Too Cool for School

When Another Antigone premiered off-Broadway in 1988, higher education’s radar screen was aglow with a growing number of issues that threatened to crash an already overloaded system. With funding scarce in the post-Reagan years, deans couldn’t motivate tenured professors to change their ways and, at the same time, couldn’t afford…

Something From Nothing

The Denver Center Theatre Company’s Much Ado About Nothing boasts some beautifully staged scenes and well-crafted performances, especially actress Robin Moseley’s bravura turn in the role of Beatrice. But while the visually pleasing production engages now and then, it adds up to considerably less than the sum of its parts…

Little House on the Prairie

An abundance of stock characters and melodramatic situations might prompt a lesser director to turn Flyin¹ West into a hiss-filled potboiler; but in director Jeffrey Nickelson’s capable hands, Pearl Cleage’s 1992 play becomes an expansive ode to courage, self-determination and the price of freedom. The two-hour-plus drama is being given…

Obstructed View

Rehashing a centuries-old debate, an erstwhile film critic (and aspiring moviemaker) declares that the theater has no relevance for his generation. Naturally, that remark doesn’t sit too well with his girlfriend’s mother — an accomplished stage actress who reminds the young man that creating art is a greater calling than…

Time and Again

The performers’ spotty British accents make whole sections of dialogue unintelligible, and the pacing often lags where it should accelerate, but the Aurora Fox Theatre Company’s production of Communicating Doors proves to be an entertaining comic thriller anyway. On the strength of some strong performances, beautifully realized design elements and…

Cheap Frills

It’s not surprising that no one disrobes in Closer, British playwright Patrick Marber’s full-frontal look at sexual mores and modern relationships. The play’s four London dwellers seem so comfortable obsessing about sex — and its sometime companion, love — that taking their clothes off hardly seems necessary. The two-hour drama,…

Blood, Sweat and Cheers

Shortly after bidding adieu to his bustling wife, a Malibu writer settles into a porch chair and begins his work. Seated at one side of a sparely appointed stage, the wiry figure peers at the audience with a gaze that both acknowledges our presence and enlists our imaginations. He rises…

Songs to Stir the Soul

Director Hugo Jon Sayles’s choice to present Ain¹t Misbehavin¹ as a New York City “rent party” lends the collection of Depression-era tunes a laid-back informality that makes the audience feel at home starting with the first note. The Broadway musical revue, now showing at the Nomad Theatre in Boulder (following…

Bad Habits

Nuncrackers: The Nunsense Christmas Musical is a collection of sketches, songs and sight gags that work best when they’re briskly paced and centered on a single character. During its many multiple-character scenes and lame segues, however, Dan Goggin’s musical revue about the Little Sisters of Hoboken fizzles into a predictable,…

Texas Twosome

Nothing in Maynard has changed since the Civil War,” says a young woman of her Texas community’s stultifying ways. Consigned to a life of folding clothes, screaming at her three kids and indulging in midday liquor-laced gossip sessions, Hattie’s sweeping assessment doesn’t seem that far-fetched to anyone who’s spent her…

Stage Plight

Encouraged in no small measure by the fact that Denver’s cultural groups annually outdraw all local professional sports teams combined, several ambitious theater companies have recently elbowed their way onto the city’s crowded stage. Rather than join forces with established organizations that operate their own spaces (and boast loyal followings),…

Hopelessly Devoted

About ten minutes after Stop Kiss begins, we learn that its two main characters, a pair of young women oblivious to their surroundings at the moment their mouths met in romantic bliss, were violently attacked while hanging out in a Greenwich Village park during the wee hours of the morning…

Miracles Happen

It’s hard to believe that what happens in Miracle on 34th Street bears any resemblance to everyday life. But as the Nomad Theatre’s entertaining revival demonstrates, the story has the ability to awaken ideals long ago beaten into a coma by megadoses of hard reality. Of course, those who attend…

Season’s Bleatings

Its title is a clever play on Tantalus, the high-priced Greek epic that effectively displaced the Denver Center’s annual presentation of A Christmas Carol, but theatreMEDINA’s Santaless: The Twelve Plays of Christmas proves to be a collection of aimless skits worth considerably less than its $20 admission. Haphazardly constructed and…

One-Act Wonders

Anton Chekhov is as famous for writing pause-filled comedies about frustrated dreamers as Eugene O’Neill is for penning dramas with more stage direction than dialogue. Beyond their writerly quirks, however, both men were masters at creating unforgettable characters. And the Shadow Theatre Company’s evening of one-acts pays homage to each…

A True Blockbuster

A product of its time that proved powerful enough to transcend the tumult of ensuing decades, The Fantasticks opened at New York’s Sullivan Street Playhouse on May 3, 1960, and has been running there ever since. Although its universal appeal is unparalleled in musical theater history, some critics continue to…

Tragedy for the Ages

Antigone’s two brothers, both sons of Oedipus, have died in each other’s arms while fighting for future control of their uncle Creon’s throne. In order to send a message to future revolutionaries, King Creon has decreed that one of the slain will be left to rot outside the walls of…

Strutting Their Stuff

The pacing lags when it should accelerate, and the actors’ delivery never matches the dialogue’s sharp brilliance, but the Upstart Crow Theatre Company’s production of The Rivals is a gorgeously costumed community theater production. In addition to providing Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s play with an adequate staging, director Joan Kuder Bell…

Just Us Girls

Of the thirty-plus songs that constitute the musical revue Jerry¹s Girls, only one proves to be more than a display of vocal pyrotechnics or choreographic cuteness. Oddly enough, that distinction belongs to a tune that’s performed in drag by an actor whose ambling gait, ill-fitting gown and rouged face drew…

Missed Manners

British playwright Alan Ayckbourn is often regarded as England’s version of Neil Simon. But while both master craftsmen have an affinity for rim-shot-style comedy — Simon started out as a writer on Sid Caesar’s Your Show of Shows, as did Mel Brooks and Woody Allen — they are careful to…

Flight From Life

Perched atop a high, bare platform and isolated in a pool of bluish-white light, a search-and-rescue pilot talks about why she’s devoted herself to serving the needs of others even as she chooses to reside on life’s perimeter. Surveying the landscape below, the youthful Maxine (Kristin Erickson) quietly says to…

Money for Nothing

As wrongheaded as it is well-intentioned, CityStage Ensemble’s world-premiere production of Bad Money flounders from the very first scene and never gains much of a foothold thereafter. Ostensibly written in the style of film noir, which uses ambiguity to heighten mystery, cloak clever plot twists and slowly reveal character, David…