Author: Tom Williams

Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Colored Museum

Ron Conner, Bakestra King, Ericka Ratcliff, Alexis J. Rogers and Samuel G. Roberson, Jr. pour energy, comic shops, and over-the-top acting to garner enough belly laughs to satisfy…
George C. Wolfe’s wild comedy pulls no punches as it satirizes, with exaggerated images of black life, by accentuating the extreme stereotypes of blacks in 11 sketches…

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Tobacco Road

The Lester clan is a morally corrupt group of poverty stricken sharecroppers that find themselves without money, food or hope. The Lester’s give new depth to dysfunctional and desperate families. They are faced with starvation and eviction from the land they have farmed for generations.

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Body Awareness

I was never able to get over the above flaws. Added Phyllis’ insecurity or jealousy when Joyce tells her that she wants to pose nude for Frank. Phyllis threatens to leave Joyce if that happens. Phyllis, despite Cheryl Graef’s attempts to make her likable, comes of as a nasty, narrow-minded control freak feminist.

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Theatre Reviews

Fuerza Bruta: Look Up

Fuerza Bruta means Break Free, and this is what we the audience get to do as we watch the performers tell their stories. Reality, the world we just came from no longer exists ( at least for the next 65 minutes) as we get caught up in the action and music of this spectacular presentation. The visual effects that we see are indeed mind-blowing and the performers are in great shape

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Hunting and Gathering

The early monologues featuring rapid speech and pointless ramblings about apartments came across as whining. I found all four of the characters as insecure losers devoid of ambition and self-confidence. Why Ruth has to move so often is never adequately explained and Astor’s unwillingness to work makes couch surfing an urban survival skill for him.

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REVIEWSTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Oh, Boy!

Oh, Boy! is a light-weight romantic farce containing lovable characters exhibiting comically innocent yet questionable behavior especially for engaged or married couples….Kudos to director Terry McCabe and music arranger/director Kingsley Day for remounting this 1917 musical in the exact style of the original.

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Jacob and Jack

Sherman’s latest comedy is a clever tribute to Yiddish Theatre as well as to vain glorious stage actors. Set in Chicago at Ruskin Theatre, we meet Jack Shermerinsky (Craig Spidle) a middle aged failed stage actor famous for doing TV commercials out of LA. Jack has agreed to do a staged reading in Chicago with his wife Lisa (Janet Ulrich Brooks) to appease Jack’s mother Ester (Roslyn Alexander).

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Odd Couple

The creative folks at Raven Theatre continually mount worthy productions of classic plays. Their latest is Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple. Neil Simon is know as “the father of modern comedy” and his classic work , the1965 Tony Award winning play (Best Play), The Odd Couple is considered by many as the finest stage comedy ever written. I agree

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Theatre Reviews

Chaste

The ensemble of four actors all commit to their characters and the physical nature of the work wonderfully. Tiffany Ross as Elisabeth is so cold and stoic throughout the play, but bursts into feverish screaming fits when trying to get the attention of her brother. Antonio Brunetti is a manic Nietzsche, struggling to control his inner urges because he is on the cusp of happiness for the first time in his life. John Kahara is hilarious and lovable as Paul Ree…

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