Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

The Island

Fugard parallels Antigone’s fight against political and patriarchal government with the loss of dignity at the island prison. La Shawn Banks and Kamal Angelo Bolder are superb as each truthfully portray the pent-up rage from their constant harassment by the prison guards.

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Distracted

Lisa Loomer’s dramatic yet funny look at the struggle to raise a precious, manic, strong-willed child in the modern world of quick fixes and pill-popping gets a stinging presentation at American Theatre Company under the swiftly flowing direction from PJ Paparell

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Lucid

Chicago playwright Tony Fiorentino (Lease on Love, Cold Cold Feet, Fraternal Instinct, My Dinner with Amy and All My Love) has amassed a fine body of work over the last five years. His latest world premiere, Lucid, is a smart work that explores the mystery and enticement of lucid dreams as used to transform one’s unsatisfactory life.

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Blue Door

In Blue Door, an African-American math professor, Lewis (played with dignity by Bruce A. Young), is left by his white wife due to his reluctance to embrace his identity. The 90 minute one-act covers the night of their break as Lewis is visited in one sleepless night by the spirits of the instant ghosts of his grand-father, Simon, his departed younger brother, Rex and Jesse, his sharecropper grandfather.

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Theatre ReviewsTom Williams

Awake and Sing

Clifford Odets sprinkles Awake and Sing with his socialist/communist anti-capitalist rhetoric especially in Jacobs speeches. Odets’ faith in the determination of youth is embodied in Hennie as she is determined to have love in her life and in Ralph’s fiery determination to “fix it so life won’t be printed on dollar bills.”

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Beverly FriendTheatre Reviews

Sins of the Mother

If every resident of Manalapan, Florida descended on the local playhouse, Florida Stage, the theater could accommodate all but 90 of them. According to the 2004 census, Manalapan has a mere 340 citizens (up from 321 in the year 2000) while the comfortable, intimate theater holds 250. These 90 hypothetical patrons, left standing outside, would certainly be missing a brilliant show if they failed to see the current Southeast Florida premiere of Sins of the Mothers.

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