ANNA KARENINA (Hollywood)
However, British playwright Helen Edmundson spreads a wider canvas by showing
two other women of the period in marriages both conventional and threatened. In
fact, by focusing on three parallel stories the play becomes a modern appeal
against female oppression. Yet Edmundson is careful to show how a man – in fact
all of the men – can love the woman in their lives yet not see how callously
they oppress them.
The cast are superb. Eva Abramian’s headstrong Anna is a
torment to her husband Bruce Ladd; Lauren Thompson is a devoted wife betrayed
by her husband Michael Worden; Ivy Beech is a proud girl challenging her
conventional husband Joseph Barone, while Deborah Marlowe and Garrett Botts are
impressive in multiple roles. Directed with style and piercing dramatic
intensity by Heather Chesley. An Actors Co-op production at First Presbyterian
Church, 1760 N Gower St. Hollywood. Tickets: (323) 462-8460 or www.ActorsCo-op.org. Free parking.
MISS AMERICA’S UGLY DAUGHTER (Hollywood)
It is always
fascinating to learn of the at-home behavior of a famous person and Barra
Grant, daughter of Bess Myerson, does not disappoint. In this play we see the
petty bad-mother side and the effect it has on a vulnerable child. There is
poignant humor in the duel between them for attention after the parade has
passed by. It’s an entertaining show but I wish Grant had told of her mothers
good works as well as her selfish home behavior.
Bess Myerson did a lot of
excellent public work that is missing from the show – it’s in the program but
not on the stage. As the first Jewish Miss America, she was hit with the
anti-Semitism that she fought against the rest of her public life. When I was
NY Bureau Chief for the Hollywood Reporter I met Bess Myerson, then NY
Commissioner of Cultural Affairs. More than a beauty queen, or TV personality,
she was a public figure doing significant work.
Written and performed by Barra
Grant, with Monica Piper as Myerson’s offstage voice. At Greenway Court
Theatre, 544 N Fairfax, (nr Melrose). Tickets: (323) 285-2078 or www.MissAmericasUglyDaughter.com. Free parking.
AMERICA ADJACENT (Los Feliz)
In this timely play, six pregnant women from the Philippines, living together in a one-bedroom, one-bath unit in East Hollywood, do their best to overcome fears of jail and deportation. Playwright Boni B. Alvarez examines the promise of US citizenship, saying “As the child of Filipino immigrants, I have always been fascinated by the American Dream. How far would you go to give your child a better future?” Directed by Jon Lawrence Rivera and produced by Gary Grossman and Tony Abatemarco for Skylight Company. At Skylight Theatre, 1816 N. Vermont, Los Feliz. Tickets & Parking info: (213) 761-7061 or www.SkylightTix.org.
TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE (Sierra Madre)
Journalist
Mitch Alborn saw his beloved college professor, Morrie Schwartz, on ABC-TV Nightline being interviewed about the
challenge of living with Lou Gehrig’s disease. Mitch starts to visit Morrie
every Tuesday and learns from him how to live life fully in the face of loss.
The play debuted off-Broadway in 2002 and New York magazine said: "Unforgettable! No matter how well you tell
the story, the play makes it more vivid, more shattering, more humorous."
Larry Eisenberg is Morrie, Jackson Kendall is Mitch. At Sierra Madre Playhouse,
87 W Sierra Madre Blvd. Tickets: (626) 355-4318 or www.sierramadreplayhouse.org Free parking.
No comments:
Post a Comment