![]() ![]() □ Zoomers (Brooklyn Center for Theater Research) □ Elsa Lanchester: She’s Alive (Laurie Beechman Theater)Ī solo biographical play of the actress best-known today for playing The Bride of Frankenstein, written and performed by Charlotte Booker (Born Yesteday, Psycho Beach Party.) Booker recreates a bawdy cabaret act that Lanchester toured with late in life. □ An Evening with Brian Stokes Mitchell (PACNYC) October 6 In this solo play, writer/performer Amy Crossman explores what it means to choose life and love in the face of incalculable loss. In this comedy by Peter Sinn Nachtrieb, Bill Bowers and Esther Williamson portray two actors who are on an ambitious quest - to tour their play “Great Moments in Human Achievement” across the country… by bicycle. □T he Making of a Great Moment (Urban Stages) The play by Eliana Pipes, which began September 23, runs through October 22 The relationship in high school and then ten years later between a privileged white boy and an overachieving Black girl who both feel like misfits. ![]() In “Juno and the Paycock,” the Boyle family see their fortunes dashed amidst the upheaval of the Irish Civil War.Īccompanied by a two-piece acoustical band, Florencia Iriondo performs her musical about leaving Argentina, to start over in New York In “The Shadow of a Gunman, “Donal Davoren, Seumas Shields and Minnie Powell find themselves tragically tangled up in the Irish War of Independence. The Irish playwright Sean O’Casey’s famed Dublin Trilogy, presented in a marathon production by Ireland’s Druid Theatre: “The Plough and the Stars” is the story of newlyweds Jack and Nora Clitheroe living in a city on the brink of rebellion in 1916. October 3 – November 5 October 4 Aaron Monaghan in The Plough and the Stars as part of DruidO’Casey Directed by Whitney WhiteĬast: Brittany Adebumola, Maechi Aharanwa, Rachel Christopher, Kalyne Coleman,Somi Kakoma, Lakisha May, Nana Mensah, Michael Oloyede, Dominique Thorne, Zenzi WilliamsĪ sweltering summer day at Jaja’s bustling hair braiding salon in Harlem, where every day, a lively and eclectic group of West African immigrant hair braiders are creating masterpieces on the heads of neighborhood women Written by Jocelyn Bioh (“ School Girls Or, The African Mean Girls Play” and “Merry Wives” in Central Park), making her Broadway playwriting debut. □ Jaja’s African Hair Braiding (MTC’s Samuel J. ![]() The first of three concerts by award-winning theater performers at the newly opening Perelman Performing Arts Center at the World Trade Center site. Immersive and/or site-specific: Silver ⬜️ Key: Broadway: Red □. Off Broadway: Blue □. ![]() This calendar is organized chronologically by opening date*, but we must consider the dates subject to change, thanks to the continuing vagaries of COVID-19.Įach title below is linked to a relevant website. The excitement this month spreads beyond the vintage venues, to places like the authoritatively named Brooklyn Center for Theatre Research in Greenpoint, home to a newly named generation (see October 6), the 17 locations for the 20th annual Prelude Festival (October 7), and to a closet in the East Village, the latest livestream from a pioneer of digital theater (October 27.) It’s worth noting that the new Sondheim musical, now entitled “Here We Are,” is debuting not on Broadway but at The Shed. The others are “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding,” which marks Jocelyn Bioh’s Broadway playwriting debut and “Gutenberg The Musical,” which reunites Josh Gad and Andrew Rannells, the original stars of “The Book of Mormon.” The other, “Merrily We Roll Along,” was long considered a flop, but a starry revival had a brief, acclaimed Off-Broadway run, and is now one of the three shows opening on Broadway this month. Congrats, Joshua Rush! See his posts below.Below is a calendar of theater opening* in New York in October, with two greatly-anticipated musicals by Stephen Sondheim, one never produced before. If that's not enough big news, Joshua also revealed that he got accepted into New York University. It's a little creative/spiritual/religious mantra for me and my dad!" On the design, Joshua explained, "The word means 'life' and the arrow symbolizes that one small act of creation can bring all of life upward. "No ragrats," he also captioned the photo below. "This was my first tat and was my first official act as a legal adult but dude.that felt really good there may well be more of those in my future," he also wrote. "Uh I GOT A TATTOO," he wrote, adding, "Overall thoughts: hurt much less than i expected it to, eventually it got totally numb and then the endorphin rush was G O O D." The Andi Mack star took to Twitter on Saturday (December 14) to document his exciting news. Joshua Rush is celebrating his 18th birthday in some pretty big ways! ![]()
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