Gooey Love for Toxic Avenger

“If a blind girl won’t love ugly people, who will?” That’s the central dilemma in Toxic Avenger, the eye-popping, knee-slapping, sci-fi musical comedy getting its Broadway tryout right now at Houston’s Alley Theatre. If the ugly person in question is “Toxie,” the avenging alter ego of mild-mannered nerd Melvin Ferd…

A Musical Comedy About Charles Manson: Too Soon, or Finally?

“I’m going to hell.” That’s how cutting edge theater maker Matthew Posey wraps up his announcement about his next show at his Ochre House studio. It’s called Mean and it’s a musical comedy about the first meeting between creepy 1960s hippie-cult leader Charlie Manson and his accomplice, Tex Watson, who…

Noises Off: The Sound You Hear is Laughter

Call a play a farce and it damn well better be funny. Michael Frayn’s Noises Off is far and away the farciest of all modern farces. Full of slamming doors, sexy girls, mistaken identities and stray plates of sardines, Noises Off has been setting the standard for feather-light theatrical comedy…

Cable TV Programmers Make Bait-and-Switch a High Art

Drunken yoga does not equal female empowerment. Show of hands: Who remembers when cable TV’s A&E channel featured real art for entertainment? Been a long time, right? Back in the 1990s, the Arts & Entertainment channel, as it was known then, specialized in high-culture programming. Ballet. Opera. Plays. Long interviews…

Shabby Sheep Welcomes Lovers of Knit-erature, Starting with Jane Austen

The cozy little shop called The Shabby Sheep, an Uptown emporium of supplies for knitters and crocheters, is now the home of the Jane Austen Society, which will meet at 11 a.m. on the second Saturday of the month, beginning February 11. Encouraging “knitting, spinning, crocheting, snacking, chatting, movie watching…

Anne Frank and Baruch de Spinoza: Shut in and Cast Out

“I want to go on living after my death,” Anne Frank wrote in her diary around the age of 14. She wanted to be a professional writer when she grew up, a novelist maybe. Her book, she said in the diary, would be based on the two years she spent…

Designer Allen Moyer Strikes Oil on DTC’s Giant Set

Creating the wide open spaces and big skies of West Texas for a huge piece of musical theater has presented an interesting set of problems for designer Allen Moyer. Now finishing up the final details on the scenery for Dallas Theater Center’s production of the musical version of Edna Ferber’s…

Go Colorblind at The Frequency of Death!

For 26 years, Pegasus Theatre has been taking the color out of stage comedy. They do it in “Living Black and White,” a trade-secret method of makeup, costume and scenery that strips all the color away onstage — except for the slip of an actor’s pink tongue or a glimpse…

At Theatre Three, La Bête Could Be Better

David Hirson’s tribute to Molière, La Bête, is the sort of play Theatre Three thinks they should be doing – but shouldn’t. The 1991 comedy, which has enjoyed a couple of decent Broadway runs, the latest starring the incomparable Mark Rylance, is written in rhymed couplets. Nobody wants to see…

The Frequency of Death! — Killing Time

Pegasus Theatre does only one production annually. One of their “Living Black and White” plays has opened at the Eisemann Center on the first weekend of the year since 2005. So we’ve come to expect that show to be a doozy. Their latest, The Frequency of Death!, is good, but…

WaterTower Theatre Announces Cast for August: Osage County

For WaterTower Theatre’s first local production of August: Osage County, the Pulitzer-winning drama by Tracy Letts, director René Moreno sticks with the star of his acclaimed 2011 Oklahoma City production, longtime Dallas actress Pam Dougherty, in the lead as matriarch Violet Weston. She co-starred in 2009 as “Big Edie” in…

12 for 2012: A Dozen DFW Actors Who Deserve More Stage Time

The list of actors we want to see more of on Dallas/Fort Worth theater stages this year includes a few we’ve seen a lot of in recent productions — a lot, as in their frontal and backal parts sans costume. Nudity has become so common among local theater companies, it’s…

Les Miz, Loud and Long, Remains Master of the Opera House

Next year we’ll have the big-budget movie starring Hugh Jackman (as Jean Valjean) and Russell Crowe (as Javert) to compare it to, but right now you can see what critics and audiences are loving in the 25th anniversary touring production of Les Misérables, playing through Sunday at the Winspear. About…

Les Miz, Oui; La Bete, Non

It’s called Les Misérables, so don’t expect comedy. You don’t look to Victor Hugo’s depiction of the 1832 Paris uprisings for belly laughs. What there is in Les Miz, now at the Winspear Opera House on a 25th anniversary tour, is singing. Great, powerful, perfectly on-pitch caterwauling. The kind of…

In Pop Culture, Music and Fashion, Is Boring the New Exciting?

A few weeks ago a photograph titled “Rhein II” (above) by artist Andreas Gursky was won at auction at Christie’s in New York by an anonymous bidder who paid more than $4 million. It is a digital photo of a river and grass embankments on the Rhine. Gursky manipulates his…