Dec 18

Victorian Story, Modern Standards: Charles Dickens’ ‘A Christmas Carol’

Will Lyman and Bobbie Steinbach.

Presented by Commonwealth Shakespeare Company
Based on the story by Charles Dickens
Adaption by Steve Wargo 
Musical Arrangements by Dianne Adams McDowell
Directed By Steven Maler
Musical Direction By Dan Rodriguez
Choreography by John Lam
Dramaturgy by Natalie McKnight
Dialect and text coaching by Bryn Boice
Intimacy consultant: Lauren Cook

December 8 – 22, 2024
Emerson Cutler Majestic Theatre
219 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02116

Online playbill

Critique by Kitty Drexel

BOSTON — I have beef with A Christmas Carol. It makes Tiny Tim Cratchit into inspiration porn, a term invented by activist Stella Young to describe the objectification of disabled folks like me to inspire unmotivated abled people. Alas, there’s a longstanding theatre tradition of producing any odd number of A Christmas Carol variations for the December holidays, so I’m reminded of my dislike for Dickens’ story every year. It’s too bad because the Commonwealth Shakespeare Company’s production of Charles Dickens’ ‘A Christmas Carol’ was otherwise solid: good acting despite wobbly accents, an ensemble that worked together and had fun, elegant singing despite some wooden moments, unique costumes with small flourishes of modernity that still borrowed from the Victorian period, clever set design that utilized a hidden trap door, and tasty intermission snacks.  Continue reading

Dec 03

Lucky Number 7: “The Jinkx and DeLa Holiday Show”

Photo credit: Jacob Ritts

The Jinkx and DeLa Holiday Show
Presented by Boch Center Wang Theatre
Created & Written by BenDeLaCreme & Jinkx Monsoon
Director: BenDeLaCreme
Choreographer: Chloe Albin
Movement Direction by BenDeLaCreme
Original Compositions by Major Scales
Lyrics: BenDeLaCreme, Jinkx Monsoon, & Major Scales
Music Production: Markaholic & Keith Harrison
Starring: BenDeLaCreme & Jinkx Monsoon
Featuring: Chloe Albin, Mr. Babygirl, Jace Gonzalez, Ruby Mimosa, Derrick Paris, Scott Spraags, and Gus Lanza as “Hunky the Elf”

Dec. 2, 2024
Wang Theatre at Boch Center
270 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02116

Critique by Kitty Drexel

BOSTON – December marks the start of a very special time for us in Boston. No, it’s not the Baby Jesus’ red and green capitalist wet dream known as Christmas. It’s the month when The Jinkx and DeLa Holiday Show visits Boston to spread cheer (and legs) across the land, sillies. Merry Kwanzanukkahdad and Mele New Year, the holiday season has begun!  Continue reading

Nov 29

Food Is Not Enough: “Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?)”

DID YOU EAT? (밥 먹었니?), Written and Performed by Zoë Kim*. Photo by Maggie Hall

Presented by Chuang Stage and Seoulful Productions
Written and Performed by Zoë Kim 
Directed by Chris Yejin
Dramaturgy by Amrita Ramanan
Choreography by Christopher Shin
Scenic and costume design by Szu Feng Chen
Sound design by Katie Kuan-Yu Chen
Lighting design by Ari Kim

Nov. 12 – 30, 2024
Boston Center for the Arts
Plaza Black Box Theatre 
539 Tremont St.
Boston, MA

Article by Kitty Drexel

Age Recommendation: Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) is recommended for audiences aged 13 and older.

Content Advisory: Experiences of childhood trauma, self-harm, and suicidal ideation.

BOSTON —  In the playbill for Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) after the Chuang Stage season info but before her polemic on the white entertainment industry, playwright and performer Zoë Kim writes a letter to the audience. She says, “I wish, For fathers to value their daughters. For mothers to believe their daughters.” As an emotionally neglected child who also grew into a strong, independent woman out of spite, I sincerely wish that, too. There are a lot of us out there. Kim’s story is her own, but unfortunately, her show’s themes are universal. 

Kim’s letter continues: she wishes “For you to ask a loved one how they would like to be loved.” 

We could not possibly understand the horrors and grief Kim experienced for decades at the hands of her verbally, physically and psychically abusive parents. Her autobiographical play about the family who spoke love but acted hate is Kim’s own; it shines a light on the traumatic experiences of young and adult women raised by parents who couldn’t, wouldn’t or refused to love them. Gather a group of trusting women together and they will share their stories of abuse. My mother had stories; I have stories; my sisters and aunts in faith (not blood) have them, too. We are not an anomaly, we are the victims of a pandemic of violence against women and girls. 

Kim wishes “For you to share how you would like to be loved.” 

These are the words I share with other survivors: Your abuse is not your fault. You deserve wondrous love. You deserved better then and you deserve better now. 

At a certain point in their adult development, an abused adult who perpetuates abuse onto others chooses their pain over healing. Your abuser chose to hurt you. No matter their cultural or personal excuses it was their choice and never your fault. It is possible to choose love while also choosing to hold your abuser accountable. An abuser earns forgiveness through atonement. Forgiveness is not the same as absolution.  

DID YOU EAT? (밥 먹었니?), Written and Performed by Zoë Kim*. Photo by Maggie Hall

Kim wishes “For you to practice radical love for yourself and for others.” 

Apropos of nothing and because this is a constructive criticism site, I would be remiss in my duties if I did not mention that the pacing of the first 20 minutes lags. The transition from the show’s bright, children’s theatre beginning into Kim’s life story could use smoothing. Otherwise, the story is seamless from start to finish. From its design elements to the acting, Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) is impactful storytelling. 

For the folks who attended Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) and felt a kinship with its story, whether big or small, I hope you find the healing and wondrous love you need. 

These are resources available to Boston-area and Boston Chinatown victims and survivors of domestic violence:

  • The Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence: Hotline at 617-338-2355, https://www.atask.org/
  • SafeLink is Massachusetts’ statewide 24/7 toll-free domestic violence hotline and a resource for anyone affected by domestic or dating violence. 1-877-785-2020
    If you are Deaf or Hard of Hearing (D/HH), please dial 711 – MassRelay Service.
    Advocates are bilingual in English and Spanish and have access to a service that can provide translation in more than 130 languages.
  • The National Domestic Violence Hotline offers assistance and safety planning 24/7.
    1-800-799-SAFE (7233), TTY 1-800-787-3224
    If you’re unable to speak safely, you can chat online at thehotline.org
  • Massachusetts Domestic Violence (Safe Link), 1-877-785-2020, https://casamyrna.org/get-support/safelink/
    If you are Deaf or Hard of Hearing (D/HH), please dial 711 MassRelay Service
  • Massachusetts Office for Victim Assistance (MOVA), 617-586-1340, https://www.mass.gov/orgs/massachusetts-office-for-victim-assistance
  • Mass.gov list of Domestic Violence Services:
    https://www.mass.gov/domestic-violence-services

If you are in immediate danger, call 911.

It may require persistence to get help, but help is out there. Keep seeking it and it will one day find you. 

Nov 27

Plucky Repertory at BPT: “How to Not Save the World with Mr. Bezos” & “Soft Star”

Presented by Boston Playwrights’ Theatre 
Produced in collaboration with the Boston University College of Fine Arts School of Theatre.
BPT’s Fall Rep Festival

How to Not Save the World with Mr. Bezos by Maggie Kearnan
Directed by Taylor Stark
Intimacy and violence choreography by Jess Scout Malone
Special effects by Lynn Wilcott
Featuring: Becca A. Lewis, Mark W. Soucy, Robbie Rodriguez

Soft Star by Tina Esper
Directed by Bridget Kathleen O’Leary
Intimacy & Violence Choreographer: Jess Scout Malone
Featuring: Annika Bolton, Mairéad O’Neill, Jesse Kodama, Kamran Bina

November 7-24, 2024 
Boston Playwrights’ Theatre (now with a water fountain!) 
Kate Snodgrass Stage
949 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215

Critique by Kitty Drexel

BOSTON — Boston Playwrights’ Theatre presents two plays as part of its Fall Rep Festival: How to Not Save the World with Mr. Bezos by Maggie Kearnan, a fictional interview with the nonfictional journalist, and Soft Star, a play about secrets between best friends, by Tina Esper. 

While they are running in repertory with each other, these plays will not be critiqued by the same standards. The scripts are at different levels of development: Bezos is nearly if not fully completed; Soft Star requires some tweaking and that’s okay; that’s why BPT exists.   

This critique discusses both plays in the order I viewed them. Both plays ran through Nov. 24 on different days on the Kate Snodgrass Stage at BPT. Their runs have ended but their legacy will live on.   Continue reading

Nov 26

Ample Breast, Moist Leg: “The Thanksgiving Play”

The cast; Photo by Sharman Altshuler

Presented by Moonbox Productions
by Larissa FastHorse
Directed by Tara Moses
Dramaturgy by Kailey Bennett

Featuring: Jasmine Goodspeed, Johnny Gordon, Ohad Ashkenazi, Marisa Diamond
Partnered with the North American Indian Center of Boston (NAICOB)

Nov. 21 – Dec. 15, 2024
Arrow Street Arts
2 Arrow St.
Cambridge, MA 02138 

Running Time: 90 minutes, no intermission

Age Guidelines: Recommended for ages 13+

Content Warning: This production contains adult language, mature themes, racism, redface, violence, and unsettling truths of both Massachusetts’ and America’s history.

Critique by Kitty Drexel

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Moonbox’s The Thanksgiving Play interprets the white American history of Thanksgiving that MAGA and its ilk want us to forget. Florida’s laws, for example, would keep copies of Larissa Fasthorse’s play out of school libraries just in case a white person might feel sad by its contents. Friends, the purpose of knowing our white, colonialist history isn’t to feel sad; it’s to recognize the white supremacist systems that enabled these atrocities so we can dismantle them. We aren’t responsible for our ancestors’ actions but we are responsible for repairing the damage they caused.   Continue reading

Nov 26

“Funny, Antiquated Slapstick: Noises Off”

The cast. Photo by Mark S Howard.

Presented by Lyric Stage Boston
By Michael Frayn
Directed by Ilyse Robbins
Sound Design – Andrew Duncan Will
​Scenic Design – Erik D. Diaz
Costume Design –  Seth Bodie
Lighting Design – SeifAllah Salotto-Cristobal
Props Artisan – Emily Allinson
Voice & Dialect Coach  – Allison Beauregard
Fight Consultant – Ted Hewlett
Featuring:  Amy Barker, Grace Experience, Dan Garcia, Eliza Fichter, Michael Jennings Mahoney, Joseph Marrella, Chip Phillips, Samantha Richert, Lewis D. Wheeler

Nov. 15 – December 22, 2024
Lyric Stage Boston
140 Clarendon St.
Boston, MA 02116

Critique by Craig Idlebrook

Two hours and thirty minutes, with two intermissions

Content Advisory: “The shenanigans of Noises Off include a bit of salty language, some sexual situations, and slapstick humor.” – Lyric Stage

BOSTON — Sometimes, reviewers best serve the audience by declaring their biases up front. Usually, those biases are about something we hate, but not always.

In this case, I should warn you that I love Noises Off as a play, and I fully realize I probably love it more than its inherent cultural worth warrants. Like with a close family member, I am inclined to defend it from accusations of its shortcomings more than I should. There is something about the play within a play about the ridiculous backstage antics of a middling theater cast that resonates with me as a high school drama nerd. Continue reading

Nov 20

Inside and Outside of Time: Hub’s “Tartuffe”

Photo by Benjamin Rose Photography

Presented by Hub Theatre Company of Boston
By Moliere
Translated by Richard Wilbur 
Director – Bryn Boice
Sound Design – Mackenzie Adamick
​Set Design – Justin Lahue
Costume Design –  Marissa Wolf
Lighting Design/ME – Nars Kelliher
Props Designer – Julia Wonkka

Featuring: Steve Auger, Lily Ayotte, Jeremy Beazlie, Patrick Vincent Curran, Lauren Elias, June Kfoury, Brendan O’Neill, Brooks Reeves, Laura Rocklyn, Kayla Sessoms, Robert Thorpe

Nov. 9 – Nov. 24, 2024
Boston Center for the Arts
539 Tremont St
Boston, MA 02116

Critique by Kitty Drexel

Two hours with one intermission
Appropriate for ages 13+

BOSTON — Hub Theatre Company’s Tartuffe is fun. It’s one of the better adaptations of Moliere’s play you’ll see in the next four years. No doubt, we will see quite a few performances of Tartuffe and other satires in the next four+ years. It’s better seeing satiric buffoonery on the stage now rather than the unfunny buffoonery we’ll see play out on the political stage coming this January.  Continue reading

Nov 13

Tomorrow Belongs to All of Us or None of Us: “Cabaret”


Presented by the Kit Kat Club at the August Wilson Theatre 
Based on the play by John van Druten and stories by Christopher Isherwood
Book by Joe Masteroff
Music by John Kander
Lyrics by Fred Ebb
Directed by Rebecca Frecknall
Fight direction by Thomas Schall
Music direction by Meghann Zervoulis Bate
Choreographed by Julia Cheng

Tickets are available now – March 2025
August Wilson Theatre
245 W. 52nd St.
New York, NY

2 hours and 45 minutes, including one intermission

Critique by Kitty Drexel

I was offered press tickets to “Cabaret” as part of the ATCA conference in New York.

NEW YORK — “I’ll be watching ‘Cabaret’ for survival tactics,” my friend Julia said when I confirmed her ticket for “Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club” on November 6. Julia and I are both gleefully queer on the LGBTQIA+ spectrum and terrified by the national and state election results. It was cathartic to watch a musical about the rise and tragic fall of queer culture in Weimar Germany as the Nazis rose to power. It looks a lot like the U.S. today. If one needs proof, they should take to their local news sources. Continue reading

Nov 11

This Place Must Yield Something Good: “Sojourners”

Abigail C. Onwunali, Asha Basha Duniani in Sojourners; photo by Marc J. Franklin.

Presented by The Huntington 
Written by Mfoniso Udofia
Directed by Dawn M. Simmons
Dramaturgy by Christine Mok
Voice and dialect coaching by Dawn-Elin Fraser
Fight Director & Intimacy Coaching by Brian C Green
Featuring: Asha Basha Duniani, Nomè SiDone, Abigail C. Onwunali, Joshua Olumide 

Oct. 31 – Dec. 1, 2024
The Huntington Theatre
264 Huntington Ave. 
Boston, MA 02115

Critique by Kitty Drexel

BOSTON — Wednesday, November 6 was a lot. It should have been an occasion for much rejoicing. I can’t have been the only person who expected- whether innocently or obtusely- to celebrate the first female president of color as Boston celebrated Sojourners, the first play of Mfoniso Udofia’s Ufot Cycle at The Huntington. Instead, my heart was in my stomach and between my teeth. I am terrified for my friends, my found family, my community and our children’s children. May they forgive us. 

But, let history remember: We did celebrate Sojourners! Our community gathered at 264 Huntington Ave to rightly praise Udofia, Dawn M Simmons, their cast, crew, production staff, and community leaders for the beginning of a most intrepid, two-year project – to stage and witness Udofia’s complete Ufot Cycle as a unified city of great theatremakers and artists. (A list of involved companies is HERE.) 

Mayor Michelle Wu proclaimed Nov. 6 Mfoniso Udofia Day in Boston before the play started. There was cheering from the swankily dressed crowd. It was a happy moment before a gorgeous play that capped a sad day for the history books.  Continue reading

Nov 04

Same Procedure as Every Year: “Dinner For One”

Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Presented by Greater Boston Stage Company
By Christina Baldwin, Sun Mee Chomet, and Jim Lichtscheidl 
Directed by Weylin Symes
Music direction by Tim Goss
Featuring Paul Melendy and Debra Wise
Violin: Tommaso Lorenson

November 1 – 17, 2024
395 Main Street
Stoneham, MA 02180

Online playbill

Critique by Kitty Drexel

STONEHAM, Mass. — Greater Boston Stage Company’s Dinner For One is a short but charming play about a grieving grand dame and her affectionate butler. It has expanded moments of prop work, physical comedy, unsettling puns and a broad range of accents. It’s a silly treat to dislodge the election panic curdling your stomach this presidential cycle. It runs in Stoneham through November 17.  Continue reading