'Nothing to Hide' Is a Magical Evening
“Nothing to Hide,” Derek DelGaudio and Helder Guimarães’ evening of sleight of hand, directed by Neil Patrick Harris in a world premiere at the Geffen Playhouse, is astounding.
'Nothing to Hide' Is a Magical Evening
“Nothing to Hide,” Derek DelGaudio and Helder Guimarães’ evening of sleight of hand, directed by Neil Patrick Harris in a world premiere at the Geffen Playhouse, is astounding.
Not a jukebox musical but a music revue, "Beehive" flies through all or part of 40 songs—two written for the show and the rest of them spanning the eclectic array of popular female performers of the 1960s
L.A. Review: The Book of Mormon
The "Book of Mormon” national tour hits Los Angeles’ Pantages Theatre with a joyous production fronted by Gavin Creel and Jared Gertner, and musicals will never be quite the same.
'Sketches From the National Lampoon' Is Delightfully Outrageous
Matty Simmons’ “Sketches From the National Lampoon,” at the Hayworth Theatre, pokes ridiculously skewed fun at everything and anyone unlucky enough to come into its crosshairs.
'Faith: Part I of a Mexican Trilogy' Completes a Significant Theatrical Achievement
“Faith: Part I of A Mexican Trilogy,” the first play in Evelina Fernández’s imposing trilogy about a Mexican-American matriarchy, from Latino Theater Company, should not be missed.
This world premiere musical about Japanese internment during World War II features George Takei and Lea Salonga in a cast of talented performers.
‘Justin Love’ Asks, Will Movie Stars Ever Come Out of the Closet?
With a book co-written by one of L.A.’s most noteworthy publicists and a delightfully irreverent score screwing the movie business to its sticking place, the fresh new musical “Justin Love” emerges as a great Hollywood love story.
Stephen Spinella and Jonathan Cake grace the cast of Jordi Galcerán Ferrer’s “The Grönholm Method,” a scathing, delightfully twisted satire of corporate greed, at Falcon Theatre.
The hit Off-Broadway parody “Silence! The Musical” gets a take-no-prisoners L.A. premiere at the Hayworth Theatre, with Davis Gaines and Christine Lakin in the leading roles.
Boundary-Breaking 'Miss Julie[n]' Turns Strindberg Gay
“Miss Julie[n],” Ken Roht’s sensational multimedia take on August Strindberg’s classic, from Orphean Circus, Firehouse Theater Company, and MorYork Gallery, will haunt your dreams.