do not expect to see such an amazingly polished script or cast, as Forward Flux Productions presented in the “auditorium” of the Kaladi Brothers Coffee Shop/Gay City bookstore in lower Capitol Hill last Friday night. Green Whales, by Lia Romeo, defied all my expectations , being a truly amazing script with superb dialogue, a coherent plot, a quirky premise and one of the quickest most engaging pieces of exposition I have ever seen. The excellent direction by Wesley Frugé, added to the delight.

Past

Bloomsday-An ACT World Premiere

Playwright Steven Dietz enjoys a fruitful relationship with the ACT. Bloomsday is his 11th play to be taken on by the Seattle troupe and its world premiere is a gem. The premise is simple: a middle aged man experiences some “time slippage” enabling him to return to his past and encourage his younger self not to let that special girl get away. The setting is Dublin, the girl is a tour guide and the time is 35 years ago. A fun idea for sure, but what enables this work to soar is the exquisite language (a bit of it borrowed from James Joyce) employed by Dietz.

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