“Maybe Happy Ending” is a silly sci fi musical about two sentient robots

“Maybe Happy Ending” is a silly sci fi musical about two sentient robots

This musical play by Will Aronson and Hue Park, set in South Korea, is about two robots who are sentient. That is taken for granted and not explained. In fact, they each have very different personalities, akin to real people. The only difference is that instead of food they get electric charges to survive. And they have liked being servants of humans. In fact, the male robot, Oliver (Darren Criss), loved his master, James. Calls him his friend. Claire (Helen J. Shen) had a complicated relationship to her master. If these servants were black slaves, the story would get quite a different reception.

“Glengarry Glen Ross” is overwrought, overacted and implausible

“Glengarry Glen Ross” is overwrought, overacted and implausible

David Mamet’s play, staged on Broadway in 1984, getting a revival with movie star Kieran Culkin, pits a collection of real estate salesman against each other as if they were in an MMA combat. (That is mixed martial arts, for the non-cognoscenti.) A punch here, a kick there, blood on the ground. That is to say that under Patrick Marber’s direction, it is overwrought, overacted and implausible. The office and inhabitants resemble a mental institution more than a tough, competitive real estate sales office. This forty-year old play doesn’t age well.

Western foreign policy “experts” provide cover for Israel genocide

Western foreign policy “experts” provide cover for Israel genocide

At a meeting of the Council on Foreign Relations May 20th, some foreign policy experts from the U.S., Germany and Australia explained western “values” The event was the capstone of a meeting of The Council of Councils, a network of 28 policy institutes set up by the U.S. group to promote American policies through “consensus-building among influential opinion leaders from both established and emerging nations, with the ultimate purpose of injecting the conclusions of its deliberations into high-level foreign policy circles within members’ countries.” In less fancy language, their governments should do what the U.S. wants them to do.

How Brzezinski made hated of Russia an element of U.S. foreign policy

How Brzezinski made hated of Russia an element of U.S. foreign policy

At the Council on Foreign Relations May 14, 2025, I asked Ed Luce, author of new book about Jimmy Carter’s National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, who admitted he supported the mujaheddin in Afghanistan to draw in the Russians and make it “their Vietnam” – though in the end, after the Russians left in a year, the US went in and it was their Vietnam for 20 years — whether his Polish hatred of Russia became a permanent element of U.S. foreign policy.

“Smash” a clever comic satire of Broadway musical comedy

“Smash” a clever comic satire of Broadway musical comedy

It’s the Marilyn Monroe story, “Bombshell,” no really her story. Though it takes a while to figure that out. (Clues abound.) It starts in typical Broadway musical fashion with dance to jazzy music, with the Marilyn figure Ivy Lynn (Robyn Hurder), doing a “Let Me Be Your Star” number. Seems cliché. Disappointment. But wait!

“The United States vs Ulysses” a surreal reminder of a horrific present

“The United States vs Ulysses” a surreal reminder of a horrific present

At a time of book-banning, what could be more timely than a look back at the trial of nearly 100 years ago where earlier yahoos were upset at the 4-letter words in James Joyce’s “Ulysses.” That probably go­­­­­t a lot of people to read, or at least start the book. And it is the basis for an engrossing and very entertaining reenactment by Colin Murphy.

“The Picture of Dorian Gray” a tour de force by Sarah Snook playing 26 roles

“The Picture of Dorian Gray” a tour de force by Sarah Snook playing 26 roles

Sarah Snook is brilliant as Dorian Gray and all the other 25 characters in this morality play about the decadent British upper class.

The Oscar Wilde novel, written in 1890, is about a young self-centered fop who doesn’t want to grow old, and, after his portrait is painted by a friend, makes a pact with the devil (as it were), to have his face stay the same while the ravages of time and his excesses are shown on the painting secreted in his childhood playroom.

Gripping “Good Night, and Good Luck” of 70 years ago explains media and politicians’ failures today

Gripping “Good Night, and Good Luck” of 70 years ago explains media and politicians’ failures today

“Good Night, and Good Luck,” the smartly-staged story of how news reporter Edward R. Murrow helped bring down the malicious “junior senator from Wisconsin,” Joseph McCarthy, occurred in the early 1950s but could have been set today.
Written by George Clooney and Grant Heslov, directed by David Cromer, it’s about how a powerful political figure targeted people he charged were communists or sympathizers and destroyed their lives. How the country’s politicians stayed silent. How he was abetted by malevolent media figures and their cowardly supporters. And how citizens were smothered into lethargy by TV’s breads and circuses.

Moon on the water at Key West

Moon on the water at Key West

I’ve been on a lot of Key West sunset cruises but a moon cruise was a first! Boats at night are more relaxing, easier on your eyes. Key West is lit up by the moon which brightens everything. A full moon happens once a month.

Key West delights the senses with terrific art, sunset sail, cabaret

Key West delights the senses with terrific art, sunset sail, cabaret

The now iconic painter of Key West is Mario Sanchez, whose folkloric style captured the old town he grew up in. He was born in 1908 in Key West, the descendant of Cuban immigrants. He was self-taught and his works, labeled “primitive,” are complex, charming and, fortunately for aficionados, in the permanent collection of Key West’s Art and History Museum. His work spans 70 years; he died in 2005. Currently, the museum features a major exhibit of Sanchez’s work. Here are some of my favorites, inspired by the island’s people, history and culture.

Amy Sherald’s stylized portraits of black people at the Whitney Museum

Amy Sherald’s stylized portraits of black people at the Whitney Museum

Amy Sherald’s exhibit at the Whitney Museum is a collection of portraits of people who are black but who could be anyone from the nature of the lives they project: a worker, a tractor driver, a lady with a bicycle, an equestrian. And Michele Obama, which is what got Sherald some fame. The faces are flat, the flesh colors are black but cool. Sherald, born 1993 in Columbus, GA, shows what black people would look like sans racism. Workers. Doing sports. Being the smartly dressed wife of a president. (She also has a painting of Breonna Taylor.)

Caryl Churchill’s brilliant surrealism

Caryl Churchill’s brilliant surrealism

“Glass,” “Kill,” and “What If If Only” are smart Caryl Churchill plays, surreal metaphors of how people live as individuals and in societies. Of course, they are metaphors, and it takes Churchill’s inventiveness and director James MacDonald’s direct realistic portrayals to make them engage you. They were first presented in London at the Royal Court Theatre in 2019.

“Ghosts” is Hendrik Ibsen’s searing denunciation of 19th century bourgeois malevolence and hypocrisy

“Ghosts” is Hendrik Ibsen’s searing denunciation of 19th century bourgeois malevolence and hypocrisy

Moral hypocrisy never goes out of style, and Norwegian playwright Hendrik Ibsen was a master at demolishing it. “Ghosts,” then called Gengangere (“the ones who return,”) published in 1881 and presented at that time in Norway and the US, aroused the fury of the smug burghers on both sides of the Atlantic with its searing portrait of an honorable gentleman as sexual predator. Perhaps because Ibsen not only took on forbidden subjects such as sexual abuse and venereal disease, but because pillars of society such as clergy were shown to share guilt for the evil done to “polite” society’s victims.