Blessed With Sexy Synthpop Satire, Altar Boyz Zings

“American consumers are demanding more God in their entertainment every day!” So chirps Matthew, lead singer of an adorably clueless, Bible-based pop quintet called Altar Boyz—also the title of the satiric musical about the group that’s been a smash Off-Broadway hit going on five years now. The regional premiere, full…

FITs And Starts

The slightly scaled-down Festival of Independent Theatres is the tapas bar of local theater, a chance to spend just a few dollars to sample offerings by new and small companies sharing the stage at the Bath House Cultural Center. It’s the 11th year for the month-long “FIT fest,” as it…

Casting Young Cuts Against Chemistry in Romeo and Juliet

With Romeo and Juliet, the problem is this: Cast seasoned actors who look a little too old for the title roles or use young ones who can pass as teenagers (Juliet’s barely 14 in the play) but might be too green to wrap their heads around the characters’ intense emotional…

Death: The Musical Breathes Life into Pocket Sandwich Theatre

Pocket Sandwich Theatre takes a break from its usual popcorn-throwing fluff to give audiences something better to chew on, the premiere of Death: The Musical, a new R-rated musical comedy by Dallas composer-writer Scott A. Eckert. The title might be a harder sell than Macbeth, but the show itself is…

The History Boys earns top grades at Uptown Players

The least important theme in Alan Bennett’s wonderful play The History Boys is that a great teacher can also be a bad person. Hector, an overweight, 60ish instructor at a lower-tier English college prep for boys, is a popular eccentric who believes in the power of big ideas and the…

Back Back Back: Un-enhanced Performance with Too Many Errors

Careers of baseball players and playwrights have more in common than you might think. Both professions have major and minor playing fields. Both require a consistent string of hits to be considered successful. And the end game is elevation to the “big show” that could mean money, awards and fame…

Garland Civic Theatre’s Beverly Hillbillies is Doggone Funny

Old television shows never die; they stubbornly live on in cable reruns, DVD boxed sets, online and now as theatrical productions. Like popular movies, from Sunset Boulevard to Shrek, that have been made over into Broadway musicals, some of TV’s best-loved series are returning repurposed as stage material. And why…