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Checking into "Six Hotels"

Stage

Checking into "Six Hotels"

"What's your deal?" one wounded character asks another in Israel Horovitz's Six Hotels, currently making its West Coast premiere at Harlequin Productions in Olympia.  It's an apt tag line for Six Hotels, a disparate collection of one-act plays.  If this anthology has any single uniting theme, it's the exposure of

Apples and orphanages

Stage

Apples and orphanages

They say you shouldn't compare apples and oranges. Why not? They're both round, they're both fruit - let's face it, they have more in common than not.  I suggest we change this illogical proverb to "Don't compare apples and orphanages," two things that really have nothing in common. Food for

Through May 9: "Inherit the Wind"

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Through May 9: "Inherit the Wind"

Director Pug Bujeaud stages a riveting revival of Inherit the Wind in the wonderfully intimate Evergreen Playhouse (no relation).  It's one thing to assess this spin on the "Scopes monkey trial" through a distant proscenium; it's another to be right in the middle of the courtroom as bombastic Matthew

Through May 8" "Little Shop of Horrors"

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Through May 8" "Little Shop of Horrors"

Riot to Follow, a student group at The Evergreen State College, is offering a free production of the beloved Ashman/Menken musical Little Shop of Horrors.  If you know the movie or the WPA production it adapted, then this incarnation will come as a surprise.  At first you might even

On a more positive note ...

Stage

On a more positive note ...

"You take yourself far too seriously ..."  "You seem to have a personal vendetta ..."  "judgemental [sic] and unhappy ..."  "usually negative in tone and often times [sic] downright mean ..."  "cranky and nasty ..."  "mean people suck ..." Gosh, what did Joann Varnell do to earn those character assassinations? Did

Through May 15: "The Brain from Planet X"

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Through May 15: "The Brain from Planet X"

It took Susan Sontag over six thousand words to describe "camp," so I probably shouldn't even try.  She viewed it as a "disengaged, depoliticized" aesthetic "sensibility" skewed toward "artifice and exaggeration," with a "spirit of extravagance" and "glorification of [exaggerated] ‘character.'"  Even in 1964, she recognized that homosexuals "constitute

Space camp

Stage

Space camp

It took Susan Sontag over six thousand words to describe "camp," so I probably shouldn't even try.  She viewed it as a "disengaged, depoliticized" aesthetic "sensibility" skewed toward "artifice and exaggeration," with a "spirit of extravagance" and "glorification of [exaggerated] ‘character.'"  Even in 1964, she recognized that homosexuals "constitute

Reassurance of "Being Earnest"

Stage

Reassurance of "Being Earnest"

I first saw Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest from the wings:  I played Lane the butler 20 years ago in one of my first polished productions, so of course I had to smile as I watched director Mike Wilkinson's version at Paradise Theatre in Gig Harbor. The Paradise,

Shakespeare-a-Thon

Stage

Shakespeare-a-Thon

It's a tribute to the dedication of Shakespeare in the Parking Lot that it was able to compile eight adaptations of the Bard's history plays with the same troupe in only a few months, in and around Tacoma's Speakeasy Arts Cooperative. It's an even bigger compliment to the writing

Through May 9: "The Importance of Being Earnest"

We Recommend

Through May 9: "The Importance of Being Earnest"

I first saw Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest from the wings:  I played Lane the butler 20 years ago in one of my first polished productions, so of course I had to smile as I watched director Mike Wilkinson's version at Paradise Theatre in Gig Harbor. The

Through May 2: "Murder on the Nile"

We Recommend

Through May 2: "Murder on the Nile"

OLT is on a three-play talent roll. The trained eye finds professional acumen in Murder on the Nile: Terence Artz did a fine job of blocking in a difficult space, and the show is entirely of a tone. Allison Gerst's costumes are as spot-on as any in the more

Murder on the cheap

Stage

Murder on the cheap

What is community theater, and exactly what is it supposed to accomplish? Can it offer professional quality, or should we resign ourselves to watching Joe the Pharmacist and Mary the Bank Teller stumble through A Streetcar Named Desire?  In other words, should it be entry level for adorably inept actors

Olympia Family Theater's "Jungalbook"

Stage

Olympia Family Theater's "Jungalbook"

In 1893, when Rudyard Kipling wrote his first Mowgli the "man cub" story, his work was shaped by a dozen years on the Indian subcontinent, but also by a warm view of English imperialism.  Sociopolitical relics aside, the two Jungle Book anthologies remain popular with schoolchildren; indeed, the Mowgli narrative

Through April 3: "Rent"

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Through April 3: "Rent"

Much to my surprise, Rent won me over in a way even the 2005 movie version, which featured most of the original cast members, could not. It's not that director Stephen Nachamie's version is any better produced, frankly, though in general it holds up fine.  Mike Spee is perfect as

"Rent" reexamined

Stage

"Rent" reexamined

Despite my oft-noted vocabulary, I can't think of a word for ... What do you call a feeling of nostalgia for something you hated when it actually happened? The first time I saw Rent was in Los Angeles.  Neil Patrick Harris played Mark the documentarian; Wilson Cruz played Angel the lovable

Through April 3: "Rabbit Hole"

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Through April 3: "Rabbit Hole"

In his notes for Harlequin's production of Rabbit Hole, director Brian Tyrrell mentions his fondness for "well written plays."  His phrasing leaped out at me - not just because playwright David Lindsay-Abaire is good at his job, which he clearly is, but because it echoes a phrase from my

Harlequin's "Rabbit Hole"

Stage

Harlequin's "Rabbit Hole"

In his notes for Harlequin's production of Rabbit Hole, director Brian Tyrrell mentions his fondness for "well written plays."  His phrasing leaped out at me - not just because playwright David Lindsay-Abaire is good at his job, which he clearly is, but because it echoes a phrase from my theater

Stage

A mess of plays

Much of New Jersey playwright's Christopher Durang's work can be described as "the comedy of disorientation."  Much like the comedy of social awkwardness popularized in the U.S. by the British version of The Office, Durang's writing requires exquisite precision in tone and pacing or it falls apart completely.  The audience

Fellows of infinite jest

Stage

Fellows of infinite jest

Film critics are, most importantly, consumer advocates:  You only have so much entertainment cash, so spend it on this movie, not on that one.  Theatre critics attempt to fill the same role, but we know it's only useful to a point.  That's because theatre is gloriously inconsistent.  What flopped opening

Through March 14: "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)"

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Through March 14: "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)"

Film critics are, most importantly, consumer advocates:  You only have so much entertainment cash, so spend it on this movie, not on that one.  Theatre critics attempt to fill the same role, but we know it's only useful to a point.  That's because theatre is gloriously inconsistent.  What flopped opening

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