Posts Tagged ‘reviews’

Noel and Gertie — November 13 – December 14, 2003 — Potomac Stages

Sunday, December 14th, 2003
Noel and Gertie

Those who know that the names in the title could only be Noel Coward and Gertrude Lawrence will enjoy this bio-revue of sketches and songs by the team that gave New York’s Broadway and London’s West End a touch of class between the 1920s and the 1950s. (more…)

Rough Crossing — September 18 – October 26, 2003 — Potomac Stages

Thursday, October 30th, 2003
Rough Crossing

Rough Crossing offers smooth sailing for lovers of farcical comedy. It is yet another of the wave of comedies, most with a decidedly back-stage feel, now being offered on local stages. At Signature show folk cavort on a train. At Arena they frolic on a sound stage. Now at MetroStage they spar, finagle and conspire on an ocean liner. (more…)

‘Rough Crossing’ Fun Farce for Fall — Washington Post, Sep 25, 2003 — Michael Toscano

Thursday, September 25th, 2003
‘Rough Crossing’ Fun Farce for Fall

This fall must be the “Fall of Farce,” as three major theater companies open their seasons with screwball comedies centered on outsized showbiz egos clashing during the gilded 1930s. Maybe that makes it the “Rise of Farce,” although some of the farce seems forced. Alexandria’s MetroStage has the latest entry in the farce- off, “Rough Crossing,” and it is the best of the three. (more…)

Sidney Bechet Killed A Man — February 26 – April 6, 2003 — Potomac Stages

Sunday, April 6th, 2003
Sidney Bechet Killed A Man

When Nancy Robillard’s visually striking and consistently intriguing production of Stuart Flack’s intellectually challenging play ends, it comes as a surprise that less than two hours have elapsed. Sometimes time having stretched out is a bad sign for “time flies when you are having fun.” In this case, however, it is a good thing. The less-than-two-hours seem much longer not because you are bored, but because you are captured, forced to concentrate and contemplate the material before you. (more…)

“Three Tall Women” One Major Success –The Herald, March 7, 2002–Charlie McMeekin

Thursday, March 7th, 2002
“Three Tall Women” One Major Success

Somewhere in each of us lives an observer, who watches us and remarks on our progress through life. We know we’re aging as our hair thins, our eyesight dims, and our memory begins to spark like a loose wire, and that quiet voice reminds us that we’re moving ultimately toward a mysterious and somewhat frightening end.

Most of us shut out that voice, buy a red sports car, comb hair over our sparse spot, and pursue a variety of avenues to retain youth. Edward Albee’s Pulitzer prize winning “Three Tall Women” is that voice we try to drown out, and watching Northern Stage’s current production pricks us to think without taking us into catharsis. (more…)