by Geoff Hoff~
Usually, the term “reliving your glory days” refers to men who are approaching or have reached middle age, reliving the triumphs they had as athletes in high school, triumphs they haven’t been able to recreate in a life outside that insular environment. In the musical Glory Days, now playing in it’s West [...]
March 26, 2011 | Posted in
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by Joel Elkins
Why is “quaint” almost always used in the past tense? Does history have a tendency to homogenize and trivialize events the farther back they occurred? If so, what would it feel like now to know that in a few generations, our world will be considered “quaint” and all [...]
February 23, 2011 | Posted in
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By Freddy Puza~
Friends. Work. Family. No matter the social dynamic, everybody somehow plays a role in the perpetual grab for power at some time or another. We either defend it, fight to get it or merely try to steer clear of it. The play, Topdog/Underdog, by Suzan Lori-Parks, tells the story of two brothers, Lincoln [...]
August 12, 2010 | Posted in
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by David Jette
Now running at the Lillian Theatre in Hollywood is Elephant Theatre Company’s world premiere of Block Nine, a same-sex noir by writer Tom Stanczyk. The play is performed by two alternating casts, one all male and the other all female, each with its own director and approach to the text. I [...]
August 27, 2009 | Posted in
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