I started this blog with one daughter, kept it up with the other, to spend time together doing something we enjoyed.
However, things change and people evolve. My daughters are older, busier, and not as interested in writing.
From now on this blog will be mostly mom with occasional contributions from my daughters and maybe even my husband.
Nothing else will change. We'll still focus on sharing fun places to go, fun things to do, and more, and we would  still love to hear your views too

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Sunday Scoop Week of 1/21/24 What's Happening This Week and More

A) Beginning Performances 

In New Jersey

1) All My Sons

In New York

2) American Whore Story

3) B.O.T.C.H.

4) Once Upon a Mattress

5) Wounded

B) Cast Changes

6) Spamalot

C) Closing Soon

7) Harmony

D) Run Extension 

8) All the Devils Are Here

9) Beverly Johnson: In Vogue

E) What's Happening This Week and More

10) ACT of Connecticut Partners With 
Posthumous Prodigy Productions Initiative for Musicians

11) America Symphony Orchestra Gives Rare Performance of Dvorak's Requiem
at Carnegie Hall 1/25

12) Broadway's Hell's Kitchen Establishes Comprehensive Fellowship

13) Centenary Stage Co. Winter Thaw Concert Series Presents 
French Grooves from Rosaway 1/27

14) Center Stage Records Releases How to Dance in Ohio Cast Album

15) Fathom Events Brings The Wizard of Oz Back to Movie Theaters
1/28, 1/29, & 1/31

16) Flatiron District Upcoming Free Tours

17) Japan Society Oshogatsu, Japanese New Year's Celebration
at Japan Society 1/28

16) NJPAC Celebrates Max Roach's Centennial
1/26

18) Nai-Ni Chen Dance Co. Celebrates the Year of the Dragon
at Kupferberg Centerfor the Arts 1/27 & 1/28

19) Seth Bisen-Hirsch Presents Sheldon Harnick Cabarets
at Don't Tell Mama 1/23 & 1/26

20) TADA! Youth Theater Open House 1/27

21) Works & Process Presents Lincoln Center Theater: Corruption
1/28

A) Beginning Performances 

In New Jersey

Photo courtesy of Kelsey Theater

1) All My Sons

The Keller family lives in a middle class, God-fearing neighborhood, where residents start and end their lives on the same block; where grape juice and gossip are never more than a few steps away, where power is gained through business and poker games, and where secrets divulged are over freshly baked apple pie. Joe Keller is a successful, self-made man, who has spent his entire life in the single-minded pursuit of wealth for the sake of his family, and who loses sight of his morality and pays the price. Rated R   

Kelsey Theatre at MCCC (1200 Old Trenton Rd., West Windsor)
1/26 - 2/4 Friday, Saturday. Sunday

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit kelsey.mccc.edu

In New York

Photo by Devin Dygert

2) American Whore Story

From the face that launched a thousand memes, gifs, clickbait, and fan art, AMERICAN WHORE STORY is an anthology of autobiographical tales of self-compromise.  In the show, Naomi Grossman reveals her history of hustling— from her compromised love life to her compromising odd jobs.  She drives the Red Bull car (then crashes it into a shopping mall), masquerades as a native-speaking Spanish teacher (at the Playboy Mansion and beyond), works a gay pride parade dressed as a giant condom (as one does) … and the list goes on. AMERICAN WHORE STORY takes its audience on a transformative trip to Burning Man, an acid trip to a 60’s Rat Pack rager, and along Grossman’s circuitous, albeit hilarious, triumphant trip to #1 on IMDb.

AMT Theater (354 West 45th St.)
1/23 - 1/25

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit www.americanwhorestory.com.

Photo courtesy of TADA! Youth Theater

3) B.O.T.C.H.

B.O.T.C.H. is a jazz-styled musical that follows 7 youth on the New York City subway who get lost underground and meet artistic rats, members of B.O.T.C.H. (Bureau of Turmoil, Chaos, & Headaches), and find themselves in the basement of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

TADA! Youth Theater (15 West 28th St., 2nd Fl.)

1/27 - 2/18 Friday, Saturday & Sunday


For more information or to purchase tickets, visit TADATHEATER.COM


4) Once Upon a Mattress

Musical theater legend Sutton Foster (The Music Man) returns to the City Center stage as Winifred the Woebegone alongside Michael Urie (Ugly Betty) as Prince Dauntless, and an all-star creative team led by Encores! Artistic Director Lear deBessonet (Lionel Bart’s Oliver!), with a new concert adaptation by Amy Sherman-Palladino (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel).
New York City Center (130 W. 56th St.)
1/24 - 4/4

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit www.nycitycenter.org/pdps/2023-2024/once-upon-a-mattress

5) Wounded 

In Wounded, writer Jiggs Burgess tells us the story of a repressed nobody who thinks of himself as somebody, an addict, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf played out between hummingbirds and a dog. Following former university classmates Carrol and Robert as their personal circumstances have led them down two very different paths, director Del Shores brings to the stage the notion that “in the darkest of comedies, the bleak paths our lives can lead us down are on full display.” Winner of the Pick of the Hollywood Fringe, Best of Broadwater Theatre and Hollywood Encore Producers’ Awards.

Soho Playhouse (15 Vandam St.)
1/24 - 2/11
Opening Night 1/27

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit https://www.sohoplayhouse.com.


B) Cast Changes

6) Spamalot

Jonathan Bennet joins the cast in the role of Sir Robin 1/23

Lovingly ripped from the film classic, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, SPAMALOT has everything that makes a great knight at the theatre, from flying cows to killer rabbits, British royalty to French taunters, dancing girls, rubbery shrubbery, and of course, the lady of the lake. SPAMALOT features well-known song titles such as “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life,” “The Song That Goes Like This,” “Find Your Grail” and more that have become beloved classics in the musical theatre canon. 

St. James Theatre box (246 West 44th St.)

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit SpamalotTheMusical.com.

C) Closing Soon

Photo by Julieta Cervantes

7) Harmony

Based on an unbelievable true story, Harmony tells the tale of the most successful entertainers you've never heard of. . . until now. In the 1920s and 30s, The Comedian Harmonists sold millions of records, made dozens of films, and sold-out the biggest theaters around the world. Their heavenly harmonies and musical comedy antics catapulted these six talented young men from singing in the subway tunnels of Berlin to international superstardom

Barrymore Theatre (243 W. 47th St.)
Closing 2/4

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit www.harmonyanewmusical.com


D) Run Extension 

Photo by Julieta Cervantes

8) All the Devils Are Here

Dubbed “The villain of Broadway” by Playbill, Mr. Page has never shied away from exploring his dark side. Now, with this tour de force show, he turns his attention to the twisted motivation and hidden humanity at the heart of Shakespeare’s greatest villains. Moving swiftly through the Shakespeare canon, Page illuminates the playwright's ever-evolving conception of evil by delving into more than a dozen of his most wicked creations. Thrilling, biting, hilarious, and enlightening, what Page delivers is a masterclass on the most terrifying subject of them all: human nature.


DR2 Theatre (103 E 15th St.) 
Now closing 1/31

For more information or to purchase tickets, allthedevilsplay.com.

9) Beverly Johnson: In Vogue

Exactly fifty years ago, Beverly Johnson made history as the first Black woman to appear on the cover of American Vogue. The iconic supermodel has graced more than 500 magazine covers and worked in theater and TV while mingling with some of the biggest stars of the last fifty years from Elizabeth Taylor to the great Ella Fitzgerald.

IN VOGUE takes us on a journey through her super-modeling career, her unimaginable tumultuous relationships, the truth about Bill Cosby, and her involvement in the #MeToo movement. Like Johnson herself, this show is funny, fearless, and unapologetic while illustrating how she bucked trends and broke through barriers, blazing a trail that continues to burn brightly today. In this intimate “live-autobiography” Johnson takes the stage to share her personal dispatches in the ever-shifting but never dull fashion and entertainment industries which all began just blocks from 59E59 Theaters.

59E59’s Theater B (59 E 59th St.)
Now closing 2/4

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit 59e59.org/shows/show-detail/beverly-johnson-in-vogue.

E) What's Happening This Week and More

10) ACT (A CONTEMPORARY THEATRE) OF CONNECTICUT PARTNERS WITH POSTHUMOUS PRODIGY PRODUCTIONS INITIATIVE FOR MUSICIANS

ACT of CT is thrilled to announce their partnership with Posthumous Prodigy Productions Fellowship Award. The Posthumous Prodigy Productions gift is given in homage to the late Bryan Gallace of Southport, Connecticut. A 2014 graduate of Fairfield Ludlowe High and the Regional Center for the Arts, Bryan was a senior at Berklee College of Music pursuing a B.A. in Professional Music when he tragically passed away at the age of 21 years old. A uniquely talented and dedicated musician from early childhood, Bryan was also a fervent supporter of equal rights.

The Posthumous Prodigy Productions Fellowship grants a one-time annual award of $30,000 to a selected musician. This transformative financial support is to be used for the creation or exploitation of new musical works (in any genre of music), as well as for professional growth.

ACT of CT’s Resident Music Supervisor, Bryan Perri will serve as Advisor to the Posthumous Prodigy Productions Fellowship Award and will work intimately with the Fellowship’s committee.

Interested and potential applicants can learn more about eligibility and application process by visiting ACT of CT’s website (specifically www.actofct.org/posthumous-prodigy-productions). Applications for Posthumous Prodigy Productions Fellowship are due by April 1st, 2024

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Photo courtesy of Pascal Nadon Communications

11) AMERICAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA GIVES RARE PERFORMANCE OF

DVOŘÁK’S REQUIEM AT CARNEGIE HALL

JANUARY 25, 2024

Soloists are Soprano Leah Hawkins, Mezzo-Soprano Lindsay Ammann,

Tenor Joshua Blue, and Bass Stefan Egerstrom with the Bard Festival Chorale

Music Director Leon Botstein leads the American Symphony Orchestra (ASO) and the Bard Festival Chorale in Antonin Dvořák’s Requiem on Thursday, January 25, at Carnegie Hall. Featuring one of the composer’s lesser-known choral jewels, the performance provides a rare opportunity to hear a work nowhere nearly as well known or performed as Dvořák’s late symphonies or other choral works, such as his Stabat Mater.

The guest soloists are soprano Leah Hawkins, a 2023 Marian Anderson award-winner who appeared this season in The Metropolitan Opera’s production of X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X; mezzo-soprano Lindsay Ammann, who can be heard on the Met Opera’s Grammy Award-winning Götterdämmerung recording; tenor Joshua Blue, who performed as Peter in the Met’s production of Porgy and Bess: and bass Stefan Egerstrom, who made his Met debut last season as Fourth Nobleman in the new François Girard production of Lohengrin.

Dvořák: Requiem

Thursday, January 25, 2024, 8 pm, Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall

Conductor’s Notes Q&A at 7 pm

American Symphony Orchestra

Leon Botstein, conductor

Leah Hawkins, soprano

Lindsay Ammann, mezzo-soprano

Joshua Blue, tenor

Stefan Egerstrom, bass

Bard Festival Chorale

James Bagwell, choral director


Tickets: Priced at $25–$65, tickets are available at carnegiehall.org, by calling CarnegieCharge at 212.247.7800, or visiting the box office at 57th St. and 7th Ave.


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Photo courtesy of Polk PR


12) BROADWAY’S HELL’S KITCHEN

ESTABLISHES 

COMPREHENSIVE FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM


APPLICATIONS NOW OPEN


Alicia Keys and Broadway’s HELL’S KITCHEN are thrilled to announce the establishment of a comprehensive Fellowship Program, dedicated to building and strengthening the Broadway employment pipeline by engaging and employing individuals from historically overlooked communities to become active and continuous participants in the Broadway workforce. The Fellowship Program will place Fellows across nine departments, including: Direction, Choreography, Scenic Design, Costume Design, Lighting Design, Sound Design, Projection Design, Company Management/Executive Producing and Public Relations. Applications are now open at HellsKitchen.com.

 

Representation remains a central focus of today’s theater landscape and is the inspiration for the genesis of this Fellowship. This initiative is rooted in the intersectional experiences of BIPOC theater creators and administrators. Fellows will be exposed to the inner workings of a large-scale Broadway musical, be assigned a mentor in their dedicated department and receive in-depth training in an area that aligns with their interests and talents. Additionally, Fellows will have access to industry networking opportunities, private and group coaching sessions and interactions with Broadway’s leading creative and management teams. Each Fellow will be compensated with a weekly salary for a fellowship period between seven to nine weeks.


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Photo courtesy of Rosaway & Centenary Stage Company


 13) FRENCH GROOVES FROM ROSAWAY TO BE HEARD NEXT FOR CENTENARY STAGE COMPANY’S WINTER THAW CONCERT SERIES. 

Centenary Stage Company’s Winter Thaw Festival of concerts continues with a performance by ROSAWAY on January 27 at 8:00 pm. The concert will take place at CSC’s Sitnik Theatre of the Lackland Performing Arts Center at 715 Grand Avenue, Hackettstown, NJ. Ticket prices are $25 for adults and $15 for students of any age & children under 12. For more information, or to purchase tickets, visit centenarystageco.org or call the Centenary Stage Company box office at (908) 979-0900. 

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14) Center Stage Records Announces inaugural cast album HOW TO DANCE IN OHIO
Original Broadway Cast Recording
available digitally now

Center Stage Records has announced that their inaugural release, the original Broadway cast recording of How to Dance in Ohio, is available digitally on all platforms today. A physical CD will be released in February and is now available for pre-order at CenterStageRecords.com. 

How to Dance in Ohio is the new musical inspired by Alexandra Shiva’s Peabody Award-winning documentary of the same name. With book and lyrics by Rebekah Greer Melocik, music by Jacob Yandura, orchestrations by Bruce Coughlin, choreography by Mayte Natalio, direction by Sammi Cannold and musical direction by Lily Ling, the musical features Desmond Luis Edwards, Amelia Fei, Madison Kopec, Liam Pearce, Imani Russell, Conor Tague, Ashley Wool, Caesar Samayoa, Haven Burton, Darlesia Cearcy, Carlos L. Encinias, Nick Gaswirth, Melina Kalomas and Christina Sastre. The album is produced by Emmy Award-winner and Grammy nominee Michael J. Moritz Jr. and co-produced by Jacob Yandura, Bruce Coughlin and, for P3 Productions, Ben Holtzman, Sammy Lopez and Fiona Howe Rudin.  Executive Producers are Raymond Esposito and Samantha Esposito, Jefferson W. Tidwell and Matthew P. Hui and Associate Producer is Corey Brunish.

For more about How to Dance in Ohio or to purchase tickets, visit howtodanceinohiomusical.com.

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15) Fathom Events & Warner Bros. Kick Off the 2024 Big Screen Classics Series by Celebrating the 85th Anniversary of ‘The Wizard of Oz’


Each Screening in the Series Includes an Exclusive Introduction by Film Critic & Historian Leonard Maltin, Discussing the Landmark Oscar®-Winning Fantasy’s Enduring Appeal

 Tickets Are Available for Purchase Via the 

Fathom Events Website


WHAT: Fathom Events’ Big Screen Classics 2024 kicks off with the beloved 1939 fantasy “The Wizard of Oz”—returning to theaters nationwide in honor of its 85TH Anniversary on Sunday, January 28, Monday, January 29, and Wednesday, January 31.


WHO: Fathom Events and Warner Bros.


WHEN: Sunday, January 28 at 1:00 pm and 7:00 pm local time, Monday, January 29 at 7:00 pm local time, and Wednesday, January 31 at 7:00 pm local time.


WHERE: Tickets for the event can be purchased at Fathom Events or at participating theater box offices. For a complete list of theater locations, visit the Fathom Events website (theater locations are subject to change).


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16) Flatiron District 
Free Upcoming Walking Tours 

1/28
2/18

Meets at tip of Flatiron Bldg.  23rd street & 5th Ave at 10:55am

For more information visit, 

For more information, visit Mike's NYC Tours

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Photo by George Hirose

 17) Japan Society is pleased to present

 

Oshogatsu: New Year’s Celebration

 

A Day of Family Fun Celebrating New Years Japan-Style with Hands-On Activities: Drum Performance and Mini-Workshop, Ink-Painting, Lion-Dance Procession,

and New Year’s Crafts at Japan Society


Sunday, January 28, 2024

 

12:30pm-3:30pm

(Taiko Performance at 1pm)


Japan Society

333 E 47th Street (between 1st and 2nd Avenues)


Celebrate the New Year Japanese-style at the Japan Society Oshogatsu celebration that’s filled with fun for the whole family.

 

After watching a riveting Japanese taiko drum performance, kids are invited on stage for a hands-on drum mini-workshop. Families can then welcome the New Year with exciting and traditional activities like New Year’s calligraphy (kakizome), lion dancing (shishimai), rice (mochi) pounding, kamishibai storytelling, kite making and more New Year’s-themed crafts. There is something for everyone to enjoy!

 

Japanese bento lunch boxes and snacks will be available for purchase to eat at in-door picnic area.


About the Performers:

  • Taiko Masala has thrilled audiences throughout the US with performances of Japan's traditional drumming - Taiko. By combining the training and discipline of Japanese martial arts with the precision and power of complex drumming, Taiko Masala brings visually stunning and breathless excitement to their performances.

 

Admission:

$18 General admission / $12 Japan Society members; children ages 2 and under free.

 

Free for Cool Culture members. Advance ticket purchase required. This event will be photographed. Recommended for children ages 3-10 and accompanying adults. Tickets can be purchased here.


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Photo courtesy of Prana Marketing

18) NJPAC CELEBRATES MAX ROACH’S CENTENNIAL 
 
MAX ROACH FREEDOM NOW SUITE “CONCERT” STARRING CASSANDRA WILSON, SONIA SANCHEZ, SAUL WILLIAMS, RAVI COLTRANE, ERIC REVIS,
NDUDUZO MAKHATHINI, HASHEET WAIT

 
FRIDAY, JANUARY 26 AT 8 P.M.

New Jersey Performing Arts Center will celebrate the centennial and impact of percussionist, drummer, jazz composer, and social activist Max Roach. See Grammy winner Cassandra Wilson as she shares her distinctive voice as Newark celebrates the centennial of Max Roach on Friday, January 26 at 8 p.m.
 
Cassandra Wilson is featured on recordings by musicians such as Terence Blanchard, Bill Frisell, Charlie Haden, Angelique Kidjo, and Luther Vandross, and earned critical acclaim for her performance on Wynton Marsalis' Pulitzer Prize-winning Blood on the Fields album. Joining the celebration will be revered poets Sonia Sanchez and Saul Williams. Extraordinary musicians who share their gift of the special occasion will be Ravi Coltrane, saxophone; Eric Revis, bass; Nduduzo Makhathini, Piano; and Nasheet Waits, Drums. 
 
This unique production that only NJPAC curate will celebrate and educate many on the life of Maxwell Lemuel Roach. Roach is among the most excellent jazz musicians ever; he performed with Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, and Sonny Rollins. He is widely considered one of the most influential drummers in the history of jazz.

Visit NJPAC.org or call 888.GO.NJPAC to reserve a seat for this once in a lifetime celebration.

MAX ROACH CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION:
Freedom Now Suite CONCERT WITH CASSANDRA WILSON
 
FRI 1.26 @ 8:00 p.m. MAX ROACH CENTENNIAL: FREEDOM NOW SUITE
Cassandra Wilson – vocals
Sonia Sanchez – poet
Saul Williams – poet
Ravi Coltrane – saxophone
Eric Revis – bass
Nduduzo Makhathini – piano
Nasheet Waits – drums
 
The revolutionary 1960 album We Insist!: Max Roach’s Freedom Now Suite explored issues of social justice and racial inequality through the lens of jazz and poetry. In celebration of the centennial of Max Roach (1924-2007)—drummer, bebop pioneer and civil rights activist—this landmark work is reimagined for today’s world. In affiliation with Jazz at Lincoln Center, this special one-night only concert is led by musical director Nasheet Waits (of Max’s percussion ensemble M’Boom) featuring vocalist Cassandra Wilson, poets Sonia Sanchez and Saul Williams, saxophonist Ravi Coltrane, pianist Nduduzo Makhathini, and bassist Eric Revis. Experience the modern evolution of the Freedom Now Suite, a piece that continues to live, expand and inspire across generations#MAXROACH100

This event will be held at NJPAC’s Prudential Hall, Newark, NJ.

NJPAC
Prudential Hall
Betty Wold Johnson Stage
One Center Street
Newark, New Jersey 07102
www.njpac.org
Box Office 888.GO.NJPAC (888.466.5722)

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Photo by Anthony Alvarez

19) Celebrate the Year of the Dragon with

Spectacular Lunar New Year Performances!


Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company at Kupferberg Center for the Arts

Saturday, January 27 and Sunday, January 28, 2024


Ring in the Year of the Dragon with Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company with an unforgettable weekend at the Kupferberg Center for the Arts at Queens College, Flushing, NY. These joyous Lunar New Year events will be a cultural extravaganza filled with vibrant performances, traditional festivities, and immersive experiences. Tickets are available online at https://kupferbergcenter.org/lunar-new-year/ or by phone at (718)-793-8080.


The Year of the Dragon is considered one of the most auspicious and significant years in the Chinese zodiac, symbolizing strength, courage, and good fortune. To mark this special occasion, Kupferberg Center for the Arts has partnered with the renowned Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company to create a celebration like no other.


Family-friendly performances will take place on Saturday, January 27, and Sunday, January 28 at 3pm, featuring majestic dragons, dancing lions, Mongolian dance, acrobats, and much more, with all tickets $20 (no additional fees).


On Saturday, January 27 at 7pm, the company will present a contemporary program combining modern and traditional dances. Be prepared to be enthralled by their mesmerizing choreography, combining contemporary and traditional elements in a breathtaking display of talent and culture. Tickets are $30 (no additional fees).


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Photo courtesy of Seth Bisen-Hersh


Photo courtesy of Seth Bisen-Hersh

20) Seth Bisen-Hersh Will Present Sheldon Harnick Tribute Cabarets at Don't Tell Mama on Tuesday/Friday, January 23rd/26th

Award-winning off-Broadway composer/lyricist Seth Bisen-Hersh (Love Quirks) will present cabarets featuring the songs of Sheldon Harnick on Tuesday, January 23rd & Friday, January 26th at 7PM at renowned cabaret venue Don't Tell Mama.

The evening, which will will celebrate the recently deceased icon of musical theater, will be comprised of songs from Harnick’s musicals including Fiddler on the Roof, She Loves Me, The Apple Tree, The Rothschilds, and Fiorello.  

Tuesday’s performers include: Cheyenne Ballew, Julie Biancheri, Danielle Burman, Lauren Vaughn Carlson, Rivka Chaim, Amy Erlanger, Kayleigh Evans, Brianna Galligan, Michael Hasty, Kimberly Larkin, Terence Law, Karis McMurry, Cara Niebling, Ally O’Brien, Lily Pierce, Carly Sesti, Neva Small, Liza Suzanna, Sarah Thompson, Sophie Leiton Toomey & Jaclyn B. Wood.

Friday’s performers include: Nayeli Abrego, Danielle Allen, Marin Asnes, Daniel Barrett, Lelia Bruske, Rivka Chaim, Kayleigh Evans, Paula Galloway, Estelle Goodwin, Michael Hasty, Zack Krajnyak, Terence Law, Cameron Long, Jillian Mitchell, Chelsea Moretz, Cara Niebling, Lily Pierce, Nikki Scamuffo, Kaleb Sells, Liza Suzanna, Sarah Thompson, Jesse Toledo & Jaclyn B. Wood.

Don't Tell Mama is located at 343 W.46th St. The show has a $20 cover and 2 drink minimum, which is cash only.  Tickets can be reserved at: 

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21) TADA! YOUTH THEATER 

OPEN HOUSE ON SATURDAY, JANUARY 27TH

DANCING! SINGING! ACTING!

 

Enjoy a sample class before registering for TADA! Youth Theater

Winter and Spring Semester Classes 

from February 26th through May 22nd


Please join in on Saturday, January 27th at TADA! Youth Theater, 15 West 28th Street, 3rd Floor, (Between Broadway and Fifth Avenue), in Manhattan to find out more about registering for TADA! Youth Theater’s Winter and Spring Semester Classes for students, ages 4 to 12, from February 26, 2024 through May 22, 2024.  After-school and weekends, young people explore the essential skills of singing, dancing and acting!

 

The TADA! Open House on January 27th  takes place from 10:00AM-10:45AM (ages 4-7) and 11:00AM-11:45AM (ages 8-12).  Students will participate in a fun, active musical theater sample class led by two professional NYC Teaching Artists. TADA’s Director of Education will facilitate a Q&A and share information with parents. *Registration required for children to attend at $25 per student.  If you register for Winter and Spring classes following the Open House, the fee plus discount will be applied to your class registration.

 

To register for January 27th Open House, please visit: https://tadatheater.com/open-house/

 

Financial Assistance is available.

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Photo courtesy of Michelle Tabnick PR

22) Works & Process Presents

Lincoln Center Theater: Corruption 

by J.T. Rogers, Directed by Bartlett Sher

Sunday, January 28, 2024

The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum


Works & Process at the Guggenheim presents Lincoln Center Theater: Corruption by J.T. Rogers, Directed by Bartlett Sher on Sunday, January 28, 2024 at 7pm at the Guggenheim’s Peter B. Lewis Theater, 1071 Fifth Avenue, NY. Tickets $55 to Choose-What-You-Pay. To purchase tickets, visit https://www.worksandprocess.org/calendar/works-and-process-at-the-guggenheim-corruption

Before previews, go behind the scenes of playwright J. T. Rogers’s newest play, Corruption, which will open this spring at the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater. Corruption is the story behind the story of the 2009-2011 international phone hacking scandal that exposed the criminal news-gathering techniques of the Rupert Murdoch media empire, and ultimately brought down UK news outlets, senior British politicians, and police officers. New York Times Magazine reporter Susan Dominus moderates a discussion with Rogers and Sher and cast members perform highlights.

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And that's the Scoop. Tune in tomorrow for More Theater Monday.

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