Theatre Reviews

REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Three Days of Rain

When Pip (Tony Bozzuto)- Welker’s best friend and son of Walker’s father’s partner joins the two siblings, old memories kindle trouble. We learn about the complex relationship between the three that was strongly influenced by the father’s partnership. Walker finds a journal left by his father that is filled with hints an a reference to “the three days of rain” back in 1960.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Outgoing Tide

Jack and Peg want to convince Gunner to move to an assisted living facility. Gunner, becoming frustrated with his worsening mental state, has an alternate plan to deal with his condition. Gunner has a quite unorthodox plan to secure both Peg’s and Jack’s future. The play deftly deals with the ramifications and ethical dilemmas as Gunner chooses a final solution that will solve everyone’s need for financial security and his need for peace and dignity.

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Aces

When the girl-next store pretty blond, Samantha (Simone Roos) arrives from Reno to become the fourth dealer, she has a soothing effect on all the characters. After a meeting, the ‘Aces’ agree to each get to know the new dealer with an eye on trying to determine of she’ll go along and join their scam.

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Fifty Words

Fifty Words – an exercise in hurt-your-spouse relationship dynamics. The show is a scream-and-holler affair that moves from being sensual seduction to brutal verbal and physical love making that moves into hurtful physicality. It depicts the deep seeded resentments that a marriage can encounter when the bond that unites two people is shallow.

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War & Peace

Jim Manganello has set himself quite the task: adapt Leo Tolstoy’s epic War & Peace into an hour-long piece of dance-theater. On the face, it seems almost comical, absurd. But with theater like this, it forces one to strip everything but the essentials away, and we are left with a very raw, very real piece of theater, that somehow, through it all, remains true to the original text.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Hickorydickory

The setting is a clock and watch repair shop on Chicago’s North Shore (terrific set designed by Simon Lashford). A middle aged man – Jimmy (Thomas Gebbia) is busy repairing clocks and watches. His daughter Dale (Cathlyn Melvin) – a moody 17 year old announces she is not going to college. She thinks she has little time left on earth. Does she know about mortal clocks – which are physical watches everyone has implanted behind the heart that can tell us precisely the time of our deaths?

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Freedom, NY

When Jennifer Barclay’s 75 minute drama ended it felt so incomplete that I wondered if the producers forgot the second act? Freedom, NY is a vague allegory about trust, tolerance and the lasting effects of violence on a small American town. The play uses black/Latino race relations to tell its cautionary tale of small town prejudice.

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