Eric Ankrim and Allison Standley in She Loves Me at Village Theatre (Danielle Barnum) |
January theater openings ramp back up in the usual robust
way with significant world premiere productions, classics in both plays and
musicals, and lots of politics! If you can’t find something that appeals to
you, you just aren’t looking! Make your New Year resolution to go to a production
from a company you’ve never tried before, or never heard of before! Get your
adventuresome calendars out!
The Rivals at Seattle Shakespeare Company (HMMM Productions) |
The Rivals, Seattle Shakespeare Company, 1/7/20-2/2/20
Not by Shakespeare, but by Richard Sheridan, an 18th Century
reverie on the elusive magic of true love filled with extravagant characters
and hilarious circumstances. Young and wealthy Lydia Languish insists on finding
and marrying a poor man for the sake of true love. Captain Jack Absolute
pretends to be a poor army officer. Aiding and thwarting Jack’s pursuit are a
collection of comic characters including his cranky father, Sir Anthony,
Lydia’s meddling and misspoken aunt, Mrs. Malaprop, and a pair of adversaries:
the jovial Bob Acres and the salty Sir Lucius O’Trigger. Director George Mount
and his design team create a twist to the story that involves both the original
setting in the 1780s and the 1980s.
Reparations, Sound Theatre Company,
1/8/20-2/2/20 (world premiere) (at Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute)
The idea of reparations (making some repayment to progeny of
those brought as slaves to our country) resonates now more than ever as we
navigate questions of ownership and accountability within ourselves, society
and the American government at large. By examining the secrets and traumas we
carry in our bloodlines, playwright Darren Canady urges us to inch closer and
closer to decolonizing and deconstructing the dominant narrative.