Uncategorized - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/category/uncategorized/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Tue, 21 Feb 2023 21:27:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Best Bets Still Available – May 2nd https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/02/best-bets-still-available-april-26th/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/02/best-bets-still-available-april-26th/#respond Mon, 02 May 2022 10:58:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16250 The May 2nd list of previous Best Bets that are still available to you.

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Many of our Best Bets from previous weeks are still running. Here’s the May 2nd list of shows/performances that you can still see.

for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf – Booth Theatre – New York – Now through May 22nd

Ntozake Shange’s “choreopoem” first opened on Broadway in 1976 and ran for 742 performances and also earned a Tony Award nomination as Best Play. 7 Black women, nameless but identified by the color of the clothes they wear, explore their lives and experiences through poetry that has been choreographed to music.

Camille A. Brown makes her directorial debut with this revival. She recently co-directed and choreographed Terence Blanchard’s opera Fire Shut Up In My Bones at the Met. The ensemble of women appearing in the show are Amara Granderson, Tendayi Kuumba, Kenita R. Miller, Okwui Okpokwasili, Stacey Sargean, Alexandria Wailes and D. Woods

For tickets and more information please go here.

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? – Geffen Playhouse – Los Angeles  – Now – May 29th

Edward Albee’s Tony Award and Pultizer Prize-winning 1962 play about marriage as seen through the eyes of a hard-drinking and embittered middle-aged couple  and a younger couple with mixed motivations for being their guests after a faculty party gets a new production in Los Angeles.

Zachary Quinto and Calista Flockhart play George and Martha – the older couple. Nick and Honey, the younger couple, are played by Graham Phillips and Aimee Carrero. Gordon Greenberg directs.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

James Jackson, Jr., Jason Veasey, John-Michael Lyles, Jaquel Spivey, L. Morgan Lee, John-Andrew Morrison, Antwan Hopper in “A Strange Loop” (Photo by Marc J. Franklin)

A Strange Loop – Lyceum Theatre New York – Now playing

The 2020 Pulitzer Prize for drama went to Michael R. Jackson’s musical A Strange Loop. It’s an aptly named meta-musical about a gay Black man who’s writing a musical about a gay Black man.  Reviews were through the roof when it ran off-Broadway.

Last week’s reviews were even stronger for the Broadway production. This is going to be a very hot ticket this season and quite possibly the musical to beat for the Tony Awards.

Stephen Brackett directs A Strange Loop. The ensemble features Antwayn Hopper, L Morgan Lee, John-Mihael Lyles, James Jackson, Jr., John-Andrew Morrison, Jaquel Spivey and Jason Veasey.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

An Evening with Fran Lebowitz – Multiple Venues – April 28th – May 6th

It probably surprises no one more than Fran Lebowitz that after the Netflix series Pretend It’s A City debuted she would be a hot ticket around the world. But here she is participating in conversations – exactly what she did with Martin Scorsese in that series.

April 28th – May 1st will find her at The Broad Stage in Santa Monica. On  May 2nd she’ll be at the Balboa Theatre in San Diego. On May 5th she’ll be at Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto and on May 6th she’s at St. Jean Baptiste Church in Montreal. A European tour launches in late June.

For tickets and more information, click on each venue’s name.

Myles Frost and the company of “MJ The Musical” (Photo by Matthew Murphy)

MJ The Musical – Neil Simon Theatre NY – Now – September 4th

It was, of course, inevitable that there would be a jukebox musical showcasing the countless hit songs by Michael Jackson. What may set this musical apart from failed attempts to use songs by The Beach Boys, Cher John Lennon and more is that the book is by two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynn Nottage and the show is directed and choreographed by Christopher  Wheeldon.

Myles Frost makes his Broadway debut as MJ. Walter Russell III (so good in Fire Shut Up in My Bones at the  Metropolitan  Opera) and Christian Wilson alternate performances as Little Michael. Interestingly Tavon Olds-Sample is listed as playing “Michael” in the show. 

Will this musical be a Thriller or will audiences tell this show to Beat It? Either way it’s bound to be interesting.

For tickets and more details, please go here.

American Ballet Theatre on Tour – Now – May 15th

ABT is on tour with two different programs. Opening this week at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa is ABT Forward. Leonard Bernstein is celebrated in Bernstein in a Bubble; Alonzo King premiere’s Single Eye with music by Jason Moran and Tony Bennett is front and center in Zig Zag. This same program will be performed at the Kennedy Center March 29th and March 30th.

Don Quixote is on the program for performances at Chrysler Hall in Norfolk, VA; the Kennedy Center and the Mahalia Jackson Theatre in New Orleans.

For tickets and more information click on each venue’s names.

Jesse Williams and Patrick J. Adams in “Take Me Out” (Photo by Joan Marcus)

Take Me Out – Hayes Theater New York – Now – October 2nd

Richard Greenberg’s 2003 play Take Me Out won the Tony Award for Best Play. It tells the story of a professional baseball player (Jesse Williams) who comes out as gay. His doing so reveals a lot about his teammates and their prejudices about his sexuality and his race.

Also appearing in the play are Patrick J. Adams and Jesse Tyler Ferguson. This is a very adult show that features a nude shower scene with most of the cast. So few professional athletes on major teams have come out in the 19 years since this play was first performed on Broadway. That means Take Me Out is just as topical today as it was then.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Plaza Suite – Hudson Theatre (NYC) – March 28th – June 26th

Neil Simon’s comedy about relationships and marriage opened on Broadway on February 14, 1968. The show ran for 1,097 performances and featured George C. Scott and Maureen Stapleton as three separate couples who all visit the Plaza Hotel in New York at different times. 

This first-ever revival of the play stars Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker. John Benjamin Hickey (Tony Award-winner for his performance in The Normal Heart) directs. Danny Bolero, Molly Ranson and Eric Wiegand round out the ensemble.

This limited engagement is scheduled to close on June 26th.

For more information, please go here.

(Photo by Joan Marcus)

Cyrano – Brooklyn Academy of Musc – April 5th – May 22nd

The recent Joe Wright film of Edmond Rostand’s play presented a variation from tradition in telling the story of the man with a large nose who falls in love with Roxanne. Get ready for an even more radical approach.

James McAvoy stars in this new version by Martin Crimp. Gone after the period costumes and pleasantries. This Cyrano is more interested in the love of language than in unrequited love.  Modern clothes, hand mics and stand mics are the tools at the cast’s disposal.

Directed by Jamie Lloyd, this production earned the Olivier Award for Best Revival.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater –multiple venues –  April 6th – May 8th

For over 60 years the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater has celebrated what it is to be an African American through innovative dances that utilize a wide array of musical styles. 

They are on tour to celebrate the 10th Anniversary of Artistic Director Robert Battle. Amongst the pieces on the program are 2004’s MassElla from 2008 and For Four from 2021. Also on the program is Revelations created by Ailey in 1960.

This tour takes them to the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles (April 6-10); The Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara (April 13th and 14th); Marcus Performing Arts Center in Milwaukee on April 20th; KeyBank State Theatre in Cleveland (April 22nd – 24th); The University of Massachusetts on April 26th; Boston’s Boch Center Wang Theatre (April 28th– May 1st); University of North Carolina (May 3rd and 4th) and concludes at Prudential Hall in Newark (May 6th – 8th). Click on each venue’s name for more information and tickets.

Sheku & Isata Kanneh-Mason Tour – April 19th – May 8th

Pianist Isata Kanneh-Mason and her brother, cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason, launch a recital tour on April 19th at Campbell Hall in Santa Barbara. The core repertoire finds the duo performing works by Frank Bridge, Benjamin Britten, Karem Khachaturian and Dmitri Shostakovich. The Khachaturian is replaced by a work by Beethoven at a few concerts.

The tour takes them to Los Angeles; Costa Mesa; La Jolla; San Francisco; Ann Arbor; Princeton; Kansas City, MO; Baltimore; New YorkTorontoBoston and Atlanta.

For tickets and more information, click on the name of the city above.

Beanie Feldstein in “Funny Girl” (Photo by Matthew Murphy)

Funny Girl – August Wilson Theatre – Now playing

It’s been 58 years since the musical Funny Girl opened on Broadway and turned Barbra Streisand into one of the world’s greatest stars. Since then producers have long considered a revival, but let’s face it, those are big shoes to fill.

Enter Beanie Feldstein who is tackling the role of Fanny Brice. Like Streisand, Feldstein has only played a supporting role in one musical before this one (Hello, Dolly!). Joining her are Ramin Karimloo as love-interest Nick Arnstein and Jane Lynch as Mrs. Brice. Michael Mayer directs the show which has a revised script by Harvey Fierstein.

People, people who need tickets and more information should go here.

Top Album Choices

Jeremy Pelt: Soundtrack

Jazz composer and trumpeter Jeremy Pelt releases his new album this week. It features 10-tracks with Vicente Archer on acoustic & electric bass; Victor Gould on piano; Chien Chien Lu on vibraophone; and Fender Rhodes and Allan Mednard on drums. Anne Drummond plays flute on two tracks and Brittany Anjouy plays Mellotron on two track.

Pelt is a terrific musician and his previous two albums, The Art of Intimacy Vol. 1 and Griot: This Is Important!revealed an incredible range and are essential listening.

Spencer Day: Broadway by Day 

These two albums couldn’t be more different, but both are immensely satisfying works. Vocalist/songwriter Spencer Day offers his interpretations of songs from some of Broadway’s greatest musicals including A Chorus LineFolliesMy Fair Lady and South Pacific on Broadway By Day. His unique stylings provided a new way of hearing these classic songs.

Gerald Clayton: Bells on Sand

Composer/pianist Gerald Clayton’s new album is one we’ve been listening to for over a month. It’s a quiet and gentle album that is filled with inventive music that requires your concentration. That commitment will be deeply rewarded with an inner-peace that Bells on Sand brings to your ears.

Main Photo: Stacey Sergeant, Amara Grandson, Okwui Okpokwasilli, Tendayi Kuumba, Kenita R. Miller, D. Woods and Alexandria Walles in for colored girls who considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf (Photo by Marc. J. Franklin)

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Family Drama: Week 37 at the Met https://culturalattache.co/2020/11/23/family-drama-week-37-at-the-met/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/11/23/family-drama-week-37-at-the-met/#respond Mon, 23 Nov 2020 08:01:31 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=11867 Metropolitan Opera Website

November 23rd - November 29th

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It’s Thanksgiving week and the Metropolitan Opera has opted for operas that depict family drama. That’s appropriate isn’t it? Week 37 at the Met offerings up the kind of dramas no one wants in their own lives, but we all love to watch.

Amongst the highlights this week are Nina Stemme giving the performance of a lifetime, one of Nico Muhly‘s operas (which features a stunning performance by Isabel Leonard) and a seldom-seen opera based on one of Shakespeare’s most famous plays.

Each production becomes available at 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT on the Metropolitan Opera website. Every opera remains available for 23 hours. They are heavily promoting their Met Stars Live in Concert series and recently announced the cancellation of the full 2020-2021 season, so you’ll have to go past those announcements and promos to find the streaming productions. Schedules and timings may be subject to change.

If you read this column early enough on November 23rd, you might still have time to catch the 2019-2020 season production of Wozzeck by Alban Berg that concludes last week’s operas conducted by Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin.

Here is the full line-up for Week 37 at the Met.

Monday, November 23 – Verdi’s Il Trovatore 

Conducted by Marco Armiliato; starring Sondra Radvanovsky, Dolora Zajick, Marcelo Álvarez and Dmitri Hvorostovsky. This revival of the 2009 David McVicar production is from the 2010-2011 season. This is an encore presentation of the production that was made available July 30th.

Giuseppe Verdi’s Il Trovatore is based on the play El trovador by Antonio García Gutiérrez published in 1836. The libretto was written by Salvadore Cammarano with additions by Leone Emanuele Badare. The opera had its world premiere in Rome in 1853.

The setting is Zaragoza, the capital of the Kingdom of Aragon, circa 1412. To offer up a quick synopsis here would be a fool’s game to play. Several stories happen simultaneously and sometimes share the same characters. The opera has rarely been hailed for its story, but it certainly ranks as one of Verdi’s finest compositions.

If you think I was a bit unfair about the plot in Il Trovatore, let me share with you what Zachary Woolfe said at the start of his review of this production in the New York Times:

“With its cackling Gypsies, mistaken identities and secret brothers, the convoluted plot of Verdi’s Trovatore can seem like the setup for a joke. Already verging on chaos, it makes a natural backdrop for the anarchic final scene of the Marx Brothers’ Night at the Opera.

Il Trovatore overcomes its absurdities, though, with its vitality, its irresistible melodies and tightly driven rhythms.” 

Tuesday, November 24 – Nico Muhly’s Marnie

Conducted by Roberto Spano; starring Isabel Leonard, Iestyn Davies and Christopher Maltman. This Michael Mayer production is from the 2018-2019 season. This is an encore presentation of the production that was made available on April 30th.

Muhly’s opera, with a libretto by Nicholas Wright, had its world premiere at the English National Opera in 2017. The opera is based on Winston Graham’s 1961 novel.

If the title, Marnie, sounds familiar, this is based on the same novel by Winston Graham that inspired Alfred Hitchcock’s 1964 film. The title character is a woman who steals from people, changes her identity and quickly moves on to other victims. Until an employer catches her and blackmails her.

Anthony Tommasini, in his review for the New York Times, said of the opera, “Marnie benefits from the director Michael Mayer’s sleek and fluid staging, with inventive sets and projections designed by Julian Crouch and 59 Productions. (It was first seen last year in London for the work’s premiere at the English National Opera.) Scenery changes are deftly rendered through sliding and descending panels on which evocative images are projected.

“Mr. Muhly’s music could not have had a better advocate than the conductor Robert Spano, making an absurdly belated Met debut at 57. He highlighted intriguing details, brought out myriad colorings, kept the pacing sure and never covered the singers. “

Wednesday, November 25 – Thomas’s Hamlet

Conducted by Louis Langrée, starring Marlis Petersen, Jennifer Larmore, Simon Keenlyside and James Morris. This Patrice Caurier and Moshe Leiser production is from the 2009-2010 season. This is an encore presentation of the production that was made available on May 5th.

Ambroise Thomas collaborated with librettists Michel Carré and Jules Barbier for this opera. Shakespeare’s play obviously is the inspiration, but they based their libretto on a French adaptation by Alexandre Dumas and Paul Meurice. Hamlet had its world premiere in Paris in 1868.

French composer Charles Louis Ambroise Thomas is not the best known of opera composers. Over a two-year period he wrote the two operas for which he’s best known: Mignon and Hamlet.

Hamlet, the Prince of Denmark, believes his Uncle Claudius and his mother, Gertrude, were involved in his father’s sudden death. As Claudius ascends the throne, Hamlet is visited by the ghost of his father asking Hamlet to avenge his murder. This becomes Hamlet’s sole purpose at the expense of other responsibilities. Amongst those responsibilities is his relationship with Ophelia who, convinced these distractions mean Hamlet doesn’t lover her, descends into madness. Will the Prince be able to do as his father’s ghost requests and what will be the price if he does?

Anthony Tommasini, in his New York Times review, raved about Keenlyside in the title role. “The opera is also a star vehicle for the right baritone in this punishing title role. Simon Keenlyside, the Ralph Fiennes of baritones, was the acclaimed Hamlet when this production was introduced, and he dominated the evening here. His singing was an uncanny amalgam, at once elegant and wrenching, intelligent and fitful. Handsome, haunted and prone to fidgety spasms that convey Hamlet’s seething anger and paralyzing indecision, Mr. Keenlyside embodied the character in every moment, and you could not take your eyes off him.”

Thursday, November 26 – Strauss’s Elektra

Conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen; starring Nina Stemme, Adrianne Pieczonka, Waltraud Meier, Burkhard Ulrich and Eric Owens. This Patrice Chéreau production is from the 2015-2016 season. This is an encore presentation of the production that was made available on April 20th and August 31st.

Richard Strauss’s Elektra had its world premiere in Dresden in 1909. The libretto was written by Hugo von Hofmannsthal and was based on his 1903 drama of the same name.

For a one-act opera, Elektra has a tangled web of intrigue at its core. Simply put, Elektra is enraged by the murder of her father, King Agamemnon. Elektra’s mother, Klytämnestra, convinced her lover, Aegisth, to kill her husband. Once Elektra finds out, she is out for nothing short of total revenge and enlists her brother, Orest, to kill their mother.

When Elektra was first presented, critics were deeply divided. Perhaps none more so than Ernest Newman, then London’s most important former music critic and playwright George Bernard Shaw. Newman found the opera abhorrent. Shaw fiercely defended it. Their argument about the merits of Strauss’s opera were published in a series of letters in The Nation.

Of this production, The New York Times‘ Anthony Tommasini said, “…nothing prepared me for the seething intensity, psychological insight and sheer theatrical inventiveness of this production on Thursday night, conducted by the brilliant Esa-Pekka Salonen, Mr. Chéreau’s partner in this venture from the start. A superb cast is headed by the smoldering soprano Nina Stemme in the title role.”

Friday, November 27 – Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor

Conducted by Patrick Summers; starring Natalie Dessay, Joseph Calleja, Ludovic Tézier and Kwangchul Youn. This revival of the 2007 Mary Zimmerman production is from the 2010-2011 season. This is an encore presentation of the production that was made available on July 27th.

Sir Walter Scott’s novel The Bride of Lammermoor was the inspiration for Gaetano Donizetti’s opera, Lucia di Lammermoor. Salvadore Cammarano, who collaborated with the composer on seven operas, wrote this libretto. This opera had its world premiere in Naples in 1835.

The opera, set in Scotland in the early 18th century, is a truly tragic love story. Lucia and Edgardo are secretly in love. They keep their love a secret as they are from opposing families. Her brother keeps them from getting married by lying to Lucia about Edgardo having married another woman. So deep is her despair that she turns to murder and ultimately devolves into madness.

When this production was first presented in 2007, Dessay also sang the title role. Zachary Woolfe, writing for the New York Times felt this return of the production after seven years allowed the men to shine.

“The manipulative brother Enrico, sung richly and acted with laconic ruefulness by Ludovic Tézier, seems almost reasonable in his heartless demands. Kwangchul Youn had burnished tone and great dignity as the well-meaning chaplain Raimondo. Even Arturo, the arranged husband Lucia murders, was charming as sung by the young tenor Matthew Plenk.

“And Joseph Calleja was sensationally ardent as Lucia’s lover, Edgardo, one of the best roles of his young, exciting Met career.”

Saturday, November 28 – Wagner’s Die Walküre

Conducted by Philippe Jordan; starring Christine Goerke, Eva-Maria Westbroek, Jamie Barton, Stuart Skelton, Greer Grimsley and Günther Groissböck. This revival of Robert Lepage’s 2013 production is from the 2018-2019 season. This is an encore presentation of the production that was made available on August 2nd

This is the second opera in Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen (also known as The Ring Cycle.) It had its premiere as a stand-alone opera in 1870 in Munich. The first performance of the entire cycle was at Bayreuth six years later. Wagner wrote the libretto as well as the music.

The son of the god Wotan is a fugitive named Siegmund. When he finds himself taking refuge at Sieglinde’s house, the two fall passionately in love. But Sieglinde is married and in order for her and Siegmund to be together Siegmund must defeat her husband in a battle to the death.

I’ve seen Christine Goerke sing music from Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen in concert and can attest to the fact that she is amongst the finest and best Wagnerian sopranos working today. Her presence in this production (which drew very mixed reviews and faced challenges with its technology when first performed in 2013) is reason enough to watch this Die Walküre.

Sunday, November 29 – Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra

Conducted by James Levine; starring Kiri Te Kanawa, Plácido Domingo, Vladimir Chernov and Robert Lloyd. This Giancarlo del Monaco and Michael Scott production is from the 1994-1995 season. This is an encore presentation of the production that was made available on August 5th.

Giuseppe Verdi’s opera is based on a play by Antonio García Gutiérrez, the same playwright whose work inspired Il Trovatore.  Francesco Maria Piave wrote the libretto. Simon Boccanegrahad its world premiere in its first version in Venice in 1857. Verdi re-worked the opera and the revised version (with assistance from Arrigo Boito) was first performed at La Scala in Milan in 1881.

Simon Boccanegra is the Doge of Genoa. As the opera begins politics surround him and threaten to envelop him as rumors about his past follow him. But they are not just rumors. Twenty-five years ago Maria, his lover, died and their daughter disappeared.

Maria’s father and his adopted daughter are plotting to overthrow Boccanegra. Simultaneously the Doge is going to finally discover the whereabouts of his missing daughter. But will his enemies and the rising political storm make him another casualty?

This is not one of Verdi’s most beloved works. The fact he tried to re-work it doesn’t suggest great confidence. Critics often call in to question the absurd plotting and its reliance on secret revelations and coincidences. 

Edward Rothstein wrote in his New York Times review, this was Verdi exploring themes that had long been a part of his work:

“Verdi’s lifelong preoccupations come to maturity in this work, as Boccanegra attempts to apply the laws of the family to the laws of the state. It is why the opera’s climaxes turn on recognitions: the hidden connections between citizens are being revealed, bringing with them the possibilities of political as well as familial reconciliation.”

Those are the family dramas to be found in Week 37 at the Met. Next week’s theme will be Stars in Signature Roles. What might those be? Send us your guesses.

Enjoy Week 37 at the Met and Happy Thanksgiving.

Photo: Simon Keenlyside in the title role of Hamlet (Photo by Marty Sohl/Courtesy The Metropolitan Opera)

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Jesus Christ Superstar https://culturalattache.co/2019/10/28/jesus-christ-superstar/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/10/28/jesus-christ-superstar/#respond Tue, 29 Oct 2019 01:13:33 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=7214 Hollywood Pantages Theatre

October 29th - November 3rd

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Most people became aware of Andrew Lloyd Webber through the musical Jesus Christ Superstar. What began as a concept album in 1970 would soon became a cultural phenomenon. A year later the album became a Broadway musical where it ran for 711 performances and earned five Tony nominations. With its 50th anniversary just on the horizon, a new production and tour of the musical is underway and the show stops at the Hollywood Pantages for one week beginning tomorrow, October 29th.

The musical depicts the last seven days in the life of Christ (Aaron La Vigne) and is seen, primarily, through the eyes of Judas (James Delisco Beeks). It features such well-known songs as I Don’t Know How to Love Him and Superstar. Lyrics were written by Tim Rice.

This production began its life at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre in England where it won the Olivier Award for Best Musical Revival. Timothy Sheader, who directed the production in England also directs the tour. Choreographer Drew McOnie also returns for the tour.

Other members of the cast include Jenna Rubaii as Mary, Alvi Crawford as Caiaphas, Tommy Sherlock as Pilate, Tyce Green as Annas, Eric A. Lewis as Simon, Paul Louis Lessard as Herod and Tommy McDowell as Peter.

If you saw the live performance of Jesus Christ Superstar on television, this will be a more contained version since it is a stage musical. But if you loved that version, this looks to appeal on many of the same levels.

Unlike many of the shows that play at the Pantages Theatre, Jesus Christ Superstar will not be going to the Segerstrom Center for the Arts. However, it will play San Diego’s Civic Theatre November 12th – 17th.

For tickets at the Hollywood Pantages go here.

For tickets at San Diego’s Civic Theatre go here.

Photo of James Delisco Beeks and the company of Jesus Christ Superstar by Evan Zimmerman, Murphy Made/Courtesy of the Hollywood Pantages Theatre

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Lady Bunny’s Full Response to Predictions for 2019 https://culturalattache.co/2018/11/15/lady-bunnys-full-response-predictions-2019/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/11/15/lady-bunnys-full-response-predictions-2019/#respond Thu, 15 Nov 2018 04:14:35 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=4105 What are your predictions for 2019? Well, I would like for the American people to realize that over half of their tax dollars are going to war. While our representatives, alleged representatives, who are supposed to do what we say, are telling us that universal health care system can’t work here. It works in almost […]

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What are your predictions for 2019?

Well, I would like for the American people to realize that over half of their tax dollars are going to war. While our representatives, alleged representatives, who are supposed to do what we say, are telling us that universal health care system can’t work here. It works in almost every other country. There may be a slight increase in taxes, but there will be no monthly premiums.

There are think tanks set up by the pharmaceutical companies and medical companies and politicians to tell us Medicare for all is not viable in the US. We have to stop calling out those liars. They’ve been paid to lie. Even after Obamacare’s meager reforms, a great boom to people with pre-existing conditions, it did not go nearly far enough. Health care costs are still the number cause of bankruptcy.

We are exploring space, but we’re killing people in other countries who never attacked us, but we can’t bolster our own people with a system that works in most of the industrialized world. We need to wake up and start demanding stuff of our representatives. If they don’t hear from you, they know to take that check from various industries. They are being paid. They are meant to represent us. We have one time to hold their feet to the first and that’s our vote and half of us don’t vote.

I think we’ve really lost the notion that the democracy that we claim to spread through bombs around the world in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, we’ve got to remember that they are working for us. In fact they are working against us due to the prevalanece of bribes. I’ve seen so many people posting about how cute it is that Michele Obama handed George W. Bush a cough drop. Or so many passionate posts for or against Kevin Hart. Do you not care anything about the world’s worst humanitarian crisis in Yemen? Which is Trump’s war. But Obama started that.

Please don’t tell me you support the troops if you can’t point to where they are on a map. If you can’t tell me what the mission is in Afghanistan, the longest war in US history, which Obama campaigned to end by 2013, you do not support the troops for reason no one can understand now. Even generals are saying let’s get out of the war. They joke that Atilla the Hun and Alexander the Great couldn’t conquer Afghanistan.

I’m Southern, I was brought up as a Christian. Christmas was time we celebrated the prince of peace, Jesus Christ, could we think a little bit more about peace around Christmas time when we’re trying to spread good cheer. Sorry to go so heavy on this, but they are taking the vote on this today.

In March the Senate tried to urge us to get out of Yemen. They don’t mention it was Bernie Sanders and Chris Murphy saying we need to stop this. There are not a lot of principaled peole in our government. I don’t believe in God, but I do believe in good and it’s not good what we’re doing. I feel a little freaked out not by “Baby It’s Cold Outside.” This war has gone on unbeknownst to Americans until it’s Trump war…it’s not. Peace on earth, goodwill to men.  That’s dead.  

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Jungle Book https://culturalattache.co/2018/07/16/jungle-book/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/07/16/jungle-book/#respond Mon, 16 Jul 2018 13:44:53 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=3435 Pasadena Playhouse

July 17 -July 29

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If what you know of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book is limited to Disney’s animated film, then there’s a lot you don’t know. Did you also know there was a second book aptly named The Second Jungle Book?  Even if you don’t, the Pasadena Playhouse is bringing in a wildly-imaginative telling of these stories in Jungle Book. The show, which runs a family-friendly 65 minutes, opens on Thursday and runs through July 29th.

The creators of this show are Craig Francis and Rick Miller. Though their highly-acclaimed production of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea didn’t make it here, it announced that there are many ways of telling a story with contemporary technology that are fully in service to the story being told and not just there for embellishment.

Amongst the techniques used for Jungle Book are puppets, digital projections, music and poems to tell the story of an architect, Mowgli, who goes back into the jungle to remember, from his boyhood time spent there, how to be a better architect and more in tune with nature. Don’t worry, the characters you know are all here:  Baloo, Kaa, Bagheera and more.

Later this week we will have an interview with Rick Miller about their new way of telling this classic story.

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This Weekend in LA (October 13-15) https://culturalattache.co/2017/10/13/weekend-la-october-13-15/ https://culturalattache.co/2017/10/13/weekend-la-october-13-15/#respond Fri, 13 Oct 2017 15:13:47 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=1309 Sam Harris – Catalina Bar & Grill October 13-14 Remember Star Search? The show that pre-dates America’s Got Talent, The Voice  and other shows?  Singer Sam Harris made his mark on that show and went on to star on Broadway in The Life and many other shows to prove there is life after competition shows on television. His […]

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Sam Harris – Catalina Bar & Grill

October 13-14

Remember Star Search? The show that pre-dates America’s Got TalentThe Voice  and other shows?  Singer Sam Harris made his mark on that show and went on to star on Broadway in The Life and many other shows to prove there is life after competition shows on television. His concert will no doubt cover the many aspects of his career. I once heard him sing “I am Changing” from Dreamgirls and was mightily impressed.

Verdi's Opera "Nabucco" performed by LA Opera
Plácido Domingo in “Nabucco” (Ken Howard/LA Opera)

Nabucco – LA Opera/Dorothy Chandler Pavilion

October 14 – Opening Night

As if it isn’t enough for Plácido Domingo to be conducted all but two performances of The Pearl Fishers, he is also starring as the title character in Verdi’s Nabucco. The opera tells of a king’s battle not just with madness, but his daughter’s lust for blood. James Conlon conducts in this production directed by Thaddeus Strassberger.

The Stanley Clarke Band – Broad Stage

October 14th Only

Jazz bassist Stanley Clarke and his band take to the main stage at the Broad in Santa Monica. A winner of four Grammy Awards, he’ll most like be vacillating between acoustic and electric bass.

Broadway to the Rescue: A Benefit for the Homeless – Montalban Theater

October 14th Only

This one-night only concert features some Broadway powerhouses recreating songs and moments from great musicals. Amongst the performers are Lillias White (Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom at the Mark Taper Forum), Aaron Lazar, John Tartaglia (Avenue Q) and more. The evening raises money for Hope of the Valley, a rescue mission for the homeless.

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Josh Groban launches the Broad Stage 10th Season https://culturalattache.co/2017/09/12/josh-groban-launches-the-broad-stage-10th-season/ https://culturalattache.co/2017/09/12/josh-groban-launches-the-broad-stage-10th-season/#respond Tue, 12 Sep 2017 21:07:15 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=751 The Broad Stage

September 14, 2017 only

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Fresh from his highly-acclaimed and Tony nominated role as Pierre is Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812, Josh Groban is back in Los Angeles to perform in concert at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica on Thursday, September 14th.  The evening, a fundraiser for the Arts Education and Community Programming of The Broad Stage launches their 10th season.

Groban’s most recent recording was a selection of songs from the stage. No doubt he’ll pull from the show he was in and the show’s he loves for this concert.

By the way, for a fascinating look at how The Great Comet crashed and burned on Broadway after Josh Groban left the show,  check out this story at the New York Times.

Photo Credit:  Brian Bowen Smith

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