‘Liv at Sea’ Navigates Emotional Tsunamis in a Pitch Perfect Production

“Liv at Sea” — Written and directed by Robert Kropf. Presented by Harbor Stage Company at Boston Center for the Arts, 539 Tremont St., Boston, through January 28.

By Shelley A. Sackett

Who among us has never wondered about what our lives might have been like if, like Robert Frost’s famous protagonist, we had chosen the road less traveled when our path diverged into two? Did we choose wisely? Given the chance to relive that pivotal moment, would we again choose the security and comfort of the path we know or risk all on the thrill of the other, the unknown?

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The Connective Tissue of Huntington’s  ‘Stand Up If You’re Here Tonight’

Jim Ortlieb in Huntington’s  ‘Stand Up If You’re Here Tonight’ Photos by Nile Hawver

“Stand Up If You’re Here Tonight” – Written and directed by John Kolvenbach. Presented by Huntington Theatre Company, the Maso Studio, 264 Huntington Avenue, Boston, through March 23.

By Michele Markarian

“I’m getting an East Village vibe here,” I whisper to my friend as we wait for the curtain to go up.  But there is no curtain, only a low wooden platform for a stage, with mismatched, elegant chandeliers strung from the ceiling. Our chairs are mismatched as well. The house lights are up, and a buzzy kind of energy vibrates among the audience – what is it that we are about to witness? 

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Dreams Deferred in Lyric’s ‘Trouble in Mind’

Cast of ‘Trouble in Mind’ at Lyric Stage

Trouble In Mind by Playwright Alice Childress. Directed by Dawn M. Simmons. Scenic Design by Shelley Barish. Costume Design by Rachel Padula-Shufelt. Lighting Design by Deb Sullivan. Sound Design by Aubrey Dube. At the Lyric Stage Company of Boston, Clarendon Steet, through February 4.

By Linda Chin

In his 1951 poem “Harlem” Langston Hughes poses an important question: What happens to a dream deferred? It continues with additional questions:

      Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?
      Or fester like a sore – And then run?
      Does it stink like rotten meat?
      Or crust and sugar over—like a syrupy sweet?

      Maybe it just sags, like a heavy load.

      Or does it explode?

In her 1955 play “Trouble in Mind,” Alice Childress (Hughes’ contemporary) tells the story of a group of Black and white actors rehearsing a play for Broadway. The play (within-the-play), “Chaos in Belleville” is an anti-lynching drama written by a white playwright, directed by white male director Al Manners (Barlow Adamson), and stars a Black actress, Wiletta (Patrice Jean-Baptiste), a seasoned actor who will be making her Broadway debut – a long-awaited dream.

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The Terror and Beauty of Plexus Polaire’s “Moby Dick” at ArtsEmerson

Plexus Polaire’s “Moby Dick” at ArtsEmerson

by Michele Markarian

“Moby Dick” by Plexus Polaire. Inspired by Herman Melville’s novel. Directed by Yngvild Aspeli. Presented by ArtsEmerson, Emerson Paramount Center, 559 Washington Street, Boston, through January 28.

“There are three types of men – the living, the dead, and those who go to sea,” Ishmael (a charismatic Julian Spooner) tells us at the beginning of Plexus Polaire’s 85-minute version of Moby Dick . At a directionless point in his life, Ishmael joins the crew of the Peqoud and lives to tell the tale. Gorgeous and disturbing, this production uses both humans and puppets, lighting, and live music to create an atmosphere that’s dense with mystery, death, and rebirth.

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Apollinaire Serves Up Chaos and Control with Witty ‘Lunch Bunch’

Cast of Apollinaire’s ‘Lunch Bunch’. Photos by Danielle Fauteux Jacques

‘The Lunch Bunch’ – Written by Sarah Einspanier; Directed by Danielle Fauteux Jacques; Scenic & Sound Design: Joseph Lark-Riley; Lighting Design: Danielle Fauteux Jacques; Presented by Apollinaire Theatre Company  Chelsea Theatre Works, located at 189 Winnisimmet St., Chelsea, MA through January 21

by Mike Hoban

What do you do when the stress of your thankless job drives you to the brink of madness every single day? You could drink like a fish and do boatloads of cocaine like the brokers in Wolf of Wall Street, or there’s always the healthier options of meditating, doing yoga, getting a therapist, or working out. Or you could try a third option: engage obsessively in a ritual that gives you the illusion of control over your chaotic and unpredictable life. The latter is the route that the characters in Apollinaire’s production of the Lunch Bunch have taken, and while it works just about as well as you would suspect it would for the characters, this very funny sendup of foodie culture is a great stress reliever for audiences.

Cristhian Mancinas-García, Alex Leondedis
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La Broa’ at Trinity Rep, Educates, Entertains

Cast of La Broa’ at Trinity Rep

Reviewed by Tony Annicone

The first show at Trinity Rep in 2024, which is the continuation of its 60th season, is the world premiere of “La Broa'” by Orlando Hernandez, inspired by “Latino History of Rhode Island: Nuestras Raices,” oral histories collected by Marta V. Martinez. “La Broa”’ (Broad Street) draws from real-life stories of Providence’s Spanish-speaking immigrant communities over sixty years and is directed by Tatyana-Marie Carlo, a resident artistic company member. Hernandez takes these oral histories and weaves interesting, poignant, and awe-inspiring tales into a show that audience members can savor and enjoy. These stories are based on real people with some fictional events mixed in, ranging from gripping to entertaining but, most of all, educating and entrancing the crowd to understand how different cultures exist, not only on Broad Street. Rosa’s Market on Broad Street is the center of the stories Dona Rosa tells Ana, a student at Providence College, in 1992. The show is told with flashbacks to 1947 when Rosa came to New York from The Dominican Republic. She met her husband Tony there, and they eventually moved to Providence. This is where the characters interact during the show as Dona Rosa weaves tales of her past. They speak of immigration, how they adjusted to Providence, and cultural matters that affect them. Marta Martinez has worked on this script for the past ten years, and Trinity Rep performers make her and real-life people extremely proud in this astounding show.

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Everyone Wants to Be Seen, and Must See “Real Women Have Curves” at ART

Cast of “Real Women Have Curves: The Musical” at the A.R.T.
Photos by Nile Hawver and Maggie Hall

‘Real Women Have Curves: The Musical.’ Music & lyrics by Joy Huerta and Benjamin Velez, book by Lisa Loomer. Directed and choreographed by Sergio Trujillo. Music Supervisor Nadia DiGiallonardo; Music direction by Robeto Sinha. Scenic design by Arnulfo Maldonado. Costume design by Wilberth Gonzalez and Paloma Young. Lighting design by Natasha Katz. Sound design by Walter Trarbach. Video design by Hana S. Kim. At the American Repertory Theater’s Loeb Drama Center, Cambridge, through January 21, 2024.

by Linda Chin 

Like the ad campaign from my childhood about Levy’s Real Jewish Rye, you don’t have to be Latinx to love Real Women Have Curves: The Musical, an exuberant and empowering production enjoying its world premiere at the American Repertory Theater. Set in the summer of 1987 in Boyle Heights, LA, home to a growing population of Hispanic and Latino residents, the story centers on the three “real women” of a Mexican family. Matriarch Carmen Garcia (Justina Machado) is a housewife and traditional, old-fashioned wife to her husband Raúl, a house painter (Edward Padilla), and mother to two daughters. The eldest, Estela (Florencia Cuenca), runs a small dressmaking shop but aspires to be a designer. The youngest, new HS graduate Ana (Lucy Godínez), was born in the US and is a citizen, aspires to go to college and pursue a writing career. Despite the many bumps and curves in their immigration and life journeys, all three “Garcia Girls” have not lost their accents nor lost sight of their big dreams. But they, like all of us, are desperate to be seen for their authentic selves, beyond their curves and the stereotypes society has placed on them. 

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Revels Goes Medieval in Swanson’s Swan Song with ‘Feast of Fools’

Vincent Ernest Siders (The King, far left) and the cast of Midwinter Revels: The Feast of Fools
Photos by Paul Buckley

Midwinter Revels: The Feast of Fools: A Medieval Celebration of the Solstice – Written and Directed by Patrick Swanson and Debra Wise.; Musical Direction by Elijah Botkin; Choreography by Susan Dibble; Set Design by Jeremy Barnett; Sound Design by Bill Winn; Lighting Design by Jeff Adelberg; Costume Design by Heidi A. Hermiller; Presented by Revels, Inc. at The Sanders Theater at Harvard University, 45 Quincy Street, Cambridge, through December 28th.

Retiring Revels Artistic Director Paddy Swanson is ending his career on a decidedly high note, delivering on his promise to the Globe’s Terry Byrne to “return to our roots, with brass instruments with their big sound, big carols, and processions.” The result is the highly entertaining Midwinter Revels: The Feast of Fools – and it’s quite possibly the best Revels in years. This year’s edition (the 53rd, 34th with Swanson at the helm) is also marinaded in comedy, bolstered by a trio of talented fools, Folly (René Collins), Fiasco (Eliza Rose Fichter), and Flop (Roger Reed), who serve their king (a regal and affably commanding Vincent Ernest Siders) with irreverent devotion.

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Theater UnCorked’s “Virginia Woolf” is a Dark Gem

Cast of Theater Uncorked’s ‘Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Brooks Reeves, Shana Dirik, AnthonyRinaldi and Brooke Casanova. Photo Credit: Leonard-Chasse

“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” – Written by Edward Albee. Directed by Ben Delatizky. Presented by Theater UnCorked at the BCA Plaza Black Box Theatre, 539 Tremont St., Boston, December 6–10, 2023

by Mike Hoban

Theatergoers looking for an antidote to the multiple versions of A Christmas Carol or the endless stream of holiday-themed programming on the Hallmark Channel hit pay dirt with Theater UnCorked’s bleak but stunningly executed Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” Revived for a short run at the BCA Plaza Black Box Theatre in early December, the production was a master class in acting by Boston favorites Shana Dirik and Brooks Reeves, who were ably supported by Brooke Casanova and Anthony Rinaldi and skillfully directed by Ben Delatizky.

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A Moving, Jubilant “Real Women Have Curves”

Cast of “Real Women Have Curves: The Musical” at the A.R.T.
Photos by Nile Hawver and Maggie Hall

By Michele Markarian

“Real Women Have Curves: The Musical”.  Music and Lyrics by Joy Huerta and Benjamin Velez, Book by Lisa Loomer.  Based on the play by Josefina Lopez and HBO’s “Real Women Have Curves”, Screenplay by Josefina Lopez and George Lavoo.  Directed and Choreographed by Sergio Trujillo.  Presented by American Repertory Theater, Loeb Drama Center, 64 Brattle Street, Cambridge, through January 21, 2024.

Ana (Lucy Godinez) is the second daughter of an undocumented Mexican family living in Los Angeles, and the only one to have citizenship. She has just received a letter from Columbia University, admitting her as a college student with a full scholarship.  However, her sister, Estela (Florencia Cuenca), owner of a dressmaking business, has a huge order to fulfill and needs help.  The sisters’ mother, Carmen (Justina Machado), fully expects Ana to work in the family dress factory with Estela. As the only US citizen in the family, Ana has negotiating skills that the rest of the family does not feel comfortable executing themselves. Ana is too afraid to let her parents know her dream of going to a prestigious school, as family, in her case, must come before individual desires. As Carmen likes to say to her, “You have big dreams. Try sleeping less”. 

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