Take Rent, or Leave Rent
This past weekend marked three things for Lake Worth Playhouse (LWP): the opening weekend of Rent; the second performance of its 2023-2024 season, its 71st; and the first show premiering after the recent passing of its Executive Director, Stephanie Smith. Her usual chair in the theater was left reserved, adorned with a bouquet of flowers.
‘HOW I LEARNED WHAT I LEARNED’ PROBES PLAYWRIGHT’S JOURNEY AS A YOUNG BLACK MAN IN PITTSBURGH
Famed Pulitzer Prize playwright August Wilson (1945-2005) shared his experiences growing up as a young Black poet in his native Pittsburgh in the one man play “How I Learned What I Learned”, running now through October 22 in the South Florida premiere of the play at GableStage in Coral Gables.
Hollywood Dreams… Where Nothing is Real
I’m writing this just as word came in of a tentative deal that would end the Hollywood writers strike. Which is welcome news, of course, for our country’s creatives and, by extension for all of us, their audience. But I can’t help feeling sorry for everyone involved in the glittery, glamorous, immensely lucrative (for the rare few) … but also incredibly caustic and phony movie business.
Sushi by Boū Opens Newest Omakase Sushi Restaurant in Boca Raton
Modern speakeasy-inspired Sushi by Boū – a restaurant known for reimagining the unique omakase experience of sushi dining – opened its doors Sept. 13 in Boca Raton after opening another location in West Palm Beach in May.
The Boca site, at 409 SE Mizner Blvd. in Royal Palm Place, features its classic omakase experience as well as additional outdoor seating.
Inspiring Young Playwrights of Tomorrow at Theatre Lab FAU
Prolific playwright Stephen Brown may be heading toward his late thirties, but he looks at least a decade younger and has managed to retain incredible knowledge of and insights into all the angst and anger of teen and preteen life. Whether his plays revolve around the actions and passions of a troubled young boy or girl, they always ring true, inciting gasps of recognition from his audience.
‘Pay the Writer’ Is Just One Point in This Relationship Play
This post was originally published on NY Times - Theater
Written by: Rhoda Feng
Despite its thunderbolt of a title, the focus of this memory play is on the relationship between a self-involved author and his long-suffering agent.
Amid an ongoing strike by Hollywood screenwriters and actors, a play with the nifty title “Pay the Writer” courts applause before anyone has uttered a word. Never mind that its turf is mainly the literary world, not the cinematic one; the author at the center of Tawni O’Dell’s play, Cyrus Holt (Ron Canada), seems to speak for all underpaid writers when he inscribes that feisty injunction in a copy of his book that is being adapted as a movie.
STUDENTS THRIVE IN THE ARTS AT MIAMI LEARNING EXPERIENCE SCHOOL
Originally published on http://artburstmiami.com.
Written By Gina Perez