GRACE NOTES: Friday, June 3, 2022

 

This Weekend’s Highlights:

Friday, June 3

  The Still Room, by Sally Rogers, directed by Nigel Douglas, featuring Zoe Brough, Jack Colgrave Hirst, Kate James, Jane Slavin, Chris Simmons, and Larner Taylor, opens at London’s Park Theatre.

  Forestburg Under the Stars Broadway Concert Series, featuring Jay Armstrong Johnson, Jackie Burns, Ken Page, Kirsten & Matthew Scott, and Cady Huffman, opens at NY’s Forestburg Playhouse.

  Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, by Todd Kreidler, directed by Lita Gaithers Owens, featuring Paul Denk (Monsignor Ryan), Lee Garlington (Christina Drayton), Brad Greenquist (Matt Drayton), Dan Martin (John Prentice Sr.), Mary Pumper (Joanna Drayton), Vickilyn Reynolds (Matilda Binks), Mouchette van Heldsingen (Hilary St. George), Vincent Washington (Dr. John Prentice), and Renn Woods (Mary Prentice, opens at Santa Monica’s Ruskin Group Theatre.

  Group Rep‘s The Desperate Hours, by Joseph Hayes, directed by Jules Aaron, featuring Jackson Bethel (Ralphie), Van Boudreaux (Robish), Fox Carney (Jesse Bard), Dave Buzzotta (Glenn Griffin), Katelyn Ann Clark (Harry Carson), Joseph Eastburn (Lt. Car Fredericks), Lareen Faye (Miss Swift), Lee Grober (Dan Hilliard), Bruce Nehlsen (Tom Winston), Kat Kemmett (Cindy Hilliard), Mason Kennerly (Chuck Wright), Duke Pierce (Hank Griffin), Steve Shaw (Mr. Patterson), and Gina Yates (Eleanor Hilliard), opens at North Hollywood’s Lonnie Chapman Theatre.

  The Light, by Loy A. Webb, directed by Jacqui Parker, featuring Dominic Carter and Yewande Odetoyinbo, begins previews at Boston’s Lyric Stage.

  In The Heights, directed by Benjamin Perez, featuring Rubén J. Carbajal (Usnavi), Daisy Marie Lopez (Nina), Hosea Mundi (Benny), Claudia Mulet (Vanessa), Jacquelin Lorraine Schofield (Abuela Claudia), Jose Carlos Rivera (Sonny), Shadia Fairuz (Daniela), Crissy Guerrero (Camila), Lindsey Dantes (Carla), Kevin Solis (Piragua Guy), Benjamin Perez (Kevin Rosario), and Kevin Trinio Perdido (Grafitti Pete), with Steven-Adam Agdeppa, Marcos Alexander, Remmie Bourgeois, Bianca Brandon, Andrea Dobbins, Juan Guillen, Haley Izurieta, Rachel Josefina, Jodi Marks, Monika Peña, Mario Rocha, Tristan Turner, Isaac Uhlenberg, and Bridget Whitman, previews at CA’s La Mirada Theatre.

  Hood, by Douglas Carter-Beane & Lewis Flinn, directed by Mark Brokaw, featuring Anthony Chatmon II (Robin), Savy Jackson (Marian), Billie Aken-Tyers (Much), Caitlin Humphreys (Lady Ann), Erin Kei (Lady Jane), Aury Krebs (Meg), Daniel Lopez (Troubadour), Jamen Nanthakumar (Friar Tuck), Luke Anthony Neville (Will Scarlet), Nick Rehberger (Sheriff of Nottingham), Zachary Francis Stewart (Little John), and Imani Youngblood (Gamble Gold), with Jordan Sam Rich, Michail Roberts, Darius Vines, Danielle Vivcharenko, and Taylor Erin Wade, begins previews at FL’s Asolo Rep.

  Kritzerland’s June Tunes and a Tribute to Stephen Sondheim concert, directed & hosted by Bruce Kimmel, featuring Lottie Arnold, Daniel Thomas Bellusci, Danika Masi, Kerry O’Malley, Adrienne Stiefel, and Robert Yacko, at 8 PM PT at Studio City’s Feinstein’s at Vitello’s.

  Kiki Ball-Change’s Funny Gworl concert, at 10 PM ET at Off-Broadway’s Laurie Beechman Theatre.

  “Joe Papp in Five Acts” documentary premieres at 9 PM on PBS (check local listings).

Saturday, June 4

  Windfall, by Scooter Pietsch, directed by Jason Alexander, featuring Spencer Garrett (Glenn Brannon), Ro Boddie (Galvan Kidd), Badia Farha (Kate Rearden), Abigail Isom (Hannah Higley), Talia Thiesfield (Jacqueline Vanderbilt), and Dylan S. Wallach (Chris Hart), opens at Sag Harbor’s Bay Street Theatre.

  In The Heights, directed by Benjamin Perez, featuring Rubén J. Carbajal (Usnavi), Daisy Marie Lopez (Nina), Hosea Mundi (Benny), Claudia Mulet (Vanessa), Jacquelin Lorraine Schofield (Abuela Claudia), Jose Carlos Rivera (Sonny), Shadia Fairuz (Daniela), Crissy Guerrero (Camila), Lindsey Dantes (Carla), Kevin Solis (Piragua Guy), Benjamin Perez (Kevin Rosario), and Kevin Trinio Perdido (Grafitti Pete), with Steven-Adam Agdeppa, Marcos Alexander, Remmie Bourgeois, Bianca Brandon, Andrea Dobbins, Juan Guillen, Haley Izurieta, Rachel Josefina, Jodi Marks, Monika Peña, Mario Rocha, Tristan Turner, Isaac Uhlenberg, and Bridget Whitman, opens at CA’s La Mirada Theatre.

  The Pajama Game, directed by Annie Potter, featuring Nicholas Yenson, Nicole Tung, Katherine Stein, Tiana Paulding, Ben Jones, Renee Deweese, Jesse Caldwell, Tony Conaty, Tracy Camp, Ashley Garlick, James Mayagoitia, Nick Nakashima, and Daniel Thomas, opens at San Francisco’s 42nd Street Moon.

  FCP Theatre Group‘s No One Will Be Immune and other plays and pieces, a collection of rarely seen short one-act plays by David Mamet, featuring Cooper McAdoo, Molly B. Thomas, Elliot White, and Harry White, opens at Hollywood’s The Complex.

  Tru (Act 1 only), by Jay Presson Allen, featuring Jamie Galen, opens at Hollywood’s. Three Clubs Stage Room (1123 N. Vine Street).

  Marys Seacole, by Jackie Sibblies Drury, directed by Nadia Latif, featuring Kayla Meikle (Mary Seacole), Déja J. Bowens (Mamie), Llewella Gideon (Duppy Mary, Esther Smith (Miriam, Olivia Williams (May), and Susan Wooldridge (Merry), closes at London’s Donmar Warehouse.

  Cock, by Mike Bartlett, directed by Marianne Elliot, featuring Jonathan Bailey, Taryn Edgerton, Jade Anouka, and Phil Daniels, closes at London’s Ambassador’s Theatre.

  Goldie, Max & Milk, by Karen Hartman, directed by Jackson Gay, featuring Blair Baker, Lauren Molina, Timiki Salinas, Shayna Nicole Small, and Beatrice Ethel Tulchin, with Victoria Huston-Elem, and Nick Piacente, closes at Off-Broadway’s 59E59 Theaters.

  Between Two Knees, by The 1491s sketch comedy group, directed by Eric Ting, featuring Edward Chin-Lyn, Rachel Crowl, Derek Garza, Justin Gauthier, Shyla Lefner, Wotko Long, Shaun Taylor-Corbett, and Sheila Tousey, closes at Yale Rep.

Sunday, June 5

  Sister Act, restaged by Steven Beckler, featuring Nicole Vanessa Ortiz (Deloris Van Cartier), Jennifer Allen (Mother Superior), Akron Watson (Curtis), Belinda Allyn (Mary Robert), Diane J. Findlay (Mary Lazarus), Kara Mikula (Marty Patrick), Jarran Muse (Eddie Souther), John Treacy Egan (Monsignor O’Hara), Anthony Alfaro (Pablo), Ryan Gregory Thurman (TJ), and Jacob Keith Watson (Joey), with Rachelle Rose Clark, Steve Czarnecki, Madeleine Doherty, Denzel Edmondson, Dion Simmons Grier, Kolby Kindle, Ashley Masula, Stephanie Miller, Alaina Mills, Heather Parcells, Chandler Reeves, Michael Schimmele, Alyson Snyder, Anne Fraser Thomas, Ariana Valdes, and Zuri Washington, opens at NJ’s Paper Mill Playhouse.

  Uncle Vanya, translated by Richard Nelson, Richard Pevear & Larissa Volokhonsky directed by Michael Michetti, featuring Hugo Armstrong (Vanya), Anne Gee Byrd (Marya), Brian George (Serebryakov), Khetanya Henderson (Elena), Brandon Mendez Homeras (Astroy), Jane Taini (Marina), and Sabina Zuniga-Varela (Sonya), opens at Pasadena Playhouse.

  The Light, by Loy A. Webb, directed by Jacqui Parker, featuring Dominic Carter and Yewande Odetoyinbo, opens at Boston’s Lyric Stage.

  Rufus Does Judy concert, starring Rufus Wainwright, with special guests Justin Vivan Bond, Laura Benanti, Lorna Luft, Molly Ringwald, and Sharon D. Clarke, opens at NYC’s City Winery.

  The Taming of the Shrew, directed by Shana Cooper, featuring Armando Durán (Baptista), Felicity Jones Latta (Tranio), Orville Mendoza (Grumio), Jesse J. Perez (Gremio), Cassia Thompson (Bianca), John Tufts (Hortensio /Biondello / Merchant), James Udom (Petrucio), and Deborah Ann Woll (Katherine), along with students in The Old Globe and University of San Diego Shiley Graduate Theatre Program, begins previews at San Diego’s Old Globe.

  The 10th annual Night of a Thousand Judys benefit concert, honoring Judy Garland, in support of The Ali Forney Center, written & hosted by Justin Elizabeth Sayre, directed by Peter James Cook, featuring Frances Ruffelle, Nathan Lee Graham, Kathryn Gallagher, Sally Mayes, Nicolas King, Shereen Pimentel, Amy Jo Jackson, Bonnie Milligan, Hilary Kole, and Eleri Ward, at 8 PM ET at Off-Broadway’s Joe’s Pub.

  for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf, by Ntozake Shange, directed & choreographed by Camille A. Brown, featuring Amara Granderson (Lady in Orange), Tendayi Kuumba (Lady in Brown), Rachel Christopher (Lady in Red), Okwui Okpolwasili (Lade in Green), Stacy Sargeant (Lady in Blue), Alexandrea Wailes (Lady in Purple), and D. Woods (Lady in Yellow), closes at Broadway’s Booth Theatre.

  Passion, directed by Michael Strassen, starring Ruthie Henshall, (Fosca), Kelly Price (Clara), Dean John Wilson (Giorgio), Ray Shell (Doctor Tambourri), Juan Jackson (Count Ludovic/Lieutenant Barri), Tim Walton (Colonel Ricci), Steve Watts (Marjor Rizzolli/Fosca’s Father), Charlie Waddell (Seargeatn Lombardi/Mistress, Danny Whitehead (Private Augenti/Young Fosca), and Adam Robert Lewis (Lieutenant Torasso/Fosca’s Mother, closes at London’s Hope Mill Theatre.

  Wish You Were Here, by Sanaz Toossi, directed by Gaye Taylor Upchurch, featuring Nikki Massoud, Nazanin Nour, Artemis Pebdani, Roxanna Hope Radja, and Marjan Neshat, closes at Off-Broadway’s Playwrights Horizons.

  A Case for the Existence of God, world premiere by Samuel D. Hunter, directed by David Cromer, featuring Kyle Beltran and Will Brill, closes at Off-Broadway’s Signature Center.

  Which Way to the Stage, world premiere by Ana Nogueria, directed by Mike Donahue, featuring Sas Goldberg, Max Jenkins, Evan Todd, and Michelle Veintimilla, closes at Off-Broadway’s MCC Theater.

  Queen, by Madhuri Shekar, directed by Aneesha Kudtarkar, featuring Ben Livingston, Keshav Moodliar, Stephanie Janssen, and Avanthika Srinivasan, closes at New Haven’s Long Warf Theatre.

  Zoey’s Perfect Wedding, by Matthew Lopez, directed by Rob Ruggiero, featuring Esteban Carmona, Hallie Eliza Friedman, Hunter Ryan Herdlicka, Rachel B. Joyce, Blair Lewin, and Daniel José Molina, closes at Theaterworks Hartford.

  Straight White Men, by Young Jean Lee, directed by Mark Lamos, featuring Richard Kline (Ed), Bill Army Jake), Denver Milord (Matt), Nick Westrate (Drew), Akiko Akita (Person in Charge), and Ashton Muñiz (Person in Charge), closes at CT’s Westport Country Playhouse.

  A Radical Invention of Shakespeare’s King Lear, directed by John Gould Rubin, featuring Joe Morton (King Lear), Mark Harelik (Gloucester), River Gallo (Cordelia/Fool), Zach Soloman (Edgar/King of France), Brie Eley (Regan), and Emily Swallow (Goneril), Rafel Jordan (Edmund), with Miguel Perez, Stanley Jackson, and Danielle Thorpe, closes at Beverly Hills’ The Wallis.

  Every Brilliant Thing, by Duncan McMillan & Jonny Donahoe, directed by directed by Tom Quaintance, featuring Jeffrey Meanza and Kathryn Hunter-Williams (rotating performances), closes at Virginia Stage Company.

  The Price, by Arthur Miller, directed by Dennis D. Hennessy, featuring Jason Chanos, Victor Raider-Wexler, Mark Robbins, and Jan Rogge, closes at Kansas City Actors Theatre.

  Metamorphoses, by Mary Zimmerman, directed by Julia Rodriguez-Elliott, featuring Alan Blumenfeld, DeJuan Christopher, Geoff Elliott, Rafael Goldstein, Nicole Javier, Kasey Mahaffy, Sydney A. Mason, Trisha Miller, Cassandra Marie Murphy, and Erika Soto, closes at Pasadena’s A Noise Within.

  Try Not to Think About It, by Alice Childress, world premiere written & directed by Chris Haas, featuring Bridget Avildsen, Mace Bullington, Sean Durrie, Alex Frasier, Travyz Santos Gatz, Sydney Jenkins, Katy Laughlin, April Littlejohn, Max Marsh, Benjamin Marshall, Ignacio Navarro, Lex Nguyen, Sarah Nilsen, Natasha Renae Potts, Sarah Sommers, and Celin Celine Rosalie Zoppe, closes at North Hollywood’s Loft Ensemble.

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  Reviews for Roundabout’s …what the end will be at Off-Broadway’s Steinberg Center:

NY Times (Naveen Kumar): … an astute and poignant reflection on sexuality, mortality and Black masculinity by the playwright Mansa Ra… Did I mention it’s also a comedy?… Learning to let go — of personal hang-ups, social expectations and ultimately of life itself — is at the heart of … What the End Will Be, which is not shy on sentimentality… What if instead of being presumed absent, Black fathers were depicted as fallibly present?… Assured and affecting performances from the cast succeed in tugging at heartstrings… t’s everything that is meant when we say that Black lives matter.

Theatermania (Pete Hempstead): …Ra’s funny and incredibly moving play… In large part, that’s because Ra does something new: He looks at the complex father-son dynamics of three generations of gay Black men, all related and all living under one roof… In a play with straight white characters, this set-up (ailing grandparent, old-school dad, rebellious teen wanting to live their best life) would feel at least a little familiar. But Ra puts these tropes in different cultural waters, and the result is fresh and engaging… [Emerson] Brooks delivers a sterling performance… Director Margot Bordelon draws terrific performances from the rest of the cast as well…

New York Theatre Guide (Joe Dziemianowicz): …an always earnest but seldom subtle play… a recurring image nods to the power of scent to trigger memories. … The script by playwright Mansa Ra struggles to find a consistent rhythm that feels like actual people talking to each other.  Margot Bordelon’s direction doesn’t help much; it all adds up to a stagy experience…. Over the play’s 90 minutes, the story predictably moves toward tidy resolutions for the various fractures dividing the Kennedys. When all is said and done, the play looks at how men deal with wounds and pain — past, present, and future…

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  Boston’s SpeakEasy Stage has announced its 2022-23 season:

  Heroes of the Fourth Turning (Sept. 9 – Oct. 8), by Will Arbery, directed by Marianna Bassham.  A daring look at the heart of a country at war with itself.

  English (Oct. 21 – Nov. 19z0, by Sanaz Toossi, directed by TBA. A new comedy that examines identity, heritage, and community through the lens of an English class in Karaj, Iran.

  Fairview (Feb. 17 – Mar. 18, 2023), by Jackie Sibblies Drury, directed by Pascale Florestal. A play that have you reconsidering race, privilege, and the power of theatre.

  Wild Goose Dreams (Mar. 24 – Apr. 22), by Hansol Jung, directed by Seonjae Kim  A wildly imaginative love story for the modern age between a South Korean “goose father” and a North Korean defector.

  The Prom (May 5 – June 3), directed by Paul Daigneault.

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  NYC’s Stonewall Inn presents Susan Campanaro & Lunn Portas’ Doing time with Lavinia: The Musical on Mon. June 20 at 7 PM ET, directed by Christopher Scott. The presentation is fundraiser for The Stonewall Inn Give Back Initiative.

Susan Campanaro

  Told from a jail cell, this is the raucously boozy tale of Livinia Draper, fallen socialite and one-time-stand-by for Broadway’s Betty Buckley, who is eternally chasing her pipe dream of becoming and entertainer. An hilarious cautionary tale of a woman whose dreams have been repeatedly derailed by a self-sabotaging addiction to drama.

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   Transport Group‘s Rodgers & Hammerstein: A Broadway Celebration will take place Mon. June 27 at 8 PM ET at NYC’s Merkin Concert Hall, written by Hannah Oren, directed by Jack Cummings III, with music direction by Chancey, and hosted by Bayork Lee.

Paolo Montalban, Mikaela Bennett, Sherry D. Boone, Donna Lynne Champlin, Hannah Elless, Danyel Fulton, Erika Henningson, Rachal Bay Jones, Sean McLaughlin, Betsy Morgan, Tally Sessions, Alexandra Silber, Jacob Keith Watson, and Sally Wilfert, with more TBA…

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  Jenn Colella will return to the Broadway production of Come From Away, replacing Becky Gulsvig, from June 21 – Aug. 7 at the Schoenfeld Theatre.

Colella will be succeeded by Rachel Tucker on Aug. 9.

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  Lisa Loomer’s Roe will run June 25 – July 10 at LA’s Fountain Theatre, directed by Vanessa Stallings.

  Kate Middleton (Norma McCorvey), Christina Hall (Sara Weddington), and more TBA.

  This hyper-staged reading of the explosive play cuts through the headlines to reveal the feal-life woman who became “Jane Roe,” the female attorney who argued her case before the Supreme Court.

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  Encompass New Opera Theater will present a Benefit Concert for Ukraine on Sat. June 18 at 3 PM ET at NYC’s Christ and Saint Stephen’s Church (120 W. 69th St.)  All proceeds and donations will support Happy Childhood of Odessa, Ukraine, which provides food, clothing and medication to families and children of the region.

 Ukrainian singers and musicians.

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  Video: First look at “Don’t Tell Mama” from Cabaret at Goodspeed.

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  Brian Watkin’s Epiphany, currently in previews, will open June 16 at Lincoln Center Theater, directed by Tyne Rafaeli.

  Francois Battiste, Marylouise Burke, Heather Burns, Jonathan Hadary, Omar Metwally, Colby Minifie, David Ryan Smith, C.J. Wilson, and Carmen Zilles.

A group of old friends gather to resuscitate a forgotten tradition only to find themselves craving answers when the guest of honor is unusually late.

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  Afterglow, written & directed by S. Asher Gelman, has extended its run through July 24 at Hollywood’s Hudson Theatre.

Noah Bridgestock (Josh), James Hayden Rodriguez (Alex), and Nathan Mohebbi (Darius).

A raw, one-act play exploring the emotional, intellectual, and physical connections between three men and the broader implications within their relationships.

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  Christopher Durang’s Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You will run June 6-18 at Studio|Stage (520 N. Western Ave.), directed by Jeramiah Peay.

Shayna Gabrielle, Lea Madda, Michael Mullen, Will Potter, Chris Ramirez, and Liam Risinger.

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Industry readings of John Riley & Kate Queen’s A Girl I Know will take place June 22 & 23 in NYC, directed by Jamibeth Margolis. here.

Roe Hartrampf, Chloe Lowery, Sean Thompson, Stephanie Lynne Mason, Michael Patrick Ryan, and Maria Lawson.

A beautiful masseuse named Jeni can’t stop murdering cheating men until she meets a suicidal client who thinks he can fix her.

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  Due to changes in its rehearsal schedule, The Public Theater‘s Free Shakespeare in the Park production of Richard III, previews will now begin June 21, with an opening set for July 10, and continuing through July 17 at Central Park’s Delacorte Theater, directed by Robert O’Hara.

Danai Gurira (Richard III), Wyatt Cirbus (Prince of Wales), Sanjit De Silva (Buckingham), Sam Duncan (Duke of York),Monique Holt (Duchess of York), Gregg Mozgala (King Edward IV/Richmond), Paul Niebanck (George), Michael Potts (Lord Stanley), Ariel Shafir (Lord Hastings, Heather Alicia Simms (Queen Elizabeth), Ali Stroker (Anne), Sharon Washington (Queen Margaret), and Daniel J. Watts (Catesby Ratcliffe), with Maleni Chaitoo, Thaddeus Fitzpatrick, Skyler Gallun, Sara Nina Hayon, Matthew Jeffers, Matt Monaco, Xavier Pacheco, Marcus Rae Perez, Grace Porter, and N’yomi Stewart.

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  Hollywood’s Blank Theatre has announced its 30th Annual Young Playwrights Festival, to run July 8 – Aug. 11.

Professional actors and directors present 12 winning plays by young playwrights from across the nation as digital shorts streaming on Vimeo, and then migrating to The Blank’s 3rd Stage on Patreon. Three different plays will be presented each week (two plays in Week 4 and one play in Week Five).

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  Cat On A Hot Tin Roof will run July 15 – Aug. 14 (opening July 24) at Theater at St. Clements, directed by Joe Rosario.

Sonoya Miczuno Maggie), Matt de Rogatis (Brick), Christian Jules Le Blanc (Big Daddy), Alison Fraser (Big Mama), Spencer Scott (Gooper), Tiffan Borelli (Mae), Jim Kempner (Doc Baugh) Austin Pendleton (Doc Baugh, beginning of July 25), Milton Elliott (Rev. Tooker), and Carly Gold (The No Neck Monsters).

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  Baltimore Center Stage has announced its 2022-23 season:

  Our Town (Sept. 15 – Oct. 9), directed by Stevie Walker-Webb.

  “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” screening (Oct. 28-29), with live performances by Chocolate Covered Rocky Horror.

   Ain’t No Mo,’ (Oct. 27 – Nov. 20), directed by Lili-Anne Brown. A satire about a mass exodus of Black Americans.

  Tiny Beautiful Things (Mar. 9 – Apr. 2, 2023), adapted by Nia Vadalos.

   Life Is A Dream (May 4-21), by Irene Fornés, directed by Stevie Walker-Webb.

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  RIP: Sammy Dallas Bayes died on May 12 at the age of 82.

He arrived in NYC in 1963, where he began an extended working relationship and mentorship with Jerome Robbins.

He was cast as Yitzuk in Fiddler on the Roof (and later played The Fiddler), as well as being the dance captain. In 1966, Mr. Bayes opened the tour of Fiddler in Japan. Mr. Bayes then became the go-to overseer for international productions of the musical, as well as the 1990 Broadway revival.

Bayes also assisted Mr. Robbins on Jerome Robbins Broadway.

Frank Loesser turned to Mr. Bayes in 1968 to choreograph his Canterbury Tales, which earned Mr. Bayes a Tony nomination. As a choreographer, he worked on Heathen! in 1972, did musical staging for Shelter in 1973 and Rainbow Jones in 1974, and worked on numerous other national and international productions.  In addition, Mr. Bayes choreographed the 1973 film of “Godspell.”

For those who wish to honor Mr. Bayes, his family would appreciate memorial donations to the Entertainment Community Fund (scroll down).

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  “Percy Jackson and the Olympians” has announced casting for it’s series, which is currently in development for Disney+, directed by Chris Columbus.  Timeline TBA.

Megan Mullally, Virginia Kull, Glynn Turman, Jason Mantzoukas, and Timm Shart.

12-year-old Percy Jacson, who is coming to terms with his newfound powers, is accused of theft by sky god Zeus and seeks resolution alongside his friends Grover and Annabeth.

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  Larissa FastHorse’s The Thanksgiving Play will debut on Broadway in Spring 2023 at the Hayes Theatre, directed by Rachel Chavkin.

Casting, dates, and additional information TBA.

 


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