“Camelot,” new take on a favorite anti-war musical, gets splendid production

“Camelot,” new take on a favorite anti-war musical, gets splendid production

Aaron Sorkin’s rethink of Alan Jay Lerner’s book of “Camelot” takes it smartly into the present, with more contemporary male-female attitudes and a heavy emphasis on social justice. The politics is solid, albeit presented in a hokey fashion (this is a musical), and the magical/mystical parts of the 1960 version have been cut, though the personal stories are still rather fanciful: the doomed romances are hard to believe. Just relish Frederick Lowe’s glorious music and Alan Jay Lerner’s sophisticated lyrics, overpowering and magical. And appreciate the politics in an era of Western warmongering.

“Bad Cinderella” is a lively musical antidote to the British royals’ fake meme

“Bad Cinderella” is a lively musical antidote to the British royals’ fake meme

“Bad Cinderella” is entertaining and fast-paced, a lot like Andrew Lloyd Weber’s other musicals. It’s camp, which is what ALW does best. And it has terrific politics! In a subtle way, it’s about the UK. Brits will get this more than Americans. Just think British royals. (Director Laurence Connor runs the story smoothly as some typical pop musical production and then slyly inserts the politics.) With witty lyrics by David Zippel. Not one of the musical greats, but I liked it.

A powerful anti-colonial exhibit by Puerto Rican artists at the Whitney

A powerful anti-colonial exhibit by Puerto Rican artists at the Whitney

There is sometimes a surreal disconnect between what the political class and the artistic class say. The Whitney Museum’s Puerto Rico exhibit, on till April 23, is an attack on American colonialism. The U.S. annexed the island as booty after victory in the Spanish-American War of 1898, and these artists’ works say it oppress the people who live there.

Amy Herzog’s take on Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” about class as well as women

Amy Herzog’s take on Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” about class as well as women

In a curious way, Jamie Lloyd’s powerful production of Henrik Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House,” stark, with black-clad actors sitting on white spindle chairs or standing ranged across the back, seems more real than if it had a traditional set, with 19th-century furnishings matching the 1879 story date. (In fact, “1879” displayed on the backdrop is the most prominent part of the “set.”)

Irish Rep’s “Endgame” is brilliant take on Beckett’s vision of the world’s end  

Irish Rep’s “Endgame” is brilliant take on Beckett’s vision of the world’s end  

Samuel Beckett’s surreal vision of dueling human nastiness and compassion, misery and hope takes place in a nondescript walled space. Outside the world has ended, but somehow these people have survived the apocalypse. The Irish Repertory Theatre production, powerfully directed by Ciarán O’Reilly, envelopes you in a bleak mood conveyed by the gloomy dialogue as well as the dark red bricks.

Catherine Austin Fitts interviews Lucy on investigating U.S. life insurance companies — watch or download

Catherine Austin Fitts interviews Lucy on investigating U.S. life insurance companies — watch or download

March 4, 2023 – Catherine Austin Fitts writes: “As soon as I learned Lucy had published a new investigation, I immediately asked her to join me on the Solari Report.”
” Lucy found a disturbing pattern. Americans buy an insurance policy. And then quietly, the company starts to move or lower the quality of its assets in a manner that impacts or threatens the value of our policy. Policyholders have no burglar alarm to warn there fundamental change in the deal – or the price at which the deal was made – and we need to pay attention.”

“Becomes a Woman” a fine 1930 feminist play with a modern message

“Becomes a Woman” a fine 1930 feminist play with  a modern message

Betty Smith is famous for her 1943 novel, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, but before that she was a playwright. Her 1930 work “Becomes a Woman” is about class and sexism. It has a bit too much soap opera for today’s tastes (except as a soap opera!), but is fascinating as a look back at a feminist view of the 1920s. Remember, this was not long after women got the 1920 ratification of the 9th amendment for the vote.

Fine staging of J.B. Priestley’s “An Inspector Calls,” a famous mystery about the exploitation of workers

Fine staging of J.B. Priestley’s “An Inspector Calls,” a famous mystery about the exploitation of workers

Key West – It takes a while before you begin to figure out the truth of this mystery that excoriates the capitalist oppression of the working class. And I won’t spoil it. Priestley, a British socialist, wrote it in 1945, setting it in 1912. It gets a terrific production, helmed by director Patrick New, expertly cut in half from the original three-hour script.

Ken Ludwig’s “Dear Jack, Dear Louise” is a romantic charmer

Ken Ludwig’s “Dear Jack, Dear Louise” is a romantic charmer

Key West – Ken Ludwig’s delightful two-hander is an affectionate memory of his parents’ epistolary courtship during World War II when his father was a small town doctor working in army hospitals and at the front and his mother was an aspiring actress from Brooklyn. Cody Borah is perfect as the low-key Jacob S. (Jack) Ludwig and Jessica Miano Kruel is excellent as the tough, sometimes cutting New Yorker, Louise Rabiner.

“Between Riverside and Crazy” where everyone is playing a con game

“Between Riverside and Crazy” where everyone is playing a con game

In this dysfunctional family near-soap opera by Stephen Adly Guirgis, the “good guys” and the “bad guys” are all con men, or women. The venue, a middle-class apartment on Riverside Drive in Manhattan, is a place for drive-by scams and attacks that have you shifting the characters between the hero and villain columns. And asking some questions for which answers are never there. That said, the acting, headed by lead Stephen McKinley Henderson, and direction by Austin Pendleton are fine, as complex but also as hokey as you are likely to see on TV.

“Some Like it Hot” gorgeous exuberant musical where “hot” means jazz

“Some Like it Hot” gorgeous exuberant musical where “hot” means jazz

Brilliant, clever, trendy, stunning, wonderful, the best musical of the season, every number a show-stopper. It’s 1933 Chicago, time of depression and prohibition. A couple of musicians, Joe (Christian Borle) and Jerry (J. Harrison Ghee), sax and a double bass players looking for a gig in a show bar, see a gang murder by mafioso Colombo, known as “Spats” (Mark Lotito), and his confederates. Witnesses will be killed. They run into a dressing room and appropriate the clothes and wigs which of course yields the costumes of the girl band.

Sarah Ruhl’s “Becky Nurse of Salem” falters tying 17th century of oppression of “witches“ to today’s women’s issues

Sarah Ruhl’s “Becky Nurse of Salem” falters tying 17th century of oppression of “witches“ to today’s women’s issues

Deirdre O’Connell is wonderful as Becky, the neurotic inheritor of the mantle of 17th century Salem’s witchcraft victims. She is as out-front and aggressive as her flaming red hair. But the Sarah Ruhl play she inhabits is a confusion of current issues (depression and opioids), fantasy witching (potions to make people fall in and out of love) and suggestion that the present echoes the bad historic past.

“Ain’t No Mo’” is in-your-face brilliance about the Black experience in America

“Ain’t No Mo’” is in-your-face brilliance about the Black experience in America

“Ain’t No Mo’” by Jordan E. Cooper is a fantastical surreal in-your-face satirical pastiche of American black experience. It targets blacks (read the black bourgeoisie) as well as whites. You won’t find anything as adventurous on or off Broadway. Which makes it sad it has posted a closing notice for Sunday, Dec. 18th, just two weeks after its opening. So here is what you will see if you go and what you will miss if you don’t.

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