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  • Review , Stages , Theater

Review: East Texas Hot Links Is a Harrowing Tale of Jim Crow and Survival at Court Theatre

Playwright Eugene Lee’s East Texas Hot Links takes place in 1955 in the piney woods of East Texas. It was the year that Emmett Till was murdered and the Klan […]

  • Kathy D. Hey
  • September 20, 2024
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Heartache Overshadows Black Lives in Milwaukee Rep’s Seven Guitars

    Black history month may be over but, in Milwaukee, a perspective of Black lives is offered this month in August Wilson’s Seven Guitars. Milwaukee Repertory Theater, in conjunction with Cincinnati […]

  • Anne Siegel
  • March 20, 2023
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Timeline Theatre Company Gives New Life to Trouble in Mind, a Classic in Our Racist History

    I always look forward to Timeline Theatre productions because the company provides the background and history of the play in a lobby display and in the playbill. Ron OJ Parson […]

  • Kathy D. Hey
  • November 14, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Court Theatre’s Arsenic and Old Lace Serves Up a Mild Cocktail

    Joseph Kesselring’s 1941 Arsenic and Old Lace is a familiar property, frequently revived and indelibly captured on film in Frank Capra’s 1944 movie starring Cary Grant. Its popularity is well […]

  • Doug Mose
  • September 16, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Court Theatre’s Two Trains Running Cannonballs Home

    There are two ways to tell history: the Big Men, Big Events timeline that Henry Ford once called “just one damn thing after another” and a more involving, intimate option […]

  • Doug Mose
  • May 27, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Timeline Theatre’s Relentless Unburies the Past to Confront the Future

    Bakari and Ladymore are brilliant as sisters. Annelle is the dilettante who has had two marriages before finding Marcus. She revels in being a doctor’s wife as much as being […]

  • Kathy D. Hey
  • January 29, 2022
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Family, Friendships and Lives on the Line in Goodman’s Stellar Staging of Sweat

    Sweat

    If you go into a performance of Sweat, the two-act drama by Lynn Nottage on now at the Goodman Theatre, without knowing much at all about the plot or setting, […]

  • Lisa Trifone
  • March 27, 2019
    • Stages , Theater

    Review: Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, August Wilson’s Essential Chicago Masterpiece, Sings at Writers Theatre

    August Wilson famously tackled the entirety of the 20th century with his poetic works of human tragedy and mythic resilience. Wilson’s plays like to live in the same Pittsburgh neighborhood […]

  • Matthew Nerber
  • February 17, 2019
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