Tom Williams

REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Big Meal

I had mixed feelings about this drama. I found the fast pace that tried to give snippets of each generation too thin to be more than a glimpse into each. I was impressed at how much family life playwright LeFranc and director Dexter Bullard were able present. Too bad they couldn’t develop each more completely. The work begs a second act.

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Earl

This 55 minute play seemed like 5 hours as the plot-less show depicts three dysfunctional brothers who can only relate to one another through highly ritualized violent games. Much of this show is a series of violent acts that finds the brothers trying to trick each other as they whack each other with a tire iron. They slap punch, stomp, and kick each other by the convoluted rules that change at the whim of the moment

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Trouble In Mind

Playwright Alice Childress’ 1957 Trouble In Mind bravely dealt with racism by utilizing a play-within-a-play device to dramatize racial attitudes in both African-Americans and whites. This was powerful and controversial theatre in the 1950’s especially with the stunning ending after a quite funny look at foibles of actors and directors as they struggle through rehearsals for a new radically “ground braking” play Chaos in Belleville.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Guys and Dolls

This fun show is light weight yet sophisticated musical comedy. The humor is infectious; the singing is fine; and the staging is brisk and compelling. Jessie Mueller’s Adelaide, Rod Thomas’ Nathan Detroit and Brian Hissong’s Sky Masterson together with Abby Mueller’s Sarah led the way with complete performances. Bernie Yvon, George Andrew Wolff and George Keating nailed their zany characters most effectively.

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Shining City

This riveting, superbly written, and expertly performed 90 minute drama is a showcase for the talented actor Brian Parry. Parry’s performance as the man collapsing under the weight of his lifeless marriage is brilliant and complete. He experiences rising rage toward his tender wife. Parry deftly tells his story in a series of long monologues to t he patient therapist. Guilt and a haunting sense of his life being out of his control rules John’s life after his wife’s death.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Les Miserables National Tour 2011

When you mount a National Tour of a show such as Les Miserables with some fresh new elements and orchestrations, you best not alienate those of us who adore the original show. Thankfully, Cameron Mackintosh’s 2011 National Tour keeps the essence of show that has pleased over 60 million people from 42 countries and in 21 languages over a 25 year span! This National Tour, now at the Cadillac Palace Theatre until February 27, has a few new twists, some new rich orchestrations with ample use of video projections in key scenes.

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MUST SEEREVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

The New Electric Ballroom

Filled with rich Irish humor and desperate remembrances of their long past teenage trauma involving romance and sex. We meet Breda (Kate Buddeke) the former sexy one; Clara (Laurie Larson), the former jilted one; and Ada (Kirsten Fitzgerald) the never-been-kissed youngest sister. The three are caught in a cycle that has them reliving, over and over, those traumatic events from their teen years in and around the Electric Ballroom.

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REVIEWSREVIEWS BYTheatre ReviewsTom Williams

Volpone

As much as Don Bender (Volpone) and his wily servant Mosca (Eric Damon Smith) tried to lead the way, the two scoundrel’s adventures to con the greedy and gullible men to Volpone’s apparent ‘dead bed’ so he can ‘name’ one (or all) as his sole heir – the satire fizzles. Over the top acting and uneven pacing dilute the humor.

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