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Taraji P. Henson and Cedric the Entertainer |
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Ed Hall and Bo Rucker in Joe Turner's Come and Gone (1988) Credit: Joan Marcus |
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Taraji P. Henson and Cedric the Entertainer |
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Ed Hall and Bo Rucker in Joe Turner's Come and Gone (1988) Credit: Joan Marcus |
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Babak Tafti and Jodi Balfour in Lowcountry. Credit: Ahron R. Foster |
Both participants in the rendezvous are seriously damaged individuals. David (Babak Tafti, deftly conveying suppressed trauma) is a divorced father emerging into the dating world after wearing an ankle monitor for a sexual offense (the true nature of his crime is slowly revealed during the course of the date). By court order, he must attend a recovery program for sex addicts and report to a probation officer who has issues of his own (Keith Kupferer in an effective cameo). David’s date Tally (Jodi Balfour in a kinetic, jittery performance) is a hot mess returning to her hometown after stints in Los Angeles as an actress and gig worker. She’s still dealing with the death of her mother when she was a child as well as coping with her difficult father.
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Jodi Balfour and Babak Tafti in Lowcountry. Credit: Ahron R. Foster |
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Babak Tafti and Jodi Balfour in Lowcountry. Credit: Ahron R. Foster |
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Anne Washburn |
||: Girls :||: Chance :||: Music :|| by Eisa Davis (Warriors concept album) follows in a winter premiere. Tony and Drama Desk winner Pam McKinnon (Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) directs. Four gifted teenagers collaborate and collide one pivotal summer at a prestigious girls’ music program in Berkeley. As their connections intensify, the world outside thrums with a steady
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Eisa Davis |
In other news, three previously announced Broadway shows have confirmed dates and theaters.
Punch at Manhattan Theater Club's Samuel J. Friedman Theater will begin previews Sept. 9 ahead of a Sept. 29 opening.
The revival of Chess will begin previews at the Imperial Theater (where the original Broadway production ran in 1988) on Oct. 15 in advance of a Nov. 16 opening.
Robert Icke's adaptation of Oedipus starts previews at Studio 54 Oct. 30 and opens on Nov. 13.
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Julia McDermott in Weather Girl. Credit: Mihaela Bodlovic |
Justin Vivian Bond will play folk legend Marianne Faithful in Flaming September (Sept 24-28), directed by Daniel Fish (Oklahoma!).
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Michelle Williams, Mike Faist, Justin Vivian Bond |
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Aaron Monaghan and Marie Mullen in Druid's Endgame. Credit: Ros Kavagh |
Stand-up comic Jeffrey Ross will bring his solo show Take a Banana for the Road to Broadway at the Nederlander Theater, starting previews Aug. 5 and opening Aug. 18 for a limited run until Sept. 29....
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Jinx Monsoon will take over the lead in Oh, Mary! |
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Jennifer Regan, Kaliswa Brewster, and Taylor Mac in Prosperous Fools. Credit: Travis Emery Hackett |
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Sierra Boggess and Aerina Park Deboer in Prosperous Fools. Credit: Travis Emery Hackett |
The premise takes off from Moliere considerably (Charles Ludlum wrote and starred in a more faithful version in his Le Bourgeois Avant-Garde in 1983.) The original focuses on the middle-class Monsieur Jourdain who aspires to the aristocracy by taking lessons in the arts but only succeeds in making an ass of himself. In Mac’s free adaptation, the focus shifts to the Artist (played by Mac in a fine comic turn) who worries that he is selling out by allowing his world-premiere ballet on the myth of Prometheus to be financed by a contemptible boor (the bourgeois figure). This character, combing the worst self-aggrandizing traits of Elon Musk and Donald Trump, is identified in the program as $#@%$ and his name is pronounced as the sound of a game-show buzzer when a contestant delivers the wrong answer.
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Brian Bedford and Henry Goodman in Tartuffe (2003) from Roundabout Theater Company. Credit: Joan Marcus |
A satire on pious hypocrites, Tartuffe has been seen on Broadway five times, most recently in 2003 from Roundabout Theater Company. Since it was written in 1664, the play has been in the repertory of France's Comedie-Francais.
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Original cast of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Credit: Joan Marcus |
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Jean Smart in Call Me Izzy. Credit: Marc J. Franklin |
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Jean Smart in Call Me Izzy. Credit: Marc J. Franklin |
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Jean Smart in Call Me Izzy. Credit: Emilio Madrid |
Sarna Lapine’s direction flows seamlessly and is varied enough to keep this one-woman show from becoming monotonous. Mikiko Suzuki MacAdams’ suggestive sets and Donald Holder’s soft, ephemeral lighting evoke the confided environment of Izzy’s reality and the expansive spaces of her imagination.
June 12—Aug. 17. Studio 54, 254 W. 54th St., NYC. Running time: 85 mins. with no intermission. callmeizzyplay.com.
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Patti LuPone and Kurt Petersen in The Baker's Wife (1976) |
The cult-status tuner was the last show presented by legendary producer David Merrick. It played out-of-town in Los Angeles and Washington, DC in 1976. Topol and Carol Demas started the tour as the leads and were eventually replaced by Paul Sorvino and a pre-Evita Patti LuPone. But the show closed out of town. LuPone's rendition of the song "Meadowlark" became a favorite of musical theater fans and a standard choice for auditions. A 1989 London production had a brief run, and was nominated for an Olivier Award for Best Musical.
In February 2026, CSC will present the World Premiere of Marcel on the Train, co-written by Tony Award nominee Ethan Slater (Spongebob Squarepants, Wicked) & Marshall Pailet (Who’s Your Baghdaddy, Private Jones), directed by Pailet, and starring Slater as legendary mime artist “Marcel Marceau.” The play chronicles Marceau's days as a young man in Nazi-occupied France, guiding Jewish children to safety.
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Marcel Marceau |
CSC’s season will conclude in May 2026 with the New York Premiere of master American dramatist Thornton Wilder’s final play, The Emporium, adapted and completed by Kirk Lynn (Lipstick Traces) and directed by Rob Melrose (Born with Teeth).
“Launched in 1947 amid a storm of rising acclaim and honorable artistic duties and distractions here and abroad, Thornton Wilder (who appeared on the cover of Time in January 1953) struggled unsuccessfully for a decade to complete a major new drama. Thanks to enticing and regular press coverage, its title was known far and wide: The Emporium,” said Tappan Wilder, nephew to Thornton Wilder.
“The Wilder family can’t be too grateful to Kirk Lynn for exploring the known published and little-known vast unpublished archival record of this work, grounded in Wilder’s passionate post-WWII encounter with existentialism, and then agreeing to complete a play exploring the loneliness of the American experience in all its humor, sadness, hope--and freedom. With a deep bow of thanks to Classic Stage Company, it is no small benefit of this unusual artistic collaboration across the decades that it celebrates the life, times and creativity of two distinguished artists, then and now.”
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Cynthia Erivo closes the Tonys. Producers of Maybe Happy Ending in the background. |
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Lisa Emery and Reed Birney in Lunar Eclipse. Credit: Joan Marcus |
Em attempts to lighten the mood, but, after a couple of shots of bourbon, she lets her smiley-face mask slip and reveals a long-term sadness, largely over the death of their adopted son Tim from a drug overdose. (We eventually learn Tim’s birth mother was an addict.) Margulies subtly reveals the couple’s inner conflicts through realistic details such as the fate of a telescope and attempts to bring failing crops to fruition.
At times, his language is bit too writerly and on-the-nose as when Em compares her melancholy to an eclipse or when George contrasts his blighted efforts at connecting with Tim with raising a non-productive batch of sugar beets. But this is a minor flaw in an otherwise endearing and heartbreaking play with a physically beautiful production under Kate Whoriskey’s sensitive, nearly invisible direction and a pair of veterans actors bringing two everyday people to vibrant life.
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John Cazale and Al Pacino in Dog Day Afternoon. |
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Noah Bean and Lois Smith in Playwrights Horizons' production of Marjorie Prime (2015). Credit: Jeremy Daniel |
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Emily Bergl and David Wilson Barnes in Second Stage's production of Becky Shaw (2008). |
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Jayne Houdyshell in The Receptionist at MTC (2007) Credit: Joan Marcus |
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Will Burton, Megan McGinnis, Madison Mosley, and Justine Collette in the tour of Beetlejuice. Credit: Matthew Murphy |
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In front of the Celebrity Silhouette in Bermuda. |
Day 1
My brother Jonathan drove us to Port Liberty in Bayonne, NJ (He lives in Delaware and drove up.) We got on the Celebrity Silhouette and watched the Statue of Liberty drift by. There was a LGBTQ passengers' get-together and we met several other gay travelers (I remember on my first cruise they called such meetings Friends of Dorothy so as not to upset the straights.) There was an "adult" comic who told sexually-oriented jokes. Mildly funny. She dressed in an orange housedress and sneakers. Her big claim to fame was she did a robot dance in front of Simon Cowell at a restaurant and it wound up in the National Enquirer when he gave her a thumbs-down.
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Carole Landis, Robert Cummings, Jack Haley, Betty Grable and Don Ameche in Moon Over Miami (1941) |
Day 2
Dinner at LePetit Chef at LaQuisine. The gimmick here is they show an animation on your plate related to each dish. A little cartoon chef explains the influences and ingredients. For dessert they had dancing strawberries. It was cute. We also played Trivia (cheap prizes) and attended a presentation on future cruises.
Lincoln Center Theater has announced more productions for its 2025-26 season, the first under the leadership of new artistic director Lear deBonesset. In addition to the previously announced Ragtime at the Vivian Beaumont, the Off-Broadway Mitzi Newhouse will feature Kyoto from London, Gian-Carlo Mennotti's Christmas opera Amahl and the Night Visitors, and The Whoopi Monologues, a revival of Whoopi Goldberg's 1984 solo show with five actresses playing the roles Goldberg originally wrote for herself.
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A scene from the London production of Kyoto. Credit: Manuel Hardin |
Amahl and the Night Visitors, commissioned by NBC in 1951 and first presented on TV in 1951 as the debut production of the Hallmark Hall of Fame, will play a holiday engagement Dec. 16-Jan. 4, 2026 (Dec. 18 opening) with Tony winner Kenny Leon directing. Opera star Joyce Di Donato will star in this co-production with the Metropolitan Opera. The plot centers on the visit of the Magi to a poor boy's home on their way to Bethlehem.
The Whoopi Monologues will star Kerry Washington and Tony and Drama Desk winner Kara Young and three additional actresses TBA. Whitney White (Liberation, The Last Five Years) will direct. Previews begin July 6 and the show opens July 16.
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(Top) A scene from the 1956 NBC broadcast of Amahl and the Night Visitors; (above) Whoopi Goldberg in Whoopi, the 2004 revised version of her one-woman show Credit: Joan Marcus |
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Titus Burgess and Debra Messing hosted the Drama Desk Awards. |
Presenters included Lily Rabe, Jeremy Jordan, Jonathan Groff, Gracie Lawrence, Jennifer Simard, Jinx Monsoon, Michael Urie, Ryan Spahn, Tom Francis, Sarah Hyland, Julia Knitel, Jeb Brown, Andrew Durand, Adam Pascal, Will Swenson, Nicole Scherzinger, Alex Newell, Darren Criss, Branden Victor Dixon, Victoria Clark, and Bebe Neuwirth. Nominee Lesli Margherita of Gypsy opened the show with a parody of "Sit Down You're Rockin' the Boat" from Guys and Dolls with four chorus boys called "Sit Down We're Startin' the Show." Steve Rosen and David Rossmer wrote the show and Lorin Latarro directed. Additional entertainment was provided by musical numbers from Joshua Henry, Norm Lewis, and Thom Sesna of Dead Outlaw, last year's winner for Outstanding Musical. A satiric video mocked immersive theater with humorous images such as a performance of Damn Yankees during a baseball game and Hadestown in the rest room at Ellen's Stralight Diner.
Celia Keenan-Bolger delivered a touching speech when accepting the Harold Prince Award for the late Gavin Creel. She related how she and Creel attended a party at Prince's apartment when they were roommates just starting out. By the end of the soiree, Creel had introduced Keenan-Bolger to everyone and his infectious spirit captivated the room full of their theater idols. She said the awards ceremony was like a party Gavin was giving where everyone in the theater community was supporting and celebrating each other.
The ceremony ran a little over three hours and was followed by a reception on Skirball's tenth floor. (Repeating a gag from last year, the hosts threw Halloween candy to the audience half-way through the show to keep their energy up.) While riding up in the elevator, Norm Lewis serenaded us with "I've Got Rhythm." I chatted with winner Gerard Alessandrini who recalled winning his first Drama Desk Award for the first Forbidden Broadway revue (A special award.) Chita Rivera hosted at Rainbow and Stars. He was sitting at a table with Charles Ludlum and Rex Harrison and Claudette Colbert, then co-starring in Aren't We All were sitting at the next table.
A complete list of DD winners follows: