I Love A Piano
A review of the hits and lesser lights of the Irving Berlin canon on stage for your entertainment.
A review of the hits and lesser lights of the Irving Berlin canon on stage for your entertainment.
A play within a play about a play that’s got plenty of drama inside its own drama.
A woman discovers the truth about here dead sister through the magic of D&D.
Goddess (Modular Fields). Review by Carl F Gauze.
A powerful musical about race opens the newly renovated Theater West End in Sanford.
The residents of impoverished Washington heights live, love, and struggle to get ahead in the middle of a blistering summer.
Local starlet Natalie Cordone makes her 9th cabaret appearance, beating out longtime rival Kevin Kelly.
Cartoon movie characters do what they do best: find love and acceptance and their true meaning complete with elaborate anthropomorphism.
A petty criminal tries to serve his sentence on the mental ward and gets a lobotomy for his trouble.
The authorized biography of the great southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd from its founding in Jacksonville, FL to their tragic plane crash in Missippi.
When vaudeville died, a new form of dancing gives hope to those who can’t make it on the radio.
Should he date the boy or the girl? Why not both? We’ll tell you why in this musical of confused feelings.
Life and love unfold at a roadside hotel packed with charm and subtext.
A woman sets out to fact check her new boyfriend and ends up with more facts than she intended.
A young ne’er-do-well meets a magical guitar that cleans him up and takes him far.
Perhaps its the cold, perhaps it’s the poverty, perhaps it’s all just magic, but this tale of a young boy in love with horses is as heartwarming as you could hope for.
Opera and traditional Spanish music underscore a romantic new musical still in work.
A fantasy about living and working in Barbara Streisand’s basement to make her happy.
No Sounds Are Out of Bounds (Cooking Vinyl). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Turns out there really IS a school shooter section in Hell.
John Badham’s 1983 future-tech helicopter thriller, Blue Thunder, with its cautionary tale of militarized police and a surveillance state, still resonates decades later.
What if the miracle of sight came with a curse? The Eye builds its horror from that chilling premise.
With the thirty-fifth anniversary of debut album Whirlpool, UK shoegaze outfit Chapterhouse is back together again and touring the US as part of Slide Away Music Festival.
The Englert theater hosted Little Feat as they embark on their Last Farewell Tour.