Director Cody Lucas Discusses His Bathtub Play Sweet Chariot

Out of the Loop Fringe Festival is an annual event at Watertower Theater featuring a packed schedule of mostly local acts through Sunday. Cody Lucas returns to his hometown for the fest, with Sweet Chariot, a show about a man in a bathtub. There are two more chances to see…

Gallery Hopping in Dallas: Can Art be Mandatory?

Saturday evening, I participated in the activity known in New York City or Los Angeles as “gallery hopping,” which is exactly what it sounds like. I just often forget you can do it in Dallas. On nights packed with openings, it can be the perfect pre-dinner or concert activity. Swing…

A Dash of Chekhov in Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike

Cross the forlorn siblings in Chekhov’s Three Sisters with the squabbling kin in Arrested Development and you get a good idea what the family is like in Christopher Durang’s Tony-winning comedy Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike. It’s a brilliant, funny play getting a brilliant production at Uptown Players,…

Crossing Punchlines: Dallas Stand-up Comedians Get a Taste of Improv

Stand-up and improvisational comedians seem like they should be mortal enemies — two opposing camps with incompatible views on how to make audiences laugh. They’re the Hatfields and McCoys of funny, with punch-line flingers on one side and scene-building tacticians on the other battling for your admiration and attention, both…

There’s a Crazy Dance Show in Fair Park. You Should Go.

Nobody likes dance shows. It’s an arts statistic we don’t like to talk about. People will wander through free museum exhibits; they’ll show up with their bottles of wine for Shakespeare in Park; they’ll even sell out operas like Carmen and Turandot. But nobody sits through dance anymore, except reluctant…

At Kitchen Dog Theater, Whose Hat Is It Anyway?

Some characters in plays are people you’d like to know in real life. In The Motherfucker with the Hat, the five characters, with maybe one exception, you are happy to walk away from after 95 minutes. That’s how long Stephen Adly Guirgis’ profanity-spewing dark comedy lasts and that’s more than…

Don’t Miss Bone Ties at The Reading Room

Dallas, meet Performance Southwest. Even if you’re not a performance art fan the name might sound familiar from fits and starts around town, but their mission is much larger than this city. It’s an educational group with constituents all over the country dedicated to educating audiences on the exciting, yet…

Philip Glass’ Best Recordings

It’s hard to overestimate the impact Philip Glass has had on classical music. Apart from being (arguably) the world’s greatest living composer, Glass almost single handedly brought minimalism into contemporary popular culture — influencing legions of rock and electronic artists while simultaneously introducing classical music to a generation of otherwise…

Blue Roses turns Glass Menagerie into musical mush

The basic question for Blue Roses is: Why? With a play as perfect as The Glass Menagerie, why mess with it at all? Why did anyone think turning it into a musical would work? Worse yet, why turn it into a bad musical, which is what’s playing at Irving’s Lyric…

Conan O’Brien’s Show Will Tape in Dallas

A lot of people are going to be in town between March and April thanks to the NCAA Division 1 Men’s Final Four Championship at Cowboys Stadium. One of those people will be Conan O’Brien. The late night host of TBS’ Conan and his sidekick Andy Richter will tape a…

Cock Explores Ups and Downs of Male Sexuality

Its title is the only bit of shock in Cock, the play by British writer Mike Bartlett now running as Second Thought Theatre’s 10th season opener at Bryant Hall. Oh, it’s all about the peen, where it goes and who wants it, but as a piece of contemporary drama, Cock…

Delilah Buitron on The Rise of Flamenco, Her Career and Dallas’ DNA

Valentine’s Day aside, The Rise of Flamenco would be a sexy way to spend any Friday night. Lucky for romantics, Orchestra of New Spain, Dallas Flamenco Festival and Danielle Georgiou Dance Group collaborated on a show for this weekend, just in time to save your previously lackluster dinner plans. This…

Death and the Powers: Robots Are Coming. And They Can Sing.

Robert Orth is splayed on his back, flailing his arms and legs from side to side with big, heavy flops. “Rememmmmberrr!” he wails in a rich, lyrical voice. “The memory chamber! Touch, too much. Too much unremembered!” He uses his legs to drag his body across the floor of the…