Musings on what Los Angeles theater is - and can be. Want to know more? Subscribe to Anthony's weekly Theater newsletter.
Matt’s Text
KCRW's longtime producer, host and cheerleader, Matt Holzman, who died Sunday, only texted me once about my reviews. Matt Holzman is the reason I'm at KCRW.
4/13/2020 • 3 minutes, 58 seconds
What do we do in the theatre when there is no theater?
At the most fundamental level, the theater connects artists with an audience at one time, in one space. That's about presence. You show up at eight o'clock, the lights come up, you see a show. We are together. Dig deeper and the connection gets vastly more rich and complicated. Connecting with an audience means understanding the moment in time we are living in; appreciating the particular place where you are making theater. What is happening here and now? Theater must do more than simply reflect our moment. It must care for its audience's soul through that moment.
3/16/2020 • 3 minutes, 33 seconds
‘Home’ review: domestic magic and the fleeting American dream
The show "Home" begins with a magic trick. When you walk into the theater, you see an empty stage. As the show begins, an unassuming man, played by the show’s creator Geoff Sobelle, walks from the audience to the stage to survey things.
3/9/2020 • 4 minutes, 4 seconds
Four Larks’ creepy and gorgeous ‘Frankenstein’ will punch you in the gut
"Frankenstein" is a major work and a major leap for Four Larks: it’s a dark and visually stunning play but it's also a concert, opera, musical and a dance piece all in one. “Frankenstein” will punch you in the gut.
3/3/2020 • 3 minutes, 32 seconds
‘Found’ Review: Finding a musical in scraps of paper
Every couple of years LA's intimate theaters produce a musical that gives the big theaters a run for their money. Right now it’s IAMA Theatre Company's "Found: A New Musical." It starts off a little awkwardly. We're in a bar in Chicago with some disgruntled 30 somethings. Denise, the bartender, went to art school but can't find a better gig than slinging shots. She's got a punk vibe and a bruised heart — so you can sense the setup there. Mikey doesn't have a job or a lover but he's got his old friend Davy who pays the rent and generally keeps him afloat. Davy's our protagonist and — at least at the top of the scene — he's got a job but not one he likes. Davy looks around the bar and beefs that everyone is on cell phones; no one is really connecting with one another. He makes a half-hearted attempt to get everyone in the bar to put down the devices and be together. It sort of flops.
2/25/2020 • 3 minutes, 41 seconds
'Revenge Song' review: Geek theatre rules!
Did you ever have a nerdy friend in high school? Or maybe you were the nerdy friend? Someone who was super into anime, comic books, sword fights; always had a corny joke or a geeky pop-culture reference; totally into cosplay; also super smart and knew really weird but cool stuff about history? Maybe queer? Maybe not? Super creative, super self-aware but also sort of a mess which kind of bugged you but at exactly the moment you were going to give up on them you realized they had a heart of gold and were doing the right thing? If you could roll all that up into a play, it'd be Qui Nguyen's world premiere "Revenge Song."
2/18/2020 • 3 minutes, 27 seconds
The loss of the LA Weekly will drive you nuts
In the first scene of playwright Steven Leigh Morris' new play "Red Ink," our protagonist makes a cri-du-coeur: "What was he thinking?...Why would a successful business man do to his own property?"
2/11/2020 • 3 minutes, 21 seconds
Are we listening?
Dael Orlandersmith's one-woman show "Until the Flood" is set in and around Ferguson, Missouri. It's 2014, immediately after Michael Brown was shot 6 times by a police officer. Ferguson erupted in protest. The following year, the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis commissioned Ms. Orlandersmith to write and perform a solo show to give voice to the city's racial divide. "Until the Flood" is based on interviews she did across Ferguson and St. Louis and boiled down to 8 poetic composite characters. We hear from black residents who are scared and angry. We hear from white residents who are angry and scared. Remarkably, Ms. Orlandersmith gives voice to it all.
2/4/2020 • 3 minutes, 44 seconds
What does the constitution mean to you?
You know how the constitution has a preamble? "We the people of the United States ..."? Okay, before you go see the play "What the Constitution Means to Me" (and you definitely need to go see this play) - you should probably imagine a preamble to the play … not a disclaimer exactly, just an explanation for what you’re about to see.
1/28/2020 • 3 minutes, 46 seconds
What’s happening at REDCAT?
Miwa Matreyek’s work doesn’t fit neatly into a simple box.
1/21/2020 • 4 minutes, 8 seconds
Roll with it
Stephen Adly Guirgis play "Between Riverside and Crazy" is one of those scripts that plays very differently outside of New York.
1/14/2020 • 3 minutes, 30 seconds
Theater for a new year
Happy New Year! LA theater is all about women in the new year. There are one woman shows, re-imagining women from history. Here’s a quick list of the shows I’m looking forward to this spring. Let’s start with a hit one-woman show … that now stars another woman.
1/7/2020 • 3 minutes, 48 seconds
Best of 2019 LA Theatre: the gender act.
Okay, Best of LA Theatre 2019 part two. Last week, I shared plays that tackled race head on. This week, one last favorite production that made an audience confront how race haunts our national drama from an unlikely source: The Getty Villa.
12/31/2019 • 3 minutes, 35 seconds
“Best of 2019 LA Theatre: the race act.”
It’s time for the best of theatre of 2019. Like last year, the best theatre in Los Angeles - the theater that spoke with the clearest voice this year - was political. But where last year the politics had to do broadly with who was leading who. This year, the politics were mostly about race and gender.
12/24/2019 • 3 minutes, 51 seconds
A big play in a tiny space
A couple of years ago "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time" was a big play. By big I mean it got a Broadway production, it won Tony awards, it went on a national tour - you know, big play. But here's the thing, it's not really a big play in a broadway sense. It's a really beautiful small play that found it's big-ness. At it's core it's a wonderful ensemble play where a small group of actors not only play a bunch of roles - they make a whole world. This is the magic of the production at the Greenway Court a 99-seat theatre. They rediscover the heart of the play in an intimate setting.
12/17/2019 • 3 minutes, 16 seconds
A male swan’s spell
Matthew Bourne’s “Swan Lake” is the production that 24 years ago catapulted Mr. Bourne’s work into the international spotlight. Famously, he reimagines Tchaikovsky’s ballet about women trapped as swans by an evil sorcerer's spell -- into the tragic and heroic story of a closeted prince discovering a secret world of male love.
12/17/2019 • 3 minutes, 22 seconds
Punk? Or Poser?
Remember being a teenager? If you are now or ever were a teenager, you've probably had to navigate some tricky social waters. Who's cool? Who's a poser? Who are your people? Those are some of the questions at the heart of Circle X's production of "punkplay" ... but in a very particular time period.
12/3/2019 • 3 minutes, 32 seconds
A holiday cab
I’m guessing the last thing you need is another “to do” on your holiday list…but I want you to add one more. You need to go see “Jitney” at the Mark Taper Forum.
11/26/2019 • 3 minutes, 30 seconds
Theatre tip: just use white people
There’s a problem with school Thanksgiving plays. But not in the particular high school drama classroom you can see onstage at the Geffen. Logan, the drama teacher, is finally getting to make her Thanksgiving school play and it’s going to right those wrongs.
11/12/2019 • 3 minutes, 30 seconds
Comfort food comedy with a dark side
The setup at the center of Mike Birbiglia's one-man show "The New One" is not particularly new. In fact, it's familiar trope: the reluctant dad.
11/5/2019 • 3 minutes, 41 seconds
An essential journey
You need to drive to Pasadena and see a 3 hour play. Okay, I know that's a big ask so let me break down why the trip is worth it. Greg T. Daniel's production of "Gem of the Ocean" is important... and it carries the weight of a ton of history both locally and for us as a nation.
10/28/2019 • 3 minutes, 38 seconds
Internal thoughts becoming external cues
It’s not that often that stunning design is the reason to go see LA’s intimate theatre. But design is really the reason to go see Son of Semele’s production of Sarah Kane’s play “4:48 Psychosis.”
10/21/2019 • 3 minutes, 40 seconds
Seeing Beckett through a clown's eyes
Think of something you love. Something you’re really passionate about; something that, at least in your mind, can either be done right or really wrong. Maybe it’s a sport? Or a recipe? Or maybe even a kiss. When that thing’s good, it feeds your soul. When it’s bad … well, sometimes you’d rather just skip it. That’s how a lot of theater folks, myself included, feel about Samuel Beckett.
10/14/2019 • 3 minutes, 45 seconds
When a play is more of a story
What’s the difference between a dramatic story and a play? That’s the question that nervously filled my mind with the first words of “How the light gets in” at Boston Court.
10/7/2019 • 3 minutes, 26 seconds
When is a “Handjob” more than a handjob?
Erik Patterson’s play “Handjob” does indeed include a handjob. So if you’re the kind of person who might be offended by that or by male frontal nudity then this play might, oddly, be perfect for you. Stick with me.
9/30/2019 • 3 minutes, 21 seconds
Holding an imperfect mirror up to LA (vida loca)
This isn’t an easy story to hear but judging by the sold out crowds and standing ovation - it’s a journey that is letting a community see a reflection of itself and their struggles.
9/23/2019 • 4 minutes, 43 seconds
Time to get schooled
The frame for John Leguziamo’s latest one man show is an eighth grade history textbook … well that and a bit of racist bullying. In “Latin History for Morons” his son comes crying from school about some white boy who, having descended from white generals dating back to the civil war, told him he was a ‘beaner’ and king of nothing.
9/16/2019 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
Breathing female life into a stubborn male classic
How do you breathe life into ancient art? That’s the driving question behind the Getty Villa’s outdoor theater program (and arguably the Getty itself). Each September the Getty mounts a Greek or Roman play in their spectacular Malibu canyon amphitheater.
9/9/2019 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
The trouble with expectation
oday, before we open that theater curtain, I want you to join me... at an imaginary art gallery. Playwright Vince Melocchi is counting on your fascination with the Warhol legend to fuel his play “Andy Warhol’s Tomato.”
8/26/2019 • 4 minutes, 36 seconds
The brilliant complexity of a feminist classic
When is the last time you saw a play with a cast of eight complex women? I see a lot of theater and I think my answer is right next to never ...but an all female cast isn’t the only stunning thing about Maria Irene Fornes’ play, “Fefu and her friends.”
8/19/2019 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
Saying no to the myth
There’s a temptation with the big stories, say a Greek myth, to embrace the epic, larger-than-life quality. After all it’s a myth, right? Take playwright Sarah Ruhle’s “Eurydice”.
8/12/2019 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
The paid intimacy of immersive theater
The invitation to “Under the Big Top: Atlas” is intentionally a little cryptic. It’s clear it’s an immersive theater experience. It’s clear it’s $70 for a 30 minute performance. Beyond that, it invites your imagination to wander. There’s mention of 1928, some kind of flood at the circus. A mystery, someone’s disappeared, maybe I can help locate her? And that it’s a partnership with Two Bit Circus. That’s enough for me. I’m intrigued.
8/5/2019 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Manifest masculinity
“Men on Boats” is a play that gets many things right… and yet somehow ends up not quite hitting its target.
7/25/2019 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Brecht without the politics
Even for a classically focused theatre company like Antaeus, their new play “Caucasian Chalk Circle” feels dated.
7/15/2019 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
A dead man’s legacy
Playwright Geraldine Inoa’s stunning play “Scraps” is haunted by a character we never meet. Don't miss this powerful production.
7/8/2019 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Shocking a culture forward
Any time you’re seeing a revival or a new production of an old script, you walk in wondering -will reviving this script tell us anything new? That question is very present in the Odyssey Theatre Company’s production of “Loot” directed by Bart DeLorenzo.
7/1/2019 • 4 minutes, 51 seconds
Sherlock Holmes and the case of too many plot points
The Sherlock Holmes inspired play “Mysterious Circumstances” is itself a bit of mystery … but not in the way the Geffen’s Artistic Director Matt Shakman probably intended it.
6/24/2019 • 4 minutes, 36 seconds
Mama drama with power chords
Sigrid Gilmer isn’t one of those playwrights who warms up to an idea. She’s the kind of playwright who grabs you by the chest from the very first moments.
6/17/2019 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
The alchemy of emptiness
Samuel Beckett’s plays can be really tricky. They are conceptually so full and simultaneously so maddeningly empty. It’s that emptiness that’s the key. What a production does with that emptiness is what separates a transcendent production of Beckett from a sleep-inducing one. Take the production of “Happy Days” starring Dianne Wiest at the Mark Taper Forum.
6/3/2019 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
Why do you choose what you choose?
In “Invisible Tango” that magic and narrative is being crafted by Helder Guimarães. The magic is mostly a theme and variation on card manipulation and increasing elaborate versions of “is this your card?” In the intimate theater that’s configured to focus on a simple card table, the action is close enough to be dazzling and big enough to feel like more than a single trick.
5/27/2019 • 4 minutes, 12 seconds
The theatre of place: Jordan Downs
For Cornerstone’s latest piece “A Jordan Downs Illumination” the focus is really space and time (or more accurately *place* through time). That place is the public housing project in Watts - Jordan Downs. And the time is from World War II when the project was built through now when - After decades of conversation and controversy, the entire project is phase by phase being rebuilt as an urban village.
5/20/2019 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Saved by the cast
At the beginning of Michael McKeever’s play at the Fountain Theatre, we are at the end of a dinner party.
Daniel and Mitchell seem to be the perfect gay couple. Daniel’s a talented architect. Mitchell’s a successful writer. They’re a terrific match. Daniel cooks, Mitchell cleans. You know the deal. It’s that moment of a dinner party where the last bottle of wine is being opened and you’re in the living room chatting about momentous things like why Mitchell’s agent Barry dates young boys and which is better: gummy bears or jelly beans.
Barry’s boy-toy du jour, Trip, who is less than half his age, is enamored of this other gay couple. They seem so perfect. They’ve been together seven years; they have this beautiful house; they are clearly in love. Trip naturally assumes they’re married.
Oops.
Turns out this is a sore spot for Daniel. Hence, the title of the play “Daniel’s Husband.”
Mitchell doesn’t believe in gay marriage. He doesn’t believe in marriage at all. Feels like it’s all some conspiracy built to devalue love and make money. Why as a gay man would he want to assimilate and be like everyone else? He’d fight for other gay men’s right to be married but is violently opposed personally.
A fight ensues. Things get tense. It’s clear this is an old issue for these two. Daniel really, really wants to be married. Mitchell can’t even consider it. The one issue they don’t raise as they argue is: what happens if one of them gets sick.
Don’t worry - the play hasn’t forgotten that argument. That’s the second half.
I won’t spoil the specific details but if I tell you the fifth character in the play is Daniel’s problematic, rich mother - you can probably sketch out the rest. What begins as a witty, clever gay comedy quickly takes a dark turn not just towards tragedy but almost soap-opera. The second half of this 90 minute play comes close to the tone of one of those old films you’d watch in high school with titles like “Scared straight.” Gay men in perfect relationships who haven’t gotten married beware: this could happen to you.
While the end of the play is a little heavy handed, the reason to go see “Daniel’s Husband” is the cast.
Headed up by Tim Cummings and Bill Brochtrup as that ideal gay couple - they’re as perfect in these roles as the characters seem perfect for each other. Jenny O’Hara is just right as the mom who comes for a visit and takes over everything. These fine actors manage to keep the play from descending into melodrama.
In the wrong hands, this play could have gone very, very badly. As it is, it’s skating on the edge.
But these are some of the finest actors in LA and they not only keep things together - they make it all terribly touching. And make small silent moments speak volumes. This is the kind of acting that make intimate theater special. You’re not going to see a cast this good in a space this small in other cities.
So laugh with the first half, cry or cringe with the second half - but enjoy these actors.
“Daniel’s Husband” plays at the Fountain Theatre in Hollywood through June 23rd.
5/6/2019 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Enjoy the dancing dildos
Sometimes watching a play is like having a friend tell you a confusing story. You know, one of those stories where, a few minutes in, you begin to wonder exactly what the story is about and why, exactly, are they sharing it with you. That’s how I felt watching Ammunition Theatre Company’s world premiere of “Brain Problems” by Malcolm Barrett.
4/29/2019 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
The tenure of white supremacy
In the Geffen Playhouse’s latest production, you’re going to office hours at an elite university.
4/22/2019 • 4 minutes, 39 seconds
Doll hubris, anyone?
Children’s theatre is tricky business. It’s a bit like cooking for kids. The easy way out is all sugary sweets. Give ‘em saccharine fake smiles and stories so simplistic they’re easily digestible without any real thought. Like that ice cream cone for breakfast, it may hold the child’s attention for a few minutes but … is it really what they need?
4/15/2019 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
A play boss-battling itself
Inda Craig-Galván’s play “Black Super Hero Magic Mama” is a tricky one to wrap your mind around. Not because the setup is unfamiliar (unfortunately, you’ll recognize it immediately) but because where the play takes that setup has it fighting against itself.
4/1/2019 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
A theatrical sudoku puzzle
“Incognito” at the Son of Semele is a puzzle play.
3/25/2019 • 4 minutes, 14 seconds
Female power? Hell yes.
Sarah De Lappe’s play “The Wolves” is having a bit of a moment. On top of being a finalist for the Pulitzer, it’s slated for over 50 productions across the US - making it one of the year’s most produced plays.
3/18/2019 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
Time for Block Party to evolve
If you’ve been patiently waiting for a play about roller derby, I have good news. If you had hoped it would be a great play about roller derby - um…not so much. “For the love of it (or the roller derby play)” takes us inside the locker room of the Brooklyn Scallywags - the best female roller derby team in the league. Gina Femia’s play gives you a peek behind the scenes at women who go by names like Lizzie Lightning and Diaz De Los Muertos.
3/11/2019 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
Bring your kids to the theater!
The Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts latest offering, Pigpen Theatre Company’s “The Old Man and the Old Moon” is the ambling story of how the light gets into the moon told by seven guys who play all the parts and double as a charming folk band.
3/5/2019 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Sometimes the past is more real than the present
What’s the difference between a play and a film? That’s one of the questions that Brazilian director Christiane Jatahy asks with her stunning piece “What if they went to Moscow?” How Ms. Jatahy poses that elegant question is a little complicated so stick with me.
2/26/2019 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
A method to the political madness
The Actors’ Gang has two things that run through their productions: style and politics. The style is a distant relative of Commedia Dell’Arte, the Italian comic tradition built around stock characters like Harlequin, Pantalone, the corrupt judge. Even if you’ve never seen a Commedia show, chances are the sitcoms of your youth were built on the same formula.
2/19/2019 • 4 minutes, 56 seconds
Questioning a fairy tale
Matthew Bourne’s “Cinderella” at the Ahmanson is fascinating as much for what it isn’t as for what it is.
2/12/2019 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Our inescapable past.
For all it’s seeming simplicity, the Wooster Group’s latest show is complicated, dense experience. Let’s start with the title: “The B-Side: “Negro Folklore from Texas State Prisons,” A Record Album Interpretation.” What’s a record album interpretation?
2/5/2019 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
Fighting the patriarchy
In Taylor Mac’s play “Hir” (spelled H-I-R - more on that in a minute), the old order simply won’t stand.
1/29/2019 • 4 minutes, 39 seconds
Hidden classical treasures
One of LA theatre’s hidden treasures is the theatre that happens at the Getty Villa. The Getty Villa’s latest production goes up this coming weekend with a site-specific show from Four Larks called “Katabasis.” Four Larks - like the Villa - is another hidden LA treasure.
1/22/2019 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Sleeping with your son
Remember that cool kid in high school? The one with the awesome jacket and that effortless edge. He was something of a rebel: used nasty language in just the right way. Made it all look so easy. Now remember that other kid who tried to copy him? Same jacket, same foul language but he couldn’t quite pull it off? Ghost Road company’s latest show is like that second kid: cool stuff but can’t really pull the whole thing off.
1/15/2019 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
Theatre for a New Year
New Year - new theatre! Here’s my short list for the plays you shouldn’t miss this spring.
1/8/2019 • 4 minutes, 15 seconds
Best of 2018, part 2
Last week I started looking back at the theatre in LA that made a difference in 2018. This week I round out that list with the kind of work I hope fills theaters in 2019.
1/1/2019 • 4 minutes, 46 seconds
Best of 2018, part 1
Looking back at the best shows from a year of theatre is always a little strange. It’s not like KCRW’s list of best albums that you can instantly download and enjoy. Theatre is ephemeral - you can’t stream it or hit rewind. So reflecting on a year’s productions is less a guide to what you should see, and more an evaluation of where we are as an audience - and maybe a hint of where we’re going.
12/27/2018 • 4 minutes, 43 seconds
The challenge of time and space
This last weekend Taylor Mac, the fabulous drag performer and all around theatre genius, returned to the Center of the Art of Performance at UCLA with a holiday show: “Taylor Mac’s Holiday Sauce”.
12/18/2018 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
A High Sugar "Nutcracker"
I’m a sucker for theater in non-traditional spaces so when I heard about “The Nutcracker Suite” in a skyscraper downtown - even though it was ballet - I was in.
12/11/2018 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
Look for the helpers
“Come From Away”, the new show at the Ahmanson, is basically a feel-good musical about 9/11. If that sounds a little far-fetched, think of the advice to kids from Mr. Rogers: in the face of catastrophe, look to the helpers.
12/4/2018 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
A mean Lear
There’s something so absurdly ambitious about Zombie Joe’s Underground production of “King Lear” - you really want it to work.
11/27/2018 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Being a Ghost Story of Christmas
When you enter the Geffen Playhouse for “A Christmas Carol” it feels like you may have entered a victorian funeral home. The lights are dim, there’s a waft of fog blowing on stage and what appears to be a coffin surrounded by black floral arrangements. It’s spooky. It feels like you’re about to hear a ghost story. Which you are.
11/13/2018 • 5 minutes
Midterm Elections and the theatre
Anthony Byrnes speaks with Steve Chiotakis about theatre and the upcoming elections on All Things Considered.
11/6/2018 • 5 minutes, 23 seconds
An absence of responsibility
At first Eliza Clark’s play “Quack” feels like a thinly veiled take-down of a Dr. Oz-like TV doctor.
10/29/2018 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
A Lie to make you care
Beyond the 6 Tony Awards and the record setting box office, what’s fascinating about the musical “Dear Evan Hansen” is how it gets an audience to care.
10/22/2018 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
Breaking free from Shakespeare's Ghetto
What if “The Merchant of Venice” were told from Shylock’s daughter’s perspective? That’s the conceit behind Sarah Mantell’s play “Everything that never happened”.
10/15/2018 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
A blue Jello spit take of truth
When’s the last time, in the theater, that you saw a really good, slow spit take?
10/8/2018 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
An argument for Dramaturgy
Watching Jose Rivera’s play “The Untranslatable Secrets of Nikki Corona” is a bit like flipping through the sketchbook of a talented artist who can’t figure out exactly how all those sketches turn into a big painting.
10/1/2018 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
The glory of subversion
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins plays aren’t quite what they seem on the surface. Or maybe a better way to say that is - they are everything they seem to be ... and more. Take his play “Appropriate” or “Appropriate” that played at the Taper in 2015.(That was a couple years ago but stick with me - because he’s doing something very similar now).
9/24/2018 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Catching glimpses of a great play
It’s easy to see why Lynn Nottage’s play “Sweat” won a Pulitzer prize. “Sweat” chronicles what happens to a union factory town when the old way of doing things isn’t doing it anymore. It’s set mostly in a local dive bar. The kind of place you go after your shift to grab a beer. The kind of place you celebrate every birthday since - well, hell you can’t even remember it’s been so long.
9/17/2018 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
The present soul of a classic
The question of the classical soul is always looming in the air for the Getty Villa’s annual outdoor drama. Calling upon those classical Greek and Roman plays, one always wonders how academic, how true to form (and perhaps devoid of soul) will the work be? That question is particularly poignant when Anne Bogart and SITI Company are tackling the Greeks, as they are for the third time this year, with Euripides “Bacchae.”
9/10/2018 • 4 minutes, 45 seconds
Too little water; too much drama!
It’s in roughly the third scene of Circle X’s world premiere of “Hole in the Sky” that the moon rises behind the actors. Not a prop moon or a piece of scenery - the actual moon…because we’re sitting on the edge of horse stable deep in the Valley - Lake View Terrace to be exact.
8/27/2018 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
‘Cabaret’ as cover band
The tricky thing with a musical like “Cabaret” is that it’s so iconic.
8/13/2018 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
"Who gets to be a mom?"
Yes, this is a play about new mothers but because child-rearing is inextricably linked to privilege and class it becomes about much, much more than that. To say this is play that could only be written by a women is like saying only a woman can give birth - both overly simplistic and more complicated than we can fully grasp.
8/6/2018 • 4 minutes, 39 seconds
Getting lost in a playwright’s mind
With most plays and playwrights, you track story, character, plot. There’s a sense that while the source of the drama may have been the playwrights mind that’s not the setting. That’s not how it works with a Murray Mednick play.
7/30/2018 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Falling for young fruit
You know how you feel about brussels sprouts? You know you should probably eat them. “A Month in the Country,” the Turgenev classic, is basically the theatrical equivalent of brussels sprouts. Fortunately, the Patrick Marber adaptation of “Three Days in the Country,” - is like the chef that throws in a little bacon into the brussels sprouts and makes you reconsider the whole affair.
7/23/2018 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
Moms will do anything
The story behind the play "Hostage" is incredible.
7/16/2018 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Going crazy in the Valley
To wrap your mind around Jonathan Muñoz Proulx's production of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" without going crazy yourself, you've got to separate the concept of the piece from the actual drama.
7/9/2018 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Easy endings to difficult problems?
Dominique Morisseau's play "Skeleton Crew" is a feel good play about an auto plant closing. It takes place in the break room of a Detroit auto plant. Times are tough. Plants are closing all over the place. People are losing their jobs, their dreams. And there are rumors that this plant might be next. That's got this play’s quartet of African-American characters on edge.
7/2/2018 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Great play! Right theater?
I want to tell you to buy a ticket to this play right now but I also need to tell you to buy a ticket up front because the Ahmanson is a less than ideal theater for this play.
6/25/2018 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
A little stinky is okay - but too much and the whole thing's a mess
It's June - which for Los Angeles intimate theater means it's time for the Hollywood Fringe Festival. Now, if you've never done the fringe, it's a bit like doing a tasting menu with a drunk chef. Everything happens quickly, some things are brilliant, some experiments are catastrophes, and almost everything goes better with a wine pairing.
6/11/2018 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
An unsatisfying journey
Mfoniso Udofia's play at Boston Court is not a satisfying play. In the opening scene of “Her Portmanteau,” Iniabasa certainly does not look satisfied. She's at arrivals at JFK - she's just flown here from Nigeria with a big tattered suitcase, the “portmanteau” of the title.
6/4/2018 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
Perverse magic of LA’s intimate theaters
You know that moment at the bookstore when you're browsing the serious, literary classics and the salacious cover of something pulpy catches your eye? It's that same impulse that has you order a plate of cheese fries. You know it's not going to be good for you, but god is it satisfying. "Forever Bound" by Steven Apostolina is the theatrical equivalent of that moment.
5/28/2018 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Better than Cats
Two facts you need to know before you go see "Soft Power" David Henry Hwang and Jeanine Tesori's new musical at the Ahmanson. One, weeks after the 2016 election, playwright David Henry Hwang was walking home in Brooklyn when he was brutally and mysteriously stabbed in the neck - this really happened. Two, that election? Hillary Clinton didn't win. Both these facts are critical dramaturgical departure points for "Soft Power."
5/21/2018 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
Straying from a mission to fulfill a promise
About 10 minutes into Antaeus Theatre Company's production of "Native Son", a black man accidentally kills a drunk white heiress. With most structurally sound plays, that would be enough. We have our moral crisis. We have a protagonist and a powerful question - "what will society do when a black man in 1939 accidentally kills a white woman?"
5/14/2018 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Weaving an audience’s soul
It's a sold out opening night of "the theater is a blank page" and even though there are only 80 of us in the audience - we're in the very last rows of the balcony at Royce Hall. Even stranger, it looks like we've come to the end of a tech rehearsal. All the rest of the seats are covered with white muslin. The stage, befitting the title, is mostly empty.
4/30/2018 • 4 minutes, 41 seconds
Struggling to find the right language
"ICE" is the story of an undocumented immigrant who comes in search of the American dream in the 1980's. We see him work a full day at a construction site only to be paid less than half of what was promised. When confronted the boss says basically "look you've got no papers, I can do what I want." We see this pattern repeat while he struggles to live his dream - converting an old ice cream truck into a gourmet taco truck.
4/23/2018 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
A messy, big play
"An Undivided Heart," a co-production of Circle X and the Echo Theatre Company is a big play. With 10 characters and almost as many subplots, playwright Yusuf Toropov is juggling a lot of ideas.
4/16/2018 • 4 minutes, 14 seconds
Xeroxing Kantor’s mirror
Watching the Wooster Group's latest piece at REDCAT "A PINK CHAIR (In Place of a Fake Antique)," had me thinking about a quote from Shakespeare and a dumb joke.
4/10/2018 • 4 minutes, 44 seconds
Everybody's got a hustle.
If you go see Sarah Jones' one woman show "Sell/Buy/Date" at the Geffen Playhouse, I'll bet you that someone in the seats near whispers during the show "wow, she's good." It's that kind of performance: one designed to elicit appreciation for its technique and virtuosity.
4/2/2018 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
What you get to carry as a human being
As Kristy Edmunds articulates so eloquently in both her words and her programming, that changes what I get to carry as a human being.
3/26/2018 • 4 minutes, 49 seconds
Shamelessly preaching to the choir
It took me three hours to fall in love with Taylor Mac's "A 24-Decade History of Popular Music." Before I can even begin to explain what's so extraordinary about the show, or why 3 hours makes up barely act one, I have to orient you to the it of it.
3/19/2018 • 4 minutes, 49 seconds
The Venn diagram of high art and fart jokes
I want you to imagine the Venn diagram where high art intersects with fart jokes. That sweet spot, if you want to call it that, is the where Sacred Fools latest show "The Art Couple" lives.
3/12/2018 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
The moving target of whiteness
Maybe it was pure coincidence. Or maybe it was the dramaturgy of the universe ...but on my drive to Pasadena to see "A Streetcar Named Desire" a particular phrase from a KCRW interview struck me.
3/6/2018 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
Bearing witness from the choir?
There's a lot of this ‘witnessing’ happening in the theater right now. Our political climate has theater makers anxious to do something, say something, to protest in some way. The challenge is–when you're preaching to the choir, what do you say?
2/27/2018 • 4 minutes, 54 seconds
How do we evolve without losing our way?
Theatre Movement Bazaar's "The Grail Project" is probably 15 minutes too long, the quest itself is a little bit of a cop out, and the end doesn't really land. So let's do this in reverse.
2/20/2018 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
A soldier's past, missing drama in the present
Elliott, a nineteen year-old combat vet back home between tours of duty in Iraq, is finally going to confront his dad. Ever since he came home nursing a purple heart leg injury, he's been trying to get his dad to open up. Elliott needs to know if his dad's time in Vietnam was anything like the horror he just experienced in Iraq. But something is missing....
2/13/2018 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
Hipster Pirates
Maybe it was all the beach balls flying through the air ... or the guy with the guitar and the sweet, terry cloth leisure suit - but as soon as I walked onto the stage at Pasadena Playhouse it was clear that this wasn't going to be a traditional "Pirates of Penzance."
2/6/2018 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Is great acting enough?
Is great acting enough? That's the question I'm left with after seeing Antaeus Theatre Company's latest production - Harold Pinter's "The Hothouse."
1/30/2018 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
A not-so-silent retreat
The idea behind Bess Wohl's "Small Mouth Sounds" is pretty ingenious: it's a play about six people at a week long silent retreat.
1/23/2018 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
The premature death of a dream
Poor Dog Group’s show “Group Therapy” is a quiet, incomplete window into what happens when an artistic dream confronts the difficulty of time.
1/12/2018 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Transitioning to new stories
Alice has almost gotten up the nerve, she's about to hit send...when her girlfriend stops her. Her girlfriend has a secret: she thinks she might actually be a he.
1/10/2018 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Theater for a New Year: a busy January
Typically, right after I wish you happy New Year, I run through my top picks in LA theater for the whole spring. But this year, there's so much exciting work happening in this month alone... well, let's just say break out your calendars and block off at least a couple nights in January.
1/3/2018 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
Best of 2017
2017 has been a tumultuous year and the best of LA theater has spoken either directly or implicitly to with our political challenges.. Here's my short list for the work on LA's stages that left a lasting impression.
12/27/2017 • 4 minutes, 59 seconds
Circus for the spinning multi-tasker
If you're looking for some theatrical spectacle for the whole family over the holidays, my pick is Cirque Du Soleil's latest Luzia.
12/20/2017 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
If it's not tax-deductible, will theater donors still give?
Okay, the holidays are almost upon us. What better time to talk about nonprofit theaters and the tax code?
12/13/2017 • 4 minutes, 39 seconds
Meaningless entertainment, on the other hand, is actually really hard
Anne Washburn's Mr. Burns is a complicated allegory that weaves pop culture references into an alternately funny and chilling tale. It's one of those plays that allow viewers to read into it their own personal take.
11/29/2017 • 4 minutes, 58 seconds
A lowbrow holiday in the theater
Okay, it's unavoidable. The holidays are upon us. Amidst the turkeys, black Fridays and Holiday parties, how about a little theater? Anthony Byrnes offers a quick list of the holiday spectacles on our stages.
11/22/2017 • 4 minutes, 44 seconds
Wrestling with the 'ghosts of ideas'
10 Million is simultaneously a private story of a family torn apart and a political history about the very personal impacts of Cuba's revolution. The Cuban production is part of the Encuentro de las Américas theater festival, a celebration of Latin theater from the Americas.
11/15/2017 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
A bearded man with a ukulele and a bird mask
At first it's just small details . . . There's something odd about Erin Courtney's play A Map of Virtue.
11/8/2017 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
An extended poetic metaphor
At its simplest level, With Love and a Major Organ is about a girl who falls in love with a guy she only knows through their shared subway rides. She decides to confess her love onto those tapes and deliver them to him with her heart -- her actual beating heart.
10/24/2017 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
A fraught political journey
Part of the magic of a great play is you get to experience a new world. For just a couple hours, you become a traveler with the actors into a playwright's thoughts, ideas, customs. Sometimes that journey is just across town, but if we're lucky we get to travel to another part of the world. For Guillermo Calderon's play Mateluna we travel to a politically fraught Chile.
10/24/2017 • 4 minutes, 51 seconds
Technology or theater?
What happens when the technological magic of a theater piece eclipses the theatrical magic?
10/17/2017 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
A prison story
All great plays tell a story . . . but not all stories make a play.
10/10/2017 • 4 minutes, 36 seconds
Appropriated disaster
There's a great play in the aftermath of the tragedy that was Hurricane Katrina. Runaway Home isn’t it.
10/3/2017 • 4 minutes, 10 seconds
Arguing with God
The ancient Greeks thought theater was a way to speak directly to the gods. Tarrell Alvin McCraney and Phylicia Rashad do them one better by arguing with God.
9/26/2017 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
The Chicago Greeks
Each fall the Getty opens its outdoor amphitheater in Malibu to a theater company to produce a classic Greek or Roman play for a modern audience. The gods are particularly demanding in Euripedes' final play, Iphigenia in Aulis, this year's offering, produced by Chicago's Court Theatre.
9/12/2017 • 4 minutes, 46 seconds
Fall theater preview
Okay, get out your calendars. Here's a short list of LA theater that's going to be worth the trip this fall.
9/5/2017 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
A crisis in governance
Last week the Geffen Playhouse announced a new artistic director . . . but the real news is how they got rid of their old one.
8/29/2017 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
Don't look behind this door
The joy of the familiar is that it let's you focus on the specific. Unfortunately, Tom Jacobson's The Devil's Wife is familiar, but that doesn't help.
8/22/2017 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
When the policy is more important than the dramaturgy
The trouble with autobiographical solo shows is that sometimes what happens in life doesn’t match up with the best dramaturgy. In Alex Alpharoah’s case, that’s a good thing.
8/15/2017 • 4 minutes, 46 seconds
Making sense of an inscrutable world
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time doesn't so much tell you a story as it does allow you to sense the world through the lens of a 15-year-old boy, Christopher.
8/8/2017 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
Why the all-star game isn't much of a game
Antaeus Theatre Company has a problem: they have too many trained actors. I know that sounds like a blessing but sadly, that's what it feels like in Antaeus' thoroughly generic production of As You Like It.
8/1/2017 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
The beasts among us
Ionesco's play Rhinoceros is a perfect commentary on our political times. Unfortunately, Pacific Resident Theatre's production squanders that power on cheap laughs
7/25/2017 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Missing Dad
There is a lot, and I mean a lot, to Lauren Yee's play The King of the Yees, so let's start simply. On one level, it's a play about a red door.
7/18/2017 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
Sweet when it should be savory
The Cake is a sweet play that really wants to be savory.
7/11/2017 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
The wrong kind of spectacle
A lot of things are moving in LA's larger theaters and it's got me freaked out.
7/4/2017 • 4 minutes, 8 seconds
A Long way to go
Everything is compelling in The Pride… until it isn't. It's a bit like a scenic drive that never really takes you anywhere.
6/27/2017 • 4 minutes, 39 seconds
A romance with slippery time
What would a romance look like in the multi-verse? What even is a multi-verse? Nick Payne's Constellations at the Geffen Playhouse tries to answer all your questions.
6/20/2017 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
A civic tragedy in 4 tweets
"Julius Caesar can be read as a warning parable to those who try to fight for democracy by undemocratic means" or …not.
6/13/2017 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Getting lost in a playwright's mind
If you're a lover of muscular playwriting, great acting and Los Angeles - you need to spend next Sunday with Murray Mednick.
6/6/2017 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
A lost classic
Les Blancs by Lorraine Hansberry is a stunning production of a lost classic that’s beautifully directed.
5/30/2017 • 4 minutes, 41 seconds
A House with a shaky foundation
The House in Scarsdale: A Memoir for the Stage is built on a shaky foundation but the actors manage to hold the thing together.
5/23/2017 • 4 minutes, 16 seconds
Unfair expectations?
Before you go see Rajiv Joseph's world-premiere Archduke, google the details of the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand in 1914.
5/9/2017 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
Why we need a good 'Block Party'
Center Theatre Group's Block Party is a big deal for small theaters.
5/2/2017 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
We are being watched as we do the watching
Walking into Christiane Jatahy's play The Walking Forest at REDCAT feels, at first, more like going to a hip gallery opening than a play.
4/25/2017 • 4 minutes, 47 seconds
A theatrical bologna sandwich
Sandwiched between two projection screens, Plasticity is the theatrical equivalent of bologna.
4/18/2017 • 4 minutes, 46 seconds
Following your ears back to the beginning
Okay, you need to stop what you're doing and go buy a ticket to see The Encounter at The Wallis. No, really, I mean it. It's only here through this Sunday and the show will change the way you listen.
4/11/2017 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Worse than a wall
Robert Schenkkan's Building the Wall isn't theater as reflection but theater as horrified fortune teller.
4/4/2017 • 4 minutes, 37 seconds
Is it the art? Or the frame?
Antaeus Theatre Company didn't just open Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, it also opened a brand new theater in Glendale. That's a big deal.
3/28/2017 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
The politics of naked power
This is Anthony Byrnes Opening the Curtain on LA Theater for KCRW.
Four naked bodies onstage.
Two male, two female standing facing the audience. They are bathed in amber sidelight present, exposed, powerful. They begin to move. First partnered by gender: woman with woman, man with man taking each other's weight. Placing nude body on top of nude body. Then partnered across gender: man with woman until they collapse downstage left in a pile of naked flesh that's hauntingly like a mound of corpses.
That's the opening of Antigonón, un contingente épico from Cuba's Teatro El Público that played at REDCAT this last weekend.
To say this opening was shocking doesn't really do it justice. Nudity in the theater is always a bit alarming but it's often little more than a gimmick. You know, one naked body, typically female against a sea of clothed actors? It's often a solitary gesture, an exclamation point or a brief wake up call to the audience, saying some version of "hey, look how brave we are." Paradoxically, rather than announcing how comfortable we are with our bodies in the theater, it emphasizes how puritanical and shy we've become.
Not only were these bodies, these actors, not shy -- their challenge to the audience wasn't so much to look at me but confront me. Deal with me in my purest most human state.
And remember this was just the opening of the 80 minute performance.
I won't lie to you and say I completely understood what the play was about -- not because it was performed in Spanish or wasn't clear but because it felt so deeply rooted in a Cuban culture and history that's foreign to me. I can tell you it left an impression on the audience. That it was a series of mostly monologues that spoke of sex, hardship, sacrifice and prostituting yourself for family and homeland. It challenged, celebrated, and mocked gender and homophobia. Those powerful naked bodies never seemed to be fully clothed often draped in wildly inventive costumes that never fully obscured the naked body underneath -- as if to remind us of that raw sexual power.
Antigonón is the first in a series of four pieces that REDCAT is presenting under the banner "Urgent Voices, a series confronting timely issues facing the country and the world in 2017." The series continues this week with The Wooster Group's The Town Hall Affair and then in March with Brazilian director Christiane Jatahy's The Walking Forest and in May it closes with The Designated Mourner by Wallace Shawn.
If this first piece is any hint, this is a series you're not going to want to miss.
It's a precious, precarious moment in the arts. It could not have been lost on the opening night audience of Antigonón that that very same day a budget had been proposed in our country that would defund the National Endowment for the Arts and countless other programs. Like the paradox of the nude body, here was a work from Cuba that simultaneously reminded us why the theater is so essential and also, when done well, so politically feared.
Antigonón played last weekend at REDCAT downtown.
For info on the rest of Urgent Voices series and to subscribe to the weekly KCRW theater newsletter, check out: kcrw.com/theater.
This is Anthony Byrnes Opening the Curtain on LA Theater for KCRW.
3/21/2017 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
A young play
Good Grief is a young play. That's part of its charm and part of its problem, but let's resist the urge to try and make the play something it isn't.
3/14/2017 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
The Irresistible pull of memory
If you're the kind of person who likes a traditional musical -- you know, boy meets girl, hummable tunes, linear narrative structure to a big redemptive finish -- if that's your thing, Fun Home at the Ahmanson is probably just going to frustrate you. If, on the other hand, you’re a little more adventurous, it’s fantastic.
3/8/2017 • 4 minutes, 5 seconds
When style gets in the way
Collective Rage: A Play in Five Boops should be moving, political and empowering. Unfortunately, its style gets in the way.
3/1/2017 • 4 minutes, 8 seconds
Why here? Why now?
In the months before D-Day, American troops took over a portion of the English seaside, displacing its residents so they could rehearse the invasion of Normandy in secret...
2/22/2017 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
A complicated history
Zoot Suit, at the Mark Taper Forum, is an essential piece of Los Angeles' history and, painfully, our political present.
2/15/2017 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
An acrobatic whale tale
Lookingglass' Moby Dick is worth the trip south, just be prepared that not everything is smooth sailing.
2/8/2017 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
The politics of collaboration
With all due respect to composer Kurt Weill and librettist Maxwell Anderson, the story wasn't the most important thing happening on stage Saturday night during Lost in the Stars at UCLA's Royce hall.
2/1/2017 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
What makes technique, technique?
The Lion is a really tight solo show with remarkable guitar playing. It's a production that's filled with technique and . . . that might be part of the problem.
1/18/2017 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
A legacy of work: Gordon Davidson
Last night at the Ahmanson Theater, Center Theater Group held a memorial for their founding artistic director, Gordon Davidson.
1/11/2017 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
Theater for the new year
Anthony Byrnes previews some of the year's most intriguing upcoming performances.
1/4/2017 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
It’s all about the audience
Two totally different shows -- one using Shakespeare, the other using a funky rock -- leave me wondering, 'Why can't more theater be like this?'
12/21/2016 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
It's just Tuesday
Last Thursday, a judge dismissed LA theater actors' lawsuit against their union. What does this mean and why you might not notice but we're all poorer for this outcome.
12/14/2016 • 4 minutes, 50 seconds
A play from before . . .
WEB BONUS: The Super Variety Match Bonus Round! at Rogue Machine Theatre, is a play from before the election with hints of what was to come but those hints aren't ready for the weight we now place on them.
12/7/2016 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
Don't miss the experience of the forest (or the beauty of a single tree)
Kristy Edmunds, artistic and executive director of UCLA's Center for the Art of Performance, curatorial work captures both the unique beauty of an individual work and provides a larger context within which to understand those works. It's a deep journey and next week's 36-hour tour through Shakespeare's canon with Forced Entertainment will be a perfect example.
11/30/2016 • 4 minutes, 37 seconds
#specialNOTsafe
Mike Pence went to the theater. A twitter storm erupts and amidst smoke and mirrors, Donald Trump issues a call to action for the theater.
11/23/2016 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
A dire, urgent warning
After the election, John Robbin Baitz's play Vicuña speaks with a completely different voice. It is now a dire, urgent warning that cannot be ignored.
11/16/2016 • 4 minutes, 13 seconds
Getting lost in a Grimm Forest
24th Street Theatre has developed an impressive track record for complicated children's theater, but this year they get lost in a forest of their own creation.
11/9/2016 • 4 minutes, 54 seconds
Polling a Play's Heart
Vicuña, John Robbin Baitz's world premiere at the Kirk Douglas Theatre is going to be a radically different play in a week - not because he's going to change anything but because the country is going to change around it.
11/1/2016 • 4 minutes, 45 seconds
An ugly story told beautifully
John Sinner's An Invasion of Decency! is an ugly story told beautifully.
10/25/2016 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
"Who's the bad guy?
Suddenly, a story we thought we knew is totally different.
10/18/2016 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
A culturally appropriate family
Together with Honky, Rogue Machine's Dutch Masters takes a compelling deep-dive on cultural appropriation and makes a strong argument for why artistic direction matters. (No audio component)
10/11/2016 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
As close as possible to the elemental core
A View from the Bridge is a must see show -- but only from the right seats.
9/27/2016 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
A classical dick joke
What's the value of classical theater? That's the question underlying the Getty Villa's annual outdoor production. For most of the past 11 years, the Getty has tried to answer that question with a tragedy. Not this year.
9/13/2016 • 4 minutes, 54 seconds
FOUR LARKS forges a path through the INDUSTRY'S WILDERNESS
This is Anthony Byrnes Opening the Curtain on LA Theater for KCRW.
There's something happening downtown and you need to know about it and support it!
Today, I'm talking about Four Larks remarkable, multi-disciplinary theater piece The Temptation of St. Antony." But I'm also talking about Annie Saunder's and her company Wilderness' The Day Shall Declare It or Yuval Sharon and Industry's Hopscotch and Invisible Cities. What's emerging downtown is a group of companies that are making sophisticated, multi-layered, works of art that are bending genres and enchanting audiences.
What unites these disparate works and companies?
For starters, they’re makes site specific work in and around downtown Los Angeles. They aren't working in traditional theaters and instead are using the city as their stage. Whether it's an abandoned storefront on Broadway or a 1920's warehouse off Santa Fe or the expanse of Union Station or the architecture of the Bradbury Building, these companies are eschewing the confines of theater architecture and creating their own public performance spaces. That doesn't mean there's no design, to the contrary it's some of the most vital design in LA theater. But through their work, they're connecting audiences to our city in unexpected and exciting ways.
Four Larks' THE TEMPTATION of ST ANTONY from FourLarks on Vimeo.
These companies are also playing with, or if you prefer embracing, multiple disciplines. That's a no-brainer for opera but even Yuval Sharon's works like Hopscotch are pressing against what we expect an opera to be and do. Four Larks' 'junkyard operas' are as much musical performances with beautifully orchestrated scores as their are plays. The Temptation of St. Antony and The Day Shall Declare It are as much movement pieces as they are journeys of theatrical text.
And the text, the stories, these companies are forging are far from simple linear narratives. These are stories with multiple layers and intriguing facets. Without judgement, it's the difference between MacBeth and Ulysses, both are masterpieces - just in very different ways. These companies are working more in the Joyce mold that rewards multiple viewings and resonances. The texts are both welcoming an audience on multiple levels and challenging the audience to experience a denser, fluid narrative.
Welcoming an audience, is key to all three companies. While their texts are challenging and their technique polished, their embrace of audience is refreshing. In a city like LA, where we are not accustomed to the communal public space of a subway or a walk to work, these artists recognize that putting on a show isn't enough. Our city's infrastructure demands that theater create it's own architectural prologue and epilogue for it's art. So these companies are creating spaces that welcome the individual into the collective. On the simplest level, Four Larks and Wilderness are creating places to have a drink before and after the show. On a deeper level, they’re offering an opportunity and a reward for audiences to go on their journey's. These are more than shows, they’re experiences.
So how can you experience the art these companies are creating?
Right now, buy a ticket for Four Larks' The Temptation of St. Antony before it sells out. It's a glorious remount of their show from last year and it's even better now than it was then.
Next? Keep an eye on all three of these companies. You won't be disappointed.
Four Larks' The Temptation of St. Antony plays at a secret location in downtown LA through October 2.
This is Anthony Byrnes Opening the Curtain on LA Theater for KCRW.
Running time: 75 minutes without an intermission.
9/6/2016 • 4 minutes, 45 seconds
Fall Theater Picks
Okay, despite your best attempts to deny it and stretch it out, the end of summer is almost here. It’s time to plan your fall theater calendar. Here are some quick highlights from LA theaters.
8/30/2016 • 4 minutes, 36 seconds
The Equity Saga Continues
Anthony talks with Steve Chiotakis about the ongoing Actors' Equity Lawsuit surrounding LA’s Intimate Theater and talks about what to look for in the coming months.
8/23/2016 • 6 minutes, 22 seconds
No Opposition
Church and State isn't a political play, it's a play about politics.
8/16/2016 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
An Essential Black, and Blue, Comedy
One of the Nice Ones is a dark black comedy that's not for the faint of heart. It's a nasty play with nasty language -- but it's essential.
8/9/2016 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
Taming the Ramones
In 1978 what the ramones needed was a major hit. What they got was Phil Spector and a gun. That's the back story of John Ross Bowie's Four Chords and a Gun.
8/2/2016 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
Lost Soles
If your shoes could talk, what would they say? Now imagine that they’ve been witness to the last half century of atrocities in Poland.
7/26/2016 • 4 minutes, 40 seconds
A Soulful Trip to the Beach
If I had to sum the play up, it's a bit like Chekhov decided to write a science fiction fantasy play with a bunch of asides set today on the the tip of Long Island.
7/19/2016 • 4 minutes, 13 seconds
An Uncertain Future
Listening to Ibsen's classic Hedda Gabler at Antaeus Theatre Company, I was struck by unexpected resonances from a play I thought I knew.
7/12/2016 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
The Sole of Satire
Honky is a razor-sharp satire about race in America and what it means to sell white suburban youth black culture and what happens to all of us along the way.
7/5/2016 • 4 minutes, 12 seconds
That’s a Good Trick
“In & Of Itself”, Derek DelGaudio’s one man magic show, is exciting as much for the magic in the audience as the tricks onstage.
6/28/2016 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
A Play to Argue Over
It's easy to see why Disgraced won the Pulitzer Prize. It's also easy to see why American Theater magazine identified it as the most produced play of last season.
6/21/2016 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
The Revelation in Repetition
There aren't a lot of plays that reward a second viewing. The Day Shall Declare It does.
6/14/2016 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Not Quite Prepared for This Disaster
Chalk Repertory Theatre's latest venture, In Case of Emergency, takes place in real garages around Los Angeles..
6/7/2016 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Shock, Awe, and...Jane Fonda?
Sheila Callaghan's play That Pretty Pretty; or, The Rape Play is sensational . . . but not in the right ways.
5/31/2016 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Unrelenting Drama?
There's no question that Steven Berkoff's production of The Hairy Ape is good. The question is, is it engaging?
5/24/2016 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
The Bodies Tell as Much of a Story as the Words
The Day Shall Declare It is a site-specific dance-theater piece not to be missed.
5/17/2016 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Taking Responsibility
Dry Land is not a play for everyone. At its center is a teenage abortion. That's difficult territory but playwright Ruby Rae Spiegel takes responsibility for it in all its power and messiness.
5/4/2016 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Shakespeare's Black Man
Charles A. Duncombe's play Othello/Desdemona is provocative ... if predictable. He's caught Othello in an identity crisis about his role and his blackness and it's intellectually fascinating if not dramatically compelling.
4/26/2016 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
Mark It
If you only have time for one play this spring, the Taper's production of Suzan-Lori Parks' Father Comes Home from the Wars is it.
4/19/2016 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Our Problem Presents Itself
This week I want to tell you about two great shows...trouble is they've already left town. What does that tell us about LA's citywide audience and our presenting houses?
4/12/2016 • 4 minutes, 10 seconds
A Nourishing Question
What does a play about sexual identity in colonial Africa have to do with Los Angeles today?
4/5/2016 • 4 minutes, 4 seconds
A Canary in a Bigger Coal Mine
Remember last year’s dispute between union stage actors and Actors' Equity? Well, things are heating up again and it might be time to start paying attention.
3/29/2016 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
What We’ve Lost
With Pocatello, Rogue Machine Theater returns to Samuel D. Hunter's small town, Idaho, this time with the closing of an olive garden. But the play's less about the closing of a chain restaurant and more about the loss of a way of life.
3/22/2016 • 4 minutes, 15 seconds
Don't Even Ask Her about Dressing!
Based on an Internet meme of the same name, Sheila Callaghan's Women Laughing Alone with Salad attempts satire but ends up wading through the greens.
3/15/2016 • 4 minutes, 8 seconds
A Challenging Chorus
Stefanie Zadravec's Colony Collapse is a beautiful small play that's trying a little too hard to be a big play.
3/9/2016 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Why Politics Matter
If you write a play that's mostly homophobic but end it with a gay marriage, do you get a pass? That's the question that I’m left with after seeing Bathsheba Doran's new play at the Taper, The Mystery of Love and Sex.
3/2/2016 • 4 minutes, 6 seconds
A Verdict without an Indictment
Remember the day of the OJ verdict? That's the dramatic engine in David McMillan's new play, Watching OJ, and its tapping into our current racial moment while staying safely in the past.
2/24/2016 • 4 minutes, 3 seconds
A Backup on the Kościuszko
How are America and Poland connected since the Revolutionary War? That's both the promise and the challenge of Nancy Keystone's epic Ameryka.
2/17/2016 • 4 minutes, 14 seconds
Whose Play Is It, Anyway?
WEB BONUS: The Wooster Group's production of Harold Pinter's first play The Room is playing at REDCAT this weekend and unfortunately that will likely be the only chance to see it -- anywhere. The reasons are fuzzy but someone is saying that this piece of theater can't exist . . . or doesn't have the rights to exist.
2/9/2016 • 7 minutes, 17 seconds
Opening Weekend
There are a ton of shows opening in Los Angeles this weekend. That's great, but you can't go see all of them – and neither can the critics. Here's why that matters to the health of LA's theater audience
2/3/2016 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The Fullness of Nothing
Nothing happens in Will Eno's play, Thom Pain (based on nothing). But that doesn't stop Rainn Wilson from giving a stunning performance.
1/27/2016 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Dystopian Delight
Britain's Headlong Theatre Company turns George Orwell's dystopian novel into a stunning theatrical production. But it might move your mind more than your heart.
1/20/2016 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
The Ritual of Space
A forced move for the Rogue Machine from its Pico Boulevard home is the latest challenge facing LA's small theaters.
1/13/2016 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Theater for a New Year
The new year promises several exciting theater productions. Anthony Byrnes previews a few.
1/6/2016 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
Best of 2015
Anthony offers his top ten for LA theater in 2015.
12/30/2015 • 4 minutes, 10 seconds
All Hell Breaks Loose
What if you didn't have to come to church and you didn't have to tithe in order to be saved? What if the hell of the bible were really just an ancient garbage dump rather than a Dante-ian inferno? What if everyone went to heaven? Everyone.
12/23/2015 • 4 minutes, 13 seconds
The Recipe Paradox
Cirque du Soleil's latest show, Kurios, repeats their favorite recipe and manages to recapture the magic. It's the best Cirque show to make it through LA in years.
12/16/2015 • 4 minutes, 11 seconds
A Commitment to Actors
This may not be the best production of Guys & Dolls you'll ever see but it is the most approachable and heartfelt -- and that's perfect for a holiday show.
12/9/2015 • 4 minutes, 12 seconds
Orpheus with an iPhone
A tragic event, a broken father and the hope of technology to contact the afterlife. Clever writing and a diverse cast help The Speed of Jake along on stage.
12/2/2015 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
The Key to Diversity in the American Theater?
Is the Center Theater Group finally rediscovering its political voice? A new play there has us thinking about gender roles and white privilege.
11/25/2015 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
Theater in the Age of Twitter
An insightful commentary on how we're living our lives in the age of Instagram and constant notifications. Like a Tweet, Caryl Churchill's play is instantly accessible, and like the overheard conversation of a couple fighting at dinner it's strangely irresistible.
11/18/2015 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Neighborly Comfort Food
In a world where everyone is oversharing what does privacy really mean? Can you really start over when your entire past is digitally archived and readily available to any curious stranger?
11/11/2015 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Hopscotch-ing Tidy Art through Our Messy City
A theatrical event that unfolds across 24 individual chapters scattered around downtown Los Angeles.
11/4/2015 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Working Very Hard for Very Little
A new Chekov adaptation that you don't want to miss!
10/27/2015 • 4 minutes, 15 seconds
Equity Lawsuit: It's Deja Vu All Over Again
Why Actors' Equity fighting it's own actors? What's at stake? More on the latest battle between the union and its actors.
10/20/2015 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
What Is Appropriate?
Playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins forces us to confront our racist past both outside and inside of the theater.
10/6/2015 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
You Smiled at the Same Time as Me
Stop what you're doing, wake up your inner child, grab any other children in your life, and go buy tickets to 24th Street Theatre’s production of Man Covets Bird, a lyrical narrative about a young man who finds a bird and goes off to the big city in search of grown up adventures. There is no scary villain like the big, bad wolf. Instead, the obstacles are isolation, losing one's way, and the challenge of saying goodbye.
9/29/2015 • 4 minutes, 14 seconds
October: An El Niño of Theater
There may be a drought in Los Angeles, but Anthony says that the city is awash in great theater in October.
9/22/2015 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
A Classic in East LA
For the last decade, the Getty Villa in Malibu has welcomed a theater company to produce an ancient text in their outdoor amphitheater. This year's production -- Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles -- pairs LA playwright Luis Alfaro with Euripedes' classic text and Pasadena's Boston Court Theater.
9/15/2015 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
A Playwright Building Bridges: An Interview with Luis Alfaro
Los Angeles playwright Luis Alfaro's new play Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles opens September 9 at the Getty Villa. Anthony Byrnes talks with Alfaro about his process, his inspiration, and the challenging balancing act between the Greeks and giving voice to his community.
9/8/2015 • 8 minutes, 16 seconds
Grandma Franca's Curse
Luka's Room is one of those plays where plot is key and it falls squarely in the Rogue Machine mold where a mid-play revelation turns everything you've seen on its head.
8/25/2015 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
Fall Theater: Relatives from Out of Town
You can feel it slowly creeping towards us. Maybe it's the flurry of back to school emails, or the work projects that will finally begin "when everyone's back," or just a sense that a summer this nice can't last forever: fall is just around the corner. Before your schedule gets filled up getting back in the swing of things, I have three must-see theater picks from our presenting houses.
8/18/2015 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
Our Historical Selves
With the 50th anniversary of the Watts Riots, the first anniversary of Michael Brown's death in Ferguson, the murders in South Carolina, the seemingly endless, and senseless, litany of unarmed black men dying at the hands of white police -- with all of this -- it's hard to imagine a more timely subject for the theater to tackle than American racism.
8/11/2015 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
A Taper Play
The latest production at the Mark Taper Forum, Bent is a 'Taper play,' one connected to our moment and urged, if only implicitly, towards inclusion and social justice.
8/4/2015 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
Can We Go Home?
Think about home: the home of childhood. The home where you grew up. The home where your mother was. The home you had to leave. This summer there are a trio of plays in Los Angeles that you shouldn't miss that are all set there - in that distant and complicated place called home.
7/28/2015 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
Going Home
This is one of those plays that’ll stick with you, in part because, true to Rogue Machine's reputation, the acting is wonderful, the casting spot on. It’s the decisions that’ll shake you and leave you with profound questions: why are we here? What makes life meaningful? It's one of those plays that's an argument for the theater: that allows us to tackle these dilemmas together as a community. What could be better?
7/21/2015 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Why Do We Laugh?
At its core, The False Servant is a Commedia-inspired, biting romantic comedy with a cross-dresser as a catalyst.
7/14/2015 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
The Veil of Youthful Comedy
A comedy about Jewish heritage and values which, on its surface the question is "what does it mean to be a Jew?" More broadly, it's a legacy play.
7/7/2015 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
It's in the Air
Have you ever been trapped by a Midwestern summer, where the stale heat seems to stop time, the limitless sky is only juxtaposed by the prison of your space and the confines of expectation? Where the air stifles you with an electric desperation. It's that air that the Antaeus Theatre Company captures in William Inge's Picnic.
6/30/2015 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
An Audience of One
For the sixth year, the Hollywood Fringe Festival has taken over Hollywood with over 250 scrappy, boot-strap shows across three weeks -- and perhaps most compelling are the shows that wouldn't exist outside of the Fringe context and take LA's intimate theater to its logical extreme...
6/23/2015 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Don't Pause...Go
Harold Pinter's The Homecoming, currently being revived by Pacific Resident Theater, is frightening, funny, profound, and most importantly does honor to Pinter's "muscular" language. If you love Pinter, or just really good drama, don't miss this one.
6/16/2015 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
Old-School School
The Royal Shakespeare Company has adapted Raoul Dahl's Matilda into a delightful musical and, now, after stopping in New York to pick up some Tony Awards, it's at the Ahmanson Theatre.
6/9/2015 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
What Difference Would It Make?
What would a great Los Angeles theater community look like?
6/2/2015 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
You Don't Exist
Act Two of the actors-union-versus-their-Los-Angeles-members' battle royale.
5/26/2015 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
A Vaudevillian Prism
It's rare, while enjoying a play, for me to think, "gosh, I wish this was dinner theater!"But from the opening lobby serenade, complete with accordion, checkered table cloth, and wrapped Chianti bottle, Big Shot, the latest from Theatre Movement Bazaar, had me craving a good meatball.
5/19/2015 • 4 minutes, 14 seconds
Brutally Beautiful
Why do we go to the theater? If words like 'the human condition,' 'honesty,' and 'catharsis' pepper your answer - Mr. Bock's brutally beautiful play at the Echo Theater Company is a must see.
5/12/2015 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
Art vs. Commerce
This is a story that pits local against national and art versus commerce. Nationally, LA's a liability to Actors' Equity because for all this 99-seat theater the union isn't collecting a penny. The union wants to get rid of a liability and standardize business practices.
4/28/2015 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
The Unexpected Circumstances of Virtuosity
In simplest terms, Anna Deavere Smith's latest piece at the Broad Stage is an exploration of the struggle of Civil Rights in America dating back to Dr. Martin Luther King's "Letter from a Birmingham Jail." In more complex terms? It's a study in the unexpected circumstances of virtuosity.
4/21/2015 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
The Next Chapter?
There's a delicious moment in great dramas when the world comes into sharp focus for an instant and where you're not really sure how it's going to turn out. LA's 99-seat theater community had one of those moments last night at the first annual 1st Annual Stage Raw Awards.
4/14/2015 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
A Lot of Words
Playwright Neil LaBute likes to get under your skin. Love him or hate him, he's going to push your buttons, challenge your assumptions. City Garage theater is tackling his 2011 play The Break of Noon and it's no exception.
4/7/2015 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
The Monkey on Our Backs
With all the off-stage drama in 99-seat-theater of late, it's been easy to forget the art itself. Trevor written by Nick Jones is the latest 99-seat gem from Circle X. It's as passionate an argument as any for why you should care about LA's small theaters.
3/31/2015 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The Tough Questions
Why does small theater in LA matter? Where's the audience rallying to support us? Why should you care? We have to answer those questions not for New York or Chicago or Athens but for Los Angeles.
3/24/2015 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
The Greater Good?
There's no question that in America, we undervalue the arts.
3/17/2015 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
Act One: Who Isn't for a Minimum Wage?
Why would a union fight its own members?
3/10/2015 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Prologue to Disaster
The drama in LA theater happening off-stage that's swirling around the stage actors' union and what's called the 99-seat Plan and it's untimely, but seemingly unavoidable, demise. And, if you listen to the majority of the LA theater community, the demise of small theater itself.
3/4/2015 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Give In to the Temptation
Anthony Byrnes reviews Four Larks latest "junkyard opera," The Temptation of St. Antony.
2/25/2015 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
Visual Feasts
Los Angeles theater has to it a bit of feast or famine. Right now there are two shows downtown that are visual feasts with challenging narratives that you shouldn't miss.
2/18/2015 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
Engaging Too Much
In many ways California Tempest is Cornerstone at their best and most ambitious.
2/11/2015 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
The Farce of Tyranny
The challenge with "Disconnection" is its dramatic engine is built around story rather than action. The characters are included as a means of getting the details out. Trouble is if you've followed any of the writing about Scientology - and who hasn't in LA - it's going to feel like old news.
2/4/2015 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Tis a Gift to Be Simple
In one sense, there isn't much there in the Wooster Group's "Early Shaker Spirituals." But there isn't much there in the same way there isn't much to a Shaker chest of drawers.
1/28/2015 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
The Safety of the Past
Matthew Lopez's The Whipping Man begins with a historical fact: there were Jews in the South during the Civil War. What would it be like if those Jews owned slaves and those slaves became observant Jews?
1/21/2015 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The Politics of Click-bait
Viral, at the Bootleg Theater, is one of those plays that in order to talk about it you have to dismantle some of its dramatic engine - or more simply - spoiler alert.
1/14/2015 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Theater for a New Year
If one of your resolutions was to see more good theater in 2015 - and you should - here are six shows to get you off to a good start.
1/7/2015 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
The Best of 2014
Anthony's favorite LA theater experiences from 2014.
12/31/2014 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
A Séance with Greatness
If you've still got holes on your holiday gift list or are looking for something to do with the in-laws from out of town, Blithe Spirit at the Ahmanson is the perfect theatrical distraction.
12/24/2014 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
A Shrinking Theater
Between work, holiday parties, and gift shopping there's really not much time to think about theater, but if you're a lover of good acting, subtle directing, and crafty playwrighting the Goodman Theater has a little early Christmas present for you.
12/17/2014 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
One Week out of 52
The LA Weekly just announced they are no longer holding the "LA Weekly Awards." Even if you don't care about theater, this is a big deal. It's another canary in the coal mine.
12/10/2014 • 3 minutes, 59 seconds
Holiday Theater for the Whole Family
A quick guide on how to share a little live theater with the whole family while you frantically regain a little sanity.
12/3/2014 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
A Taper Tragedy
It's hard to make sense of the latest play, a straight forward British sex farce, at the Mark Taper Forum...
11/26/2014 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
The Asian Carp of LA Theater
What LA theaters and audiences can learn from the rise of the imports and the slow transformation of LA into a 'presenting town.'
11/12/2014 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
LA's the Thing
Luis Alfaro's latest world premiere Painting in Red, is a loose adaptation of Calderon's The Painter of His Own Dishonor -- full of LA references from Langer's to the latest Little Tokyo noodle shop, from the death of Joan Rivers to the etymology of Villaraigosa's name.
11/5/2014 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Re-Imagine This! #Pro99
Anthony Byrnes on the "divisive and distracting" plan to re-imagine LA theater.
10/28/2014 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
Discord Is Right!
Writing is hard. Now, I wish I could say I learned that from watching Scott Carter's play "The Gospel According to Thomas Jefferson, Charles Dickens and Count Leo Tolstoy: Discord" at the Geffen. Truth is I learned writing is hard by enduring it.
10/21/2014 • 4 minutes
Art Takes A Life
What's that old saying? You should pick a doctor who's the same age so that the two of you can grow old together? Jessica Goldberg's world premiere "Better" at the Echo Theater Company, has me thinking that the same is true about playwrights.
10/14/2014 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
The Magic of Harmony
As you could guess from the title, "Choir Boy", Tarell Alvin McCraney's new play at the Geffen Playhouse, is all about harmony . . . and discord.
10/7/2014 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
The Rewards of Time
From director Matt Almos and co-director Ken Roht, whose signature joyful style is intact but somehow clearer; to the always grounded Hugo Armstrong who plays Broadus and strings together 20 years of work in a single night; to the uniformly stunning cast: this is LA's intimate theater at its complicated best.
9/30/2014 • 4 minutes, 44 seconds
Is It a Recipe or a Formula?
Have you ever been seduced by a recipe? That's what happened to me with the inventive, if dissappointing, new production of Shakespeare's The Tempest at South Coast Rep.
9/16/2014 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
Upsetting the Hierarchy
The Persians is not an easy play and SITI is a complicated company, but if you're up for a work that challenges an audience rather than being dependent on it - it's a remarkable journey.
9/9/2014 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Theatre’s Economic Reality
In light of Labor Day and Mayor Garcetti's floating a higher minimum wage, now's a great time to focus on some of the backstage 'labor' drama of LA theater’s 99-seat plan.
9/2/2014 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Six Shows Not To Miss: Fall Theater Preview
While you're busy planning the last beach hurrah - keep the calendar out long enough to pencil in these 6 shows you're not going to want to miss.
8/26/2014 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
The Style is All
Like most recent Actors' Gang shows, "A Midsummer Night’s Dream" comes down to a question of style. How you feel about the show, whether you find it creative and enchanting, or. . . otherwise depends on whether you buy into the Gang's style.
8/19/2014 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Let Neil LaBute Push Your Buttons
In "Reasons to Be Pretty", the moral is surprisingly simple and noble. It's worth letting Neil LaBute push your buttons for two hours to get it.
8/12/2014 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
The Emperor Is Wearing a Speedo
If amidst our summer heat, you're looking for a chance to watch someone else sweat it out for a while and you're willing to go on some philosophical tangents - there's some powerful acting happening at the bottom of a pool at the Rogue Machine Theater.
8/5/2014 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
The Mythic Poetry of the Distant Present
While you might have a tough time traversing the play's worlds, the actors in "The Brothers Size" embody the characters so completely that you are with them every step of the way.
7/29/2014 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
Tim Wright: Does Producing Less Lead To More?
This week a conversation with Tim Wright, Artistic Director of Circle X, half of the co-production with Boston Court of "Stupid Fucking Bird" playing through August 10th in Pasadena.
7/22/2014 • 4 minutes, 56 seconds
Great F**king Show!
Okay, stop what you're doing . . . and go get tickets for the production of "Stupid Fucking Bird" at the Theatre at Boston Court.
7/15/2014 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
#Tonycanyouhearme
This week Anthony wants to talk about the Tony Awards.
7/8/2014 • 4 minutes, 13 seconds
A Cinderella Story - Sort Of
Anthony really wants to celebrate Stoneface: The Rise and Fall of Buster Keaton, but while it captures the details of Keaton's life, it does little to illuminate his soul.
6/24/2014 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Density? Yes. Quality? Uh…
Grab a couple of friends, pick a couple of Fringe shows within walking distance of a good bar and roll the dice on a night of quirky theater.
6/17/2014 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
Grappling with Narrative
Mickey Birnbaum’s Backyard wrestles with the sagas of good and evil we all tell -- in bouts that are simultaneously sexual, primal, bloody, and darkly, darkly funny.
6/10/2014 • 4 minutes, 35 seconds
The Faustian Bargain of Audience
Playwright Steven Drukman's Death of the Author combines postmodern literary theory, the power dynamics of the classroom and an ethics seminar on intention.
6/3/2014 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Hitting the Center
There's Zankou Chicken falling from the ceiling, there's sex after a car crash, there's Cafe Tropical, continual comparisons to New York, liposuction...
5/27/2014 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
It Feels like a Big Play
Musings on what Los Angeles theater is - and can be. Want to know more? Subscribe to Anthony's weekly Theater newsletter.
5/20/2014 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
O for a Muse of Venice
The Pacific Resident Theatre takes on Shakespeare's "Henry V," in a production that's beautifully and quirkily cast.
5/13/2014 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Formally Excavating the Past
Two stages in downtown LA couldn't be more different in scale and yet are oddly both resurrecting the past and relying on the power of form to tell the hidden stories.
5/6/2014 • 4 minutes, 16 seconds
Ever Present Technique
Mikhail Baryshnikov returns to the Broad Stage, this time in a collaboration with New York's Big Dance Theater, adapting two Chekhov short stories of missed love.
4/29/2014 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Dreaming of a Sun King
City Garage's ambitious new world premiere examines state corruption, religious hypocrisy, gratuitous nudity and, for good measure, the cowardice of the state.
4/22/2014 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
A Dance of Specificity and Spontaneity
"The Suit" at UCLA is a tale of the tragedy of humiliation.
4/15/2014 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
A Dream of Imagination
"A Midsummer Night's Dream" at the Broad Stage makes sense of Shakespeare's language and creates an enchanted world where love is both magical and terrifying.
4/8/2014 • 4 minutes, 37 seconds
An Australian Prologue
Unfortunately,
Four Larks' junkyard opera "Orpheus" only plays this week. So quickly buy a
ticket and discover a hidden jewel on the edge of downtown LA.
4/1/2014 • 4 minutes, 44 seconds
Don't Circle the Wagons!
Is LA theater suffering from a lack of critical response, or is it no longer worthy of broad coverage because it's no longer giving voice to Los Angeles?
3/25/2014 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
The Cult of Ensemble
Poor Dog Group, whose "Five Small Fires" is currently up at the Bootleg Theatre, have been something like that rare, blooming flower--often talked about but seldom seen.
3/11/2014 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Half Baked and a World of White
A
look at the Wooster Group's "Cry Trojans! (Troilus and Cressida" at the RedCat, and "White" at the Wallis Annenberg
Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills.
3/5/2014 • 4 minutes, 42 seconds
Relentless Commitment
Murray Mednick turns his sights on the 15th century French poet Francois Villon, a misshapen, crooked man who carries a dagger and cudgel - and is not afraid to use them.
2/26/2014 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
Vanya et alia
What's the balance between comedy and tragedy? That's always the question when you're tackling Chekhov.
2/19/2014 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
What You Leave Out
"Se Llama Cristina," the Theatre at Boston Court's latest production is a
perfect example of the power of subtraction and abstraction.
2/5/2014 • 4 minutes, 36 seconds
For Christ's Sake
The Evidence Room latest production at the Odyssey Theatre features three different communities who all put up their own production of a passion play.
1/29/2014 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
I Hope It's the Last Time
Denis O'Hare not only resurrects Homer's epic tale of war and rage, but reminds us how undeniably powerful a good story can be.
1/22/2014 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
It Comes Down to the Comma
Barry McGovern takes three of Samuel Beckett's novels and boils them down into the one-man show, “I'll Go On,” at the Kirk Douglas Theatre.
1/15/2014 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
What Does It Mean to Be Local?
The LA Weekly is cutting its theater section by roughly 70 percent, perhaps more importantly the size and frequency of critic Steven Leigh Morris' feature articles.
1/8/2014 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Theater for a New Year
Anthony Byrnes looks at several productions on the 2014 horizon, everything from one-man plays to passion plays and classic theatre.
1/1/2014 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
The Year's Best
While we've all got presents on our minds, here are the top 10 gifts LA got from theater this year.
12/25/2013 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Theater in Beverly Hills?
Will the inaugural play at Beverly Hills' new theater venue give us a hint about the Wallis Annenberg
Center for the Performing
Arts' artistic mission?
12/18/2013 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Peter Pan Doesn't Necessarily Have to Fly
In this grownup's prequel, Peter Pan doesn't necessarily have to fly in order to soar.
12/11/2013 • 4 minutes, 14 seconds
Holiday Theater - Everywhere!
LA theaters are filled with festive holiday fare. So in the spirit of holidays both past and present, here's a quick guide to your perfect holiday theater tradition.
12/4/2013 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
The Magic of Less
"Play Dead," at the Geffen, is a concoction of Teller, of Penn and Teller fame, and Todd Robbins, is a cross between a magic show, a séance, and an old school haunted house.
11/27/2013 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
A Decade of Work
RedCat, the Roy and Edna Disney CalArts Theater, is beginning to celebrate its 10-year anniversary and it offers a moment for reflection, a chance to look back on their decade of work.
11/20/2013 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Back to Class
Furious Theater Company transforms the intimate, upstairs theater at the Pasadena Playhouse into a classroom for their production of "Gidion's Knot."
11/13/2013 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Oops
The Stella Adler Lab Theater takes on one of Shakespeare's 'problem' plays, Titus Andronicus.
11/6/2013 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
The Culture of Resonance
The plot of "Moskva," at City Garage, ranges from Satan's ball and the promise of becoming a naked queen of the night to a dialogue between Jesus and Pontius Pilate.
10/29/2013 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Our Invisible City
Director Yuval Sharon sets the new opera "Invisible Cities" within Los Angeles' Union Station, which is both the work's greatest success and most profound challenge.
10/22/2013 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Gone
Time is a double edged sword in the theater.
10/15/2013 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Unity
It's a poetic irony that a play about invasive rules might benefit from some old fashioned rules of its own.
10/8/2013 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Connecting the Dots
What's the community doing to develop and sustain its audience? What difference does a theater festival make? Or even more importantly, if it succeeded what's next?
10/1/2013 • 4 minutes, 8 seconds
A Theater on a Roll
This darkly comic, dysfunctional family drama revolves around 3 generations of women struggling to break free of "degenerate bad decision blood" that runs in the family.
9/17/2013 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
It's All about Scale
How do you engage the Getty Villa's architecture and scale without falling prey to it? A look at CalArts Center for New Performance's production of “Prometheus Bound.”
9/10/2013 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Fall Theater Preview
Anthony Byrnes previews theatre offerings to look forward to from the Getty Villa, Boston Court Theatre, A Noise Within and Radar L.A.
9/3/2013 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
A Feminist Rorschach Test
A feminist drama -- though not in the stereotypical sense -- but that all too rare species in the American Theater: a play driven by a cast of women written by a woman.
8/27/2013 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Zombie Soap Opera
What would happen if Eve got a second bite of the apple?
8/13/2013 • 4 minutes, 36 seconds
Large Casts: The Redemption of Small Theater
"The Last Days of Judas Iscariot" is built around a simple question: if God is all forgiving, why is Judas condemned to Hell?
8/6/2013 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Take Me Back!
'A Parallelogram,' Bruce Norris' new play at the Taper, is, at least conceptually, a play about time travel.
7/30/2013 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
The Weight of History
Based on a historical event, playwright Kemp Powers imagines what Malcolm X, Cassius Clay, Sam Cooke and Jim Brown might have chatted about behind closed doors.
7/23/2013 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Cold Hard Cash
Nancy Keystone's Critical Mass Performance Group take on Euripedes. It's up at the Theatre @ Boston Court, thanks to the Getty, a funder with a vision.
7/16/2013 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Who's Story Is It?
In a spare rehearsal room, six actors, three black, three white are trying to create a show, or presentation, about an African genocide from the last century.
7/2/2013 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Forging Meaning
City Garage's "Opheliamachine" explores the themes of feminity, power, sex, rage, love, and madness through a faceted portrayal of Ophelia.
6/25/2013 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Space Meet Time
Contemporary architecture fills the galleries at MOCA's Geffen Contemporary. If you're craving a survey of theater, the Hollywood Fringe Festival runs June.
6/18/2013 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Where's the Revolution?
The genius of Neva, written and directed by Chilean Guillermo Calderón, is it captures not only Chekhov's gift for theater but also what's happening outside the theater.
6/11/2013 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
So Much Has Changed?
The mysterious death of an American soldier in Iraq lays the groundwork for Christopher Shinn's intimate, character-driven piece at Rogue Machine Theatre.
5/28/2013 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
An American Classic
"Joe Turner's Come and Gone" at the Taper not only does honor to Mr. Wilson's words and legacy, but gives us a hint at how his plays are going to age and grow.
5/21/2013 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Breaking Boundaries or Thank God for Repressive Gender Roles
If you're a fan of the formally daring and witty, you need to see Theatre Movement Bazaar's riff on Tennessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof."
5/14/2013 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Sleeping with the Help
Neil LaBute's adaptation of August Strindberg "Miss Julie" is going to be a tough ticket to get in the Geffen's small space. So, like they say on TV, 'act now.'
5/7/2013 • 4 minutes, 33 seconds
Trailer Park Ulysses
There's something about "Annapurna," Sharr White's play starring Megan Mullally and Nick Offerman at the Odyssey Theater, that's satisfying like comfort food.
4/30/2013 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Why?
Two brothers. Foreign born. They are angry. Maybe at the government. Maybe not. Sounds disturbingly like Boston, right?
4/23/2013 • 4 minutes, 15 seconds
Trust the Actor
Actor Brian Finney's performance in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness at the Actors' Gang shouldn't be missed.
4/16/2013 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
Theater Journalism: Size Matters
In theater/journalism, size matters!
4/9/2013 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
The Value of Consequences
"The Nether," Los Angeles playwright Jennifer Haley's world premiere at the Kirk Douglas Theater, is seductive. It's a play about complicated ideas.
3/26/2013 • 4 minutes, 15 seconds
Balancing Shaw
The Antaeus Company makes a valiant effort with their production of "Mrs. Warren's Profession" revealing both the charms and challenges of Shavian style.
3/19/2013 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Defined by Disability?
"Tribes" is a complicated play about language, meaning, listening and deafness whose tragedy is one of unrealized promise, of not taking the next step in the conversation.
3/12/2013 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
Horsing Around
Calling Cavalia's "Odysseo" a horse circus doesn't quite do it justice. Think Cirque du Soleil meets equestrian event.
3/6/2013 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
And Some Things Change...
While death is the catalyst for the play, at its heart "Walking a Tightrope" is sweet tale of a grandfather trying his best and a little girl growing up.
2/27/2013 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
Showcasing the Dark Side
Playwright Gary Lennon’s new play, "A Family Thing," at the Echo Theater Company, features people showcasing the dark side of themselves, a sort of wish fulfillment...
2/20/2013 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
The Black Art of Dramaturgy
It's easy to see what attracted Boston Court Theater to playwright David Wiener's play, "Cassiopeia."
2/13/2013 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Remembering John
The company that created "Ganesh versus the Third Reich" is, in their own words, "a company driven by an ensemble of…actors perceived to have intellectual disabilities."
1/30/2013 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
A Company's Growing Pains
Anthony Byrnes reviews Theatre Movement Bazaar's latest piece, "Track 3," which tackles Chekhov’s "Three Sisters."
1/23/2013 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Damn Ephemerality!
Now typically when I talk about the ephemeral quality of theater, it’s something I’m celebrating. It’s part of what makes theater so magical and essential. Theater can’t be repackaged in a ‘best of’ box set or re-released in 3d. You need to be there in the room or . . . well . . . you missed it.
And that’s the flip side to that magic.
1/16/2013 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Financial Times
It’s
been a tough couple of years, a sort of family recession for Nora.
Looking back, it all started when her husband left his job. He couldn’t
find another. Really there was nothing out there. Then he got sick,
really sick. There were some major medical bills to be paid. Nora
didn’t know what to do. She had to find a way to get the money. She had
to save her husband. But how?
1/9/2013 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
Theater for a New Year
1/2/2013 • 4 minutes, 5 seconds
Best of 2012
Anthony reflects on ten plays that made LA's life richer in 2012.
12/26/2012 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Six Voices
Take a break from the holiday chaos and treat yourself to the Fiasco Theater Company's production of Shakespeare's "Cymbaline" at the Broad Stage.
12/19/2012 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Listen
Nothing brings out family dysfunction quite like the holidays, does it? That's where Jon Robbin Baitz's play, "Other Desert Cities," at the Mark Taper Forum begins.
12/12/2012 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
We, The Audience
Remember the last time you fell in love with a really good book?
12/5/2012 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
A Commercial Formula
Take the best tunes from a director who turns out films with great soundtracks, cast talented singers with great pipes and you've got Rockwell's "For the Record."
11/28/2012 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Rapture Anyone?
A quirky, beautifully acted dark comedy set in the break room of a craft supply store - the Hobby Lobby. The twist is a new employee who wants the Rapture to happen now.
11/21/2012 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
A Study in Manipulation
When's the last time you saw a musical about torture? The world premiere of "Bad Apples" is a disturbing but powerful look at the Abu Ghraib scandal.
11/14/2012 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Tentacle Erotica?
Playwright Stephen Yockey take’s a classic fairytale, gives it a modern spin and adds a helping of lust...
10/30/2012 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
Oh Krapp!
Anthony Byrnes on the bittersweet joys of memory and John Hurt's performance in Samuel Beckett masterpiece, "Krapp's Last Tape," at the Kirk Douglas Theater.
10/16/2012 • 4 minutes, 15 seconds
A World Untethered
Anthony Byrnes calls the Studium Teatralne's American premiere of "The King of Hearts Is Off Again" at the Odyssey Theatre a rare moment in theater.
10/9/2012 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
The Magic of a Little Fishing Line
The myth of Orpheus and Eurydice becomes the backbone for Sarah Ruhl's 'Eurydice,' a story of love and about the inevitable act of letting go of the things we love.
10/2/2012 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
To Pillage
Anthony Byrnes on Chuck Mee's ethos, his [re]making project, and the wonderful 'pillaging' in his "Orestes 3.0:Inferno," a world premiere at City Garage.
9/25/2012 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Five Golden Plates
Anthony Byrnes on The Book of Mormon and the secrets to making a musical in the 21st century.
9/18/2012 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Quantity or Quality?
Chalk Repertory Theatre pairs up with the Page Museum at the La Brea Tar Pits and does site-specific 10-minute plays in the museum, at night, for three weekends.
9/11/2012 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Seven Hours
Anthony Byrnes says LA's upcoming theater season offers a rich menu of productions, including a seven hour production of...
9/4/2012 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
Amateur Virtuosity
Anthony Byrnes on a hipster magic show at the Kirk Douglas Theater that answers the age old question, what do you get when you mix grape Kool-Aid with the Dalai Lama.
8/28/2012 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
A painter's pas de deux
At the heart of the play “Red”, two men stand before a massive canvas. It’s center stage in Mark Rothko’s cavernous studio. The blank expanse towers before the artist and his young assistant. As the young man pours thick red paint into two galvanized buckets, Rothko, played by Alfred Molina, drops the needle on TLU.
8/14/2012 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Rodney King: The First Reality TV Star
Whether we like it or not, Rodney King looms as a mythic and complicated figure in Los Angeles history. In the words of Roger Guenveur Smith, 'the first reality TV star.'
8/7/2012 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
99% Farce, 1% Satire
What’s the difference between farce and satire?
7/31/2012 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
A Crown? Or a Tiara?
If you're looking for a traditional MacBeth look elsewhere. If you want a 50-minute darkly sexual, inappropriately funny, thrill ride, don't miss this one.
7/24/2012 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
An Evil Metaphor
Anthony Byrnes on the theater version of "The Exorcist," currently up at the Geffen Playhouse.
7/17/2012 • 4 minutes, 38 seconds
Two Languages at War
Anthony Byrnes on a simple 'boy and his horse' story and the theatrical magic created by the National Theatre of Great Britain and the Handspring Puppet Company.
7/3/2012 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Does LA Need a Fringe?
Anthony Byrnes poses the question, "Does LA really need a fringe festival in the first place?"
6/26/2012 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
Behind an Actor's Eyes
Playwright Vanessa Claire Stewart’s new play at Sacred Fools is deeply indebted to silent films in ways that make it both as rich and as frustrating as its source.
6/19/2012 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
I Miss August
Anthony Byrnes remembers the economy, elegance and scope of playwright August Wilson, as he reviews SCR's revival of "Jitney," currently up at the Pasadena Playhouse.
6/12/2012 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Irising Down on the Details
Anthony Byrnes reviews 'Los Otros,' which plays at the Mark Taper Forum downtown through July 1.
6/5/2012 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
The Evidence Room Is Back
Anthony Byrnes on the Evidence Room's quirky production of Ivanov at the Odyssey Theater.
5/29/2012 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
The Alchemy of Experience
Anthony Byrnes on Murray Mednick's play within a play, which embodies the wonderful alchemy possible when a lifetime of craft is mixed with a still youthful experimentation with form.
5/22/2012 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
A Greek Betrayal
Anthony Byrnes on the production of Boston Court Theatre's production of Michael Elyanow's Medea, as told through the eyes of children...
5/15/2012 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
A Process with Integrity
The Cornerstone Theater's latest production is produced in partnership with Father Greg Boyle and the Home Girl Cafe, which trains former gang members to run a restaurant.
5/8/2012 • 4 minutes, 34 seconds
A Civic Voice for the Theater
Anthony Byrnes recalls Anna Deveare Smith's one-woman show "Twilight: Los Angeles 1992" and the role of theater in the civic dialogue of the city.
4/24/2012 • 4 minutes, 13 seconds
A Master Class in Stagecraft and Movement
Anthony Byrnes on Mikhail Baryshnikov in a chronicle of the painful and awkward moments that precede love.
4/17/2012 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
The Internet of the Soul
Anthony Byrnes on the history of the Internet, privacy in the Age of Google, and the mystical thinking of philosopher Martin Buber in Matt McCray's "Eternal Thou."
4/10/2012 • 4 minutes, 11 seconds
En Attendant Urgence
How do you make the familiar come to life as if for the first time? Anthony Byrnes on the blessing and the curse of Samuel Beckett's classic "Waiting for Godot."
3/27/2012 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Worst Jesus Movie in the History of Cinema
Anthony Byrnes on Mike Schlitt's Jesus Ride, which he says plays "like a great dinner party story that just happens to have video all cued up."
3/20/2012 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
The Theatrical Languages of LA?
Wouldn't it be exciting if LA theater reflected that diversity and spoke the same languages as its people?
3/13/2012 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
An Exciting Failure
The Theater Movement Bazaar and the evolution of two artists who have committed to making ensemble theater in Los Angeles...
2/29/2012 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
The Stories We Spin
We go on a journey through time with El pasado es un animal grotesco ("The past is a grotesque animal"), which is up at REDCAT for four performances this weekend.
2/22/2012 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
Prison Poetry
Anthony Byrnes on the LATC production of Miguel Piñero's Short Eyes, his love of language and unapologetic view of life behind bars.
2/15/2012 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
The Path Forward
Anthony Byrnes weighs in on two landmark plays, inspired by the same Chicago home, but written 50 years apart.
2/8/2012 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Breakfast in America
"It's all about the eggs," says Anthony Byrnes, about A Raisin in the Sun, at the Kirk Douglas Theatre, and Our Town, at the Broad Stage.
1/25/2012 • 4 minutes, 16 seconds
In Conversation with Helen Hunt and David Cromer
Anthony Byrnes talks with actress Helen Hunt and David Cromer about their production of Our Town, now at the Broad Stage.
1/18/2012 • 52 minutes, 59 seconds
In the Company of the Male Gaze
Anthony Byrnes muses on Neil LaBute's Filthy Talk for Troubled Times.
1/11/2012 • 4 minutes, 16 seconds
Theater for a New Year
Anthony Byrnes in anticipation of the year's upcoming shows...
1/4/2012 • 4 minutes, 16 seconds
Best of 2011
KCRW theatre critic Anthony Byrnes on this year's ten outstanding productions in LA theatre.
12/28/2011 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The Soul of Fela!
When you think of the music and life of Fela Kuti, a broadway musical isn’t the first thing that comes to mind.
12/21/2011 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The Two Sides of Consistency
The Troubadour Theater Company works its unique brand of magic on 'A Christmas Story.'
12/14/2011 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
The Night Watcher
Anthony Byrnes reviews The Night Watcher, which is up at the Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City through December 18.
12/7/2011 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
A Hate Crime and a Kiss
What's the responsibility of a plot point? That's the question Anthony Byrnes asks after seeing Diana Son's Stop Kiss at the Lounge Theatre in Hollywood.
11/23/2011 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
LA Theater: A Study in White?
Anthony Byrnes on language, diversity and The Romance of Magno Rubio at [Inside] the Ford.
11/16/2011 • 4 minutes, 16 seconds
The Responsibility of Space
After 20 years, A Noise Within has already built something astounding: a home. Can they answer the tough questions the space asks about their art?
11/9/2011 • 4 minutes, 37 seconds
A Play Called Hope
On its surface Hope: Part II of a Mexican Trilogy, by Evelina Fernandez, is a play about a Mexican-American nuclear family in the 1960's...
11/1/2011 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
Adult Culpability and Childhood Innocence
Playwright Gregory Moss' House of Gold begins with a challenge. The setting: a suburban Colorado kitchen. A husband sits at the breakfast table while his wife...
10/25/2011 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
The Poetry of Fluid Time
Tucked into the third floor of the Alexandria Hotel in downtown LA is the Company of Angels tiny, black box theater. There's something wonderfully disorienting about the...
10/18/2011 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Cowboys and Dinosaurs
The Dinosaur Within, by playwright John Walch at Boston Court in Pasadena, is built around paleontology and coincidence. Let's start with the Paleontology. What is it?
10/11/2011 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The Responsibility of Image
10/4/2011 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
Where Are the Hollywood Clowns?
Let's start with what works in Cirque du Soleil's $100 million spectacle Iris at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood...
9/27/2011 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Morally Bankrupt and Vacuous...but Funny
It's late. We're a couple of bottles of rose into a dinner at Ella and Peter's beautiful woodsy place outside of the city - no, not Los Angeles, New York...
9/20/2011 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The SITI Company's Questions
Trojan Women, written by Euripedes 2,400 years ago, is one of the most brutal, unrelenting anti-war plays ever created. The play takes place among the wreckage of Troy...
9/13/2011 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Ideas in Need of Passion
What is love? Really? Is it a rush of the heartbeat? Is it the dedication to a child? These are the questions in Mr. Goodspeed's AP Biology class in...
8/30/2011 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
The Magic of Intimate Theater
There's an experience you can only have in an intimate theater...There's an energy that's possible that is absolutely exhilarating...and at times horribly uncomfortable...
8/23/2011 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
A Dark Night of the Soul
Sarah Kane's play 4.48 Psychosis can be read as the internal monologue of a woman as she descends into psychosis and plans her suicide...
8/9/2011 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
An All Too Pretty Labyrinth
The center of the Minotaur's mythical labyrinth is not necessarily a place you want to find yourself. But I did recently - and it was stunning...
8/2/2011 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Healthcare and Humanity
Longtime Angelenos will remember Anna Deavere Smith's brilliant and haunting play called Twilight: Los Angeles about the aftermath of the Rodney King trial. She's back...
7/26/2011 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
An All Too Clever Hamlet
Somewhere scrawled on a blackboard in a Shakespeare seminar is that perennial essay question "chart Hamlet's journey through his four soliloquies." Like "to be or not to be..."
7/19/2011 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Peeling Peer's Onion
"You are about to see the rarely performed 1867 masterpiece Peer Gynt, a disembodied voice says, "but instead of the epic 50-character, five-act, five-hour Ibsen original…"
7/12/2011 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
A real theatre community?
The clearest lesson of the last two weeks in LA theatre is that festivals rock! Or to try to be a little more erudite, theatre needs community and community needs context...
6/28/2011 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Was It All Make Believe?
So a couple of weeks ago, I told you that this is a critical moment for LA theater...
6/21/2011 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
A step into the past...and maybe the future
Roughly a decade ago, the evidEnce Room was one of the centers of LA theater....churning out thrilling show after show, all
in fantastic warehouse spaces...
6/14/2011 • 4 minutes, 15 seconds
The Magic of Polaroid
Remember the magic of Polaroid cameras? Unlike the camera on your iPhone, there was that satisfying, mechanical ker-chunk as the photo spit itself out like a tongue...
6/7/2011 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
A Desire for Honesty
Kate Fodor's play 100 Saints You Should Know is all about longing -- for faith, intimacy, a real connection with your child, and perhaps most poignantly -- for honesty...
5/31/2011 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Spotlight on LA
For a couple of weeks in June, and perhaps for the first time ever, LA will be the center of the American Theater! No really! You should make plans, buy tickets, get a sitter...
5/24/2011 • 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Fleck's Madness
Depending on your politics and artistic tastes, John Fleck is either famous or infamous as being one of what was called "The NEA Four..."
5/17/2011 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
Sorry, Charlie
So you work at some high-powered consulting firm...burning the candle at both ends…You're in a bit of trouble, took advantage of a situation and now it's coming back to haunt you.
5/10/2011 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Stage Stars
God of Carnage is the story of two couples who come together after their children have gotten into a little playground rumpus.
4/26/2011 • 4 minutes, 20 seconds
The Merchant of Venice Goes to Wall Street
It's been part of the drill for centuries for directors to stage Shakespeare in exotic locales and different time periods. As You Like It in the Civil War, A Midsummer in a disco, Orson Welles' MacBeth in Harlem. In a way, Shakespeare himself got the ball rolling by setting his plays in foreign lands...
4/19/2011 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
The Joys of Simulated Nudity
You sit down to see Jane Anderson's new play The Escort. The lights go down, a luscious red curtain opens and there is a beautiful, buxom naked woman center stage...
4/12/2011 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
History Plays
Theater is so damn...ephemeral...We can still experience a Michelangelo sculpture, still read James Joyce, but an ancient Greek tragedy performed by ancient Greeks...
4/5/2011 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Head in the Oven
On February 11, 1963, Sylvia Plath turned her gas oven on and opened the door. She carefully placed wet rags under the door to the kitchen so the fumes wouldn't seep into the next room where her one year old son and two-year-old daughter were sleeping. Then she placed her head in the oven and waited to die. What was going through her mind at that moment?
3/29/2011 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Natural History Theater
There's a lot of Tennessee Williams in Los Angeles right now. The great Southern playwright would be 100 this week and as a posthumous birthday celebration just about every theater in town is trotting out a production...
3/22/2011 • 4 minutes, 19 seconds
Laughter, Catharsis and a Side of Gore
So the Greeks, well Aristotle really, argued that one of the reasons to go to the theater was to experience catharsis, literally, a kind of emotional purging or cleansing. The idea was that you'd go to the theater and get so wrapped up in the characters lives, so involved in the emotions, the actions, the "pitiable and fearful incidents" that you'd get all worked up, just like the characters, and then at the climactic moment you'd have a little emotional orgasm of sorts that would release you of the fear or pity in your life. And you'd leave the theater refreshed and ready for another day...
3/15/2011 • 4 minutes, 18 seconds
Quixote's Misfortune Is Not His Imagination
During Argentina's "dirty war" in the 1970's, the state imprisoned dissidents and other undesirables, including many artists. For some, their treatment was extreme. They were kept in solitary confinement. Their only chance to interact with other human beings was an hour each Sunday. The prisoners were allowed to sit four to a table. As long as they sat and kept their hands on the table, they were allowed to talk; if they stood up, they could be shot. With this treatment the regime hoped to break their spirits...but amazingly, on their Sunday meetings, they made theatre...
3/2/2011 • 4 minutes, 11 seconds
Camino Real
It’s not politically correct for a theater person to say that they hate Tennessee Williams. Well “hate” might be a little strong, but l certainly wasn’t the first person in line to sit through another gloriously languorous production of “The Glass Menagerie.”
2/23/2011 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
33 Variations
The heart of Moises Kaufman’s new play “33 Variations” comes about 2/3 of the way through. The audience finds themselves alone with Beethoven and his music. To the side of the stage is a pianist beginning to play Beethoven’s Variation #32 on a grand piano.
2/16/2011 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
The Pleasure of Consequences
Take a beautiful, sexually liberated female archetype. Mix in some macho dialogue filled with wit and innuendo. Add a dash of gratuitous nudity and play it with gusto...but mostly for laughs. Recipe for a great evening of theater? You'd think....
2/9/2011 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Oh Baby, I'm a Cyclops
Today we start with a quick refresher on obscure classical Greek theater...the Satyr Play. Now, Satyrs are the those bawdy half man/half beast follower's of Dionysus -- god of wine and all things good -- like theater...
1/26/2011 • 4 minutes, 25 seconds
Drama of the Everyday
Sometimes the best theater happens outside the theater. Like in the line at the grocery store. That little snippet of a conversation that you overhear during checkout. Or maybe in your yoga class: that budding romance between the two over in the corner. It's those moments where you suddenly get a peak into a stranger's life, where a little detail reveals an entire world...
1/19/2011 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Greed Isn't What It Used to Be
So you get the email. You know, that email. Maybe it's from someone in Nigeria with a pile of money or maybe you've won the Irish Sweepstakes. You go to hit delete but then . . . hey, what if it's true? Who couldn't use a pile of free money? That's the setup for Karl Gadjusek's dark-comedy, Greedy...
1/12/2011 • 4 minutes, 11 seconds
One Final Monologue
With the holidays and the year end upon us, it's that time again when we look back out our lives and creative some kind narrative; was it a good year? A bad year? A year of "personal growth?" For monologist Spalding Gray, this personal storytelling wasn't a once a year thing; he made a career out of it...
12/22/2010 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
A Holiday Wedding
They say that at the end of Shakespeare's plays, everyone's either dead or married. Much Ado about Nothing falls into the wedding category. And you can experience all the nuptial bliss at the Kirk Douglas Theater in Culver City in a new production by the Los Angeles Shakespeare Center...
12/15/2010 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Recently Closeted Gay Man
In 1977, after a decade of drowning his demons, Tennessee Williams finished an autobiographical play he'd started 40 years before. On the page, the play reads a bit like a "Portrait of the Artist as a young-recently-closeted-gay-man.‘ At its center is a young 'writer' living in a New Orleans' boarding house trying to find his voice. Panned as the mutterings of a genius past his prime, Vieux Carré closed after only six performances on Broadway. This is not Williams at his best, and, yet, in the hands of Elizabeth LeCompte and the Wooster Group it becomes a window into the writer's tortured soul and a piece of theater not to be missed...
12/8/2010 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Holiday Theater, Anyone?
The holidays are upon us. There's no escaping it. From the incessant carols at Rite-Aid and the ringing of the Salvation Army bells outside to the crystal clear brisk blue skies above, it's that time of year. And what better way to get in the seasonal spirit than with a little holiday theater?
12/1/2010 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Arts Funding, Anyone?
Here’s the Cliff Notes of a new work now at RedCat. A woman gives the audience a slideshow tour of her beloved Rotterdam...There’s a statue there there she hates... She’s joined by three actors also from Rotterdam... They begin reading emails while sitting in white lawn chairs... Their emails are about the statue, arts funding, and revenge...
11/24/2010 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
The Origin of Theater?
The new show Hyperbole: origins begins with a quick history of LA from the Indians all the way through Sig alerts, all captured with little more than a hunk of styrofoam and some dolls on toothpicks. While not necessarily historically accurate, or politically correct, the saga brilliantly captures the stereotypes of LA LA land...
11/17/2010 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
Where's the Next Bet?
Playwright John Steppling's characters are not the kind of people you'd like to meet in a dark alley. They are desperate men. They're men living on the fringes, outside the normal bounds of society. It's not that they are without honor, quite the contrary, but it's an honor and a code of an extraordinary world, often a lost world...
11/10/2010 • 4 minutes, 22 seconds
A Window to a Playwright
It's tricky. I'm realizing that my reviews end up having the same arc as the plays I see. Which makes this week tough because The Train Driver starts dark and stays there. Athol Fugard's latest work is based on a horrific true story...
10/26/2010 • 4 minutes, 21 seconds
Elizabethan Sitcom
I am about to say something for which I expect to be pilloried: Not all of Shakespeare’s plays are great. There, I said it. Take The Merry Wives of Windsor playing this week at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica. This isn’t the Shakespeare of deep human insight or political intrigue
or stunning word play. This is the Shakespeare with a subplot which
revolves around making fun of how tough it is to understand the French
and Welsh. It’s broad brush comedy -- no pun intended. It’s great; but
it’s not GREAT...
10/19/2010 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
A Winning Season
In any story, the protagonist is motivated by passion. You know: avenging the death of a loved one, righting a wrong, becoming king. In Jordan Harrison's new play Futura at Boston Court, the protagonist's passion is something a little less passionate: typography. You know - fonts, serifs and the like...
10/12/2010 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Artifice and Awareness
It's not everyday you hear someone say "Get in your car. Drive to La Jolla and see some Dostoyevsky!” Today is your lucky day...
10/5/2010 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
A World of Desire
The question raised by two works performed in Southern California this weekend is: To what length will we go to pursue a forbidden desire? And though subject is the same, the two shows are separated by 50 miles, 100 years, and two radically different styles and audiences, they both have at their heart - desire...
9/28/2010 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
The Cart before the Horse
OK, there are these young lovers and their love is thwarted by their pompous elders. So they ask their wacky servants to help out, and hilarity ensues...
9/21/2010 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
How Big Is Your Chorus?
You'd think that something as tried and true as Greek tragedy was cut in stone. But watching Sophocles Elektra performed at the expansive outdoor amphitheater at the Getty Villa in Malibu, I was struck by the question: "what is Greek theater?" and, specifically, "what is a Greek chorus?"
9/14/2010 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Dinosaurs and Storytelling
Before the onslaught of fall theater openings I thought we'd leave the intimacy of local theater and go big . . . really, really big. Like T. Rex big. Of course, I'm talking about Walking with Dinosaurs - billed as an “arena spectacular” - it's coming to Staples Center this weekend.
9/7/2010 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
The History Next Door
Neighbors, a new play by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, starts in a peaceful, familiar middle class suburb, home to Richard, a black upwardly mobile professor and his white wife, Jean. As the play opens, a family of minstrels, black face and all, moves in to the adjacent tract home. The neighbors have come to town to mount their traditional minstrel show as if they’ve traveled straight out of 1850...
8/31/2010 • 4 minutes, 30 seconds
The Theater Needs You
It's been said that the role of the theater is to synchronize the audience and the artists in time and space. Traditionally that's been pretty straight forward. Show up at the theater - the space - at 8 o'clock - the time - and we'll begin the show. When the curtain goes up we're all in that moment. Easy...
8/10/2010 • 3 minutes, 31 seconds
Bloody Irresponsible
It's about two thirds of the way through Martin McDonagh's play The Lieutenant of Inishmore, and the stage is covered in blood. Not just a bit of blood - but literally gallons of blood. And not just blood. There's a severed head. And a torso...
8/3/2010 • 4 minutes, 13 seconds
Brewsie and Willie
When I first came to LA from Colorado, I struggled with time. There was something about the loss of seasons, or at least seasons as I knew them - snow, mud, summer, leaves, repeat - without the context of weather I couldn't figure out, for instance, when I'd met someone. Was it last year? Or three years ago? It just seemed to be one sunny day after another...
7/27/2010 • 4 minutes, 29 seconds
Procreation
Male Frontal nudity . . . . check.
Profound familial dysfunction . . . . check.
Gratuitous crotch grab for humorous effect . . . check.
Closeted gay husband . . . . check.
Schadenfreude . . . . check.
Catharsis or deep meaningful reflection . . . . not so much...
7/20/2010 • 4 minutes, 14 seconds
A Warehouse and a Dream
There are works of theater that hold a mirror, or a magnifying glass to life. We go to the theater to examine life as we know it. Think: the Greeks, Shakespeare, Death of a Salesman...
7/13/2010 • 4 minutes, 17 seconds
A Human Lear
"Don't play the idea of a king. You are the king" That's a note you'll hear in Shakespeare classes every time a young thespian tackles Macbeth, or Richard, or Lear...
6/29/2010 • 4 minutes, 31 seconds
Theater on the Fringe
Stick with me. This is a long quote from 25 years ago but it's really relevant right now. "Los Angeles has no great public monument which focuses attention and serves as a backdrop for a festival. Its disparate elements, its sprawl, its multiple cultures, all contribute to the city's central paradox - its identity lies in its diversity. This reality combined with the fact that Los Angeles is essentially vehicular and Private rather than pedestrian and public, might lead one to believe the city is ill suited to host an arts festival..."
6/22/2010 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
Theater of the Cliche
I laughed, I cried. It's better than Cats. It's a play for the whole family. I'm going again. I heard Shakespeare for the first time. Now those are some terrible theater clichés. And that's what I want to talk about. There's a fascinating moment right before the end of Act One in Sarah Ruhl's play, Clean
House...
6/15/2010 • 4 minutes, 27 seconds
Anton's Uncles
Anton Chekhov is a daunting figure in the theater. One hundred fifty years after his birth, he's rightly revered as one of the great ensemble playwrights, creating dense dramas inhabited with these wonderfully eccentric and honest souls. But like all ‘great' works of literature, Chekhov's plays can get a bit dusty. There tend to be a few too many waistcoats and samovars and not nearly enough of the witty and racy charm that seems buried in his writing....
6/8/2010 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Towards a Slow Theater
What if we started a slow theater movement? I’m not talking about boring theater or long theater but what if we stole an idea from the food world? Namely, the Slow Food movement and the idea of being a locavore...
6/1/2010 • 4 minutes, 28 seconds
UCLA Live Theater: Thanks for the Memories
Four shirtless men seem to float above a table. They're singing in
Polish and I can't understand a word. Beautiful. Two emaciated Italians
wander amongst an apocalyptic landscape while light bulbs explode, one
after another after another…sheer terror. Thirteen Belgian teens destroy
the stage and I'm giddy...
5/25/2010 • 4 minutes, 32 seconds
Second
It’s 8:15 on Saturday night in Echo Park and I’m in a bedroom with a scientist and a hooker and I’m watching TV. This, of course, is the Filament Theater Company’s production of a play called “Second” by Neal Utterback.
5/18/2010 • 3 minutes, 53 seconds
The 20th Century Way
In 1914, Long Beach Police Department hired two actors named Warren and Brown as “vice specialists.” Their job was to go into private clubs and public changing rooms and arrest gay men in the act of being . . . gay. That appalling and tantalizing little historical detail is the kernel of Tom Jacobson’s new play – “The Twentieth Century Way.” It’s currently premiering at the Boston Court Theater in Pasadena.