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REVIEWSTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Night and Day

Night and Day is a stinging attack on the role of newspapers (now the Internet blogs and cable news TV) in shaping news. Stoppard has his characters debate who controls the news and asks what news really is and should reporters simply cover events or should they create events? The role of editors and unions in the news process is also covered.

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REVIEWSTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Candide

Wonderful music, witty lyrics and brilliant symbolism fuel this most enchantingly beautiful operetta into both a philosophical satire and a travel adventure romance. This most difficult show is an artistic achievement filled with a cast of expert singers, charming innocence and deft comics, Candide is an eye-poping theatrical gem.

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Thieves Like Us

Filled with gun-tooting, bank robberies and heaving drinking, Thieves Like Us is an entertaining show that grabs us and keeps us involved through. The pace is brisk and the action is wild. Beth Sagal’s, as the all-in-white-dress angel of death, sings torch songs to comment and underscore the action. The extensive use of newspapers including a giant paper that the actors keep unfolding vividly depict the sensationalize coverage of bank robbers.

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Beverly FriendTheatre Reviews

Daddy Long Legs

In our age of telephones, cell phones, texting, and Skype, it is wonderfully nostalgic to return a world where letters are a works of art – witty, poignant, ever exploring and revealing the thoughts of their creators. And these letters are consistently interesting, not only revealing a bright, lively mind reacting to all that she is learning, but steeped in the gossip and concerns of a young girl coming of age. Dialogue nested in pleasant lyrics enhances the action.

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REVIEWSTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

She Loves Me

Set in a European perfume shop in the 1930s, the delightful characters inhabit a world suffused with love and longing. The central story revolves around the two feuding clerks, Georg and Amalia, who secretly find solace in their anonymous romantic pen pals, little knowing that their respective correspondents are each other

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

A Brief History of Helen of Troy

Caroline Neff gave a strong performance as Charlotte. We see both her innocent painful side as well as her naughty vicious side. Neff never flinches as she gave a scary look into teenage grief and the search for acceptance. Neff’s performance makes this show worth seeing. Peter Moore was also excellent as the cold, grief-stricken father. Be warned that graphic references and depiction of sex acts and violence occurs.

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Beverly FriendREVIEWSTheatre Reviews

Romeo and Juliet

The fight choreography is terrific. Kudos to fight director Rick Sordelet. Battles become even more vivid later in the play when Mercutio (Ariel Shafir) and Tybalt (Zach Appelman) — followed by Romeo (Jeff Lillico) and Tybalt — fight to the death. Here the combatants drop their swords and slug it out with their fists in an amazingly effective transition.

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REVIEWSTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Mamet Repertory: Oleanna and Speed-the-Plow

Both plays are highly recommended since each are filled with strong, emotionally wrenching performances. Director Rick Snyder lets his fine cast go for all the intensity contained. Cox and Baker quickly established a workable stage chemistry. These three actors sure leave it all on stage in these two short gems by one of America’s leading playwrights. Catch both plays-and for a massive jolt of Mamet, see both on the same day.

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