Posts Tagged ‘F. Murray Abraham’

The WEEK AHEAD: July 16-22

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Shannon photo3

This WEEK AHEAD is dedicated to Shannon Tavarez! Shannon, former young Nala in Broadway’s The Lion King was diagnosed with AML leukemia last April. She now has to undergo regular chemotherapy treatments, which prevent her from performing. Shannon’s chances of beating this horrible disease will greatly increase with a bone marrow transplant.

The Lion King, Disney Theatrical Productions and DKMS are holding two special donor drives in the hopes of finding a match for Shannon and other patients like her.

Sunday, July 18, 10AM-4PM (St. Malachy’s – The Actors’ Chapel, Encore Senior Center, 239 West 49th Street)

Friday, July 23, 10AM-3PM (The Minskoff Theatre, home of Disney’s The Lion King, 200 West 45th Street).

You can also sign up for a DKMS registration kit online at GetSwabbed.org

For more information about Shannon, go to matchshannon.com

Stay strong, Shannon!
Love,
Your Pals at Playbill

Friday, July 16
GO→ The summer’s hottest dance party, the Fire Island Dance Festival returns to the isle of fire with a slew of performances from the hottest dancers in the world including, Marcelo Gomes (Principal, American Ballet Theatre), Travis Wall and members of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. Proceeds from the fest benefit BC/EFA and Dancers Responding to AIDS. (Through July 18, Click here for a full schedule of events)

GO (FREE)→ Talk about an enchanted (and romantic) evening! The annual Concert in the Park (the Brooklyn edition) features the New York Philharmonic and the sweet sounds of Leonard Bernstein’s West Side Story and Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet. (8pm, Prospect Park, enter at Bartel-Pritchard Circle or 9th St., Brooklyn, info)

Bill T. Jones

GO→ Fondly Do We Hope…Fervently Do We Pray features the stunning and emotional choreography of Tony winner Bill T. Jones, with original music by Jerome Begin, Christopher Antonio William Lancaster and George Lewis, Jr. This new dance piece explores some key moments in the life of Abraham Lincoln and the struggle for civil rights throughout American history. (Through July 17, $30-$75, Lincoln Center, Frederick P. Rose Hall, Broadway at 60th St., info/tickets)

Saturday, July 17

Zakiya Young and Matt CavenaughGO→ With Superman flying high above the Dallas Theater Center on the songs of Strouse, and Spider-Man slowly spinning his web toward Broadway, what better time to get out and learn all you can about the history of these and other caped crusaders? Take the “Superhero Tour of New York” and visit places like the Green Goblin’s mansion and the apartment of Leonore Lemmon (who is suspected of killing the original Superman, George Reeves). (Starts at Jim Hanley’s Universe, 4 W. 33rd. St., opposite the Empire State Building, advance bookings only, $25, info)
Sunday, July 18

GO→ Alice Ripley will play her last Broadway performance in the show that gave her a Tony Award, Next to Normal. Tony nominee Marin Mazzie will take over starting Monday, July 19. Ripley will resume the role of Diana this fall for the national tour. (Booth Theatre, 222 West 45th St., btwn. Broadway & 8th Ave., Click here for Playbill Club discount tickets)

Mandy Gonzalez

GO→ Oscar winner F. Murray Abraham and Wicked’s Mandy Gonzalez will join host Neil Berg for songs from Berg’s songbook, including tunes from The Prince and the Pauper, The 12 and the upcoming Grumpy Old Men. Berg’s wife, Rita Harvey, will also perform, as will Rob Evan, Laurence Clayton, Sophia Ramos and William Michals. (8:30 PM, Feinstein’s at Loews Regency, 540 Park Ave., at 61st St., $50-$71 with food/beverage minimum, info/tickets or call 212.339.4095)

Monday, July 19
Morticia's NailsBUY→ Addams Family matriarch, Morticia (aka Bebe Neuwirth) has designed a limited-edition, specialty trio of nail polishes based on her character’s love of the glamorously ghoulish. The box set will debut July 19 with only 5,000 pieces available for purchase. Proceeds will benefit The Actors Fund. ($30, purchase/info)

Tuesday, July 20
Featured Offer: Rufus WainwrightGO→ Rufus Wainwright takes to the stage at Prospect Park along with dad, folk legend Loudon Wainwright III. The younger Wainwright is said to be including songs from his Judy Garland tribute show and subsequent Grammy-nominated album. (7pm, Prospect Park Bandshell, 9th St & Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, NY, Click here for $20 Playbill Club discount tickets)

GO (FREE)→ Rising opera star, soprano Susanna Phillips will perform as part of The Metropolitan Opera’s Summer Recital Series. (7pm, Brooklyn Bridge Park, Pier 1, info/directions)

Wednesday, July 21
Walking With Dinosaurs "stars" Tyrannosaurus mother and her young with narrator Huxley.GO→ Theatrical designers partnered with scientists to create the arena spectacular Walking with Dinosaurs. More than 15 life-sized dinosaurs come alive to help tell the story of the reptiles’ 200 million-year domination on earth. It’s like “Jurassic Park” come to life! The show will continue on a national tour hitting Chicago, IL, Green Bay, WI, Duluth, MN, Anchorage, AK, Anaheim, CA, and Los Angeles, CA. (Through July 25, Madison Square Garden, $35-$99, info/tickets)

Thursday, July 22
GO (FREE)→ The third installment of the popular lunchtime event “Broadway in Bryant Park” will include performances by Chicago, Rock of Ages A Little Night Music and Falling for Eve. (12:30pm-1:30pm, Bryant Park, btwn. 40th and 42nd Sts. & 5th and 6th Aves., info)

The WEEK AHEAD: Feb.19-25

Friday, February 19th, 2010

This WEEK AHEAD is all about giving a tip of the proverbial hat to the geniuses of yesterday. A tune for the lady who sang (and lived) the blues…a dance for one of the most influential choreographers and directors of all time, Jerome Robbins…and a reading by Richard Dreyfuss and Mario Cuomo to honor the place that helped make Lincoln president.

Of Thee I Sing (and dance and act!)
Blake

Friday, February 19th
HolidayGO→ Billie Holiday died in 1959 at the age of 45. She lived a life of alcohol-and-drug-induced excess, but like many artists who met an untimely death, the work she left behind is what most people remember her for. Her last performance (in May of ‘59), as witnessed by playwright Reenie Upchurch, is what is documented in Yesterdays: An Evening with Billie Holiday. The songs that made her famous (including “My Man” and “Yesterdays”) are featured in the show, as are the demons that made her infamous. Vanessa Rubin stars as Holiday, Woodie King, Jr. directs. (Through Feb. 21, National Black Theatre, 2031 Fifth Avenue, at 125th Street, $20, call 1-866-811-4111 for tickets)

Saturday, February 20th
netrebkoOPENING→ Stunning soprano Anna Netrebko stars in the classic Puccini opera La Bohème, (as imagined by the legendary Franco Zeffirelli) at the Met. (Through March 20, The Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center, Columbus Avenue between 62nd and 65th Streets, info/tickets)

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Sunday, February 21st:
OPENING→ As the old saying goes, we all want to “keep up with the Joneses,” but who exactly are the Joneses? Bruce Norris’ Clybourne Park explores the many different types of “Joneses” that make up a Chicago community as it moves from a mostly white neighborhood in the 1950s to a multi-racial community of today. Inspired by Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun, Clybourne Park takes a darkly comedic and provocative look at how society’s feelings towards race and gentrification have (or have not) changed. (Through March 7, Playwrights Horizons Mainstage, 416 West 42nd Street, Click here for Playbill Club discount tickets)

The cast of the 1994 Harold Prince revival of Show Boat.

1994 revival of Show Boat directed by Harold Prince

Monday, February 22nd
GO→ Town Hall’s Broadway By The Year series returns with Broadway Musicals of 1927, which includes songs from Show Boat, Hit the Deck!, the Ziegfeld Follies and others, sung by some of Broadway’s biggest voices, including Chad Kimball (Memphis), Christopher Fitzgerald and Kate Baldwin (Finian’s Rainbow) and Ragtime’s Quentin Earl Darrington, Christiane Noll, and Bobby Steggert. (8pm, The Town Hall, 123 West 43rd Street, between Sixth Avenue and Broadway, $45-$55, info/tickets)

Michael Urie & Becki Newton, “Getting Married Today” GO→ Len Cariou, Raul Esparza, Tony Goldwyn, Julia Murney, Becki Newton, Tituss Burgess, Lea Salonga, Bruce Vilanch and a host of other Broadway celebs throw caution (and convention) to the wind for the Fifth Annual Broadway Backwards concert, which benefits Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center on 13th Street. As per usual, expect some great “gender-bending” performances with women singing songs written for men and vice versa. Florence Henderson is back as host. (8pm, Lincoln Center Theater at the Vivian Beaumont, 50 Lincoln Square Plaza, info/tickets)

GO→ The Theater for the New City hosts its seventh annual Love ‘n Courage benefit, which this year will honor Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson (who also celebrate their 62nd wedding anniversary next month). The evening boasts performances by Laura Linney, F. Murray Abraham, Elaine Stritch, Marian Seldes and the honorees themselves. Hosted by Charles Busch and Julie Halston. (7:30pm, The National Arts Club, 15 Gramercy Park South, $125 (tax deductible), info/tickets)

Tuesday, February 23rd

robbinsGO→ The New York City Ballet celebrates the work of one of its most prolific members with the return of All Robbins, a show featuring famous Jerome Robbins choreography. Expected pieces from West Side Story, and Dances at a Gathering, his ballet masterpiece set to the music of Chopin. (From Feb. 18-February 24, David H. Koch Theater at Lincoln Center, Columbus Avenue and 63rd Street, info/tickets)

Wednesday, February 24th
GO (FESTIVAL)→ The FRIGID Festival kicks off its fourth year of bringing New Yorkers out of the cold and entertaining them with over 150 different performances in three spaces in downtown NYC. (Through March 7, Full Schedule of Events)

Thursday, February 25th
lincolnGO (FREE)→ Great Evenings in the Great Hall will celebrate the 150th Anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s “Right Makes Might” speech with a reading (at the very same lectern Lincoln used) by Oscar winner Richard Dreyfuss, Tony winner André DeShields, former Gov. Mario Cuomo, Kathleen Chalfant and Stephen Lang. (6:30pm, arrive at 4pm for free tickets, Cooper Union’s Foundation Building, East 7th Street between 3rd and 4th Avenues, info)

The WEEK AHEAD . . . Jan. 15-21

Friday, January 15th, 2010

The rush of Broadway winter/spring show openings begins this WEEK AHEAD with a Coward classic… another classic (this time by the Bard) plays over the bridge…Constantine goes solo…Broadway auditions… and everything’s comin’ up Sondheim!

Curtain Up!,
Blake

Friday, January 15

GO→F. Murray Abraham brings his Oscar winning baritone to Carnegie Hall this Friday for a one-night-only performance featuring the poetry of Ilene Starger and the music of Eric Shimelonis. (8pm, Weill Recital Hall, 881 Seventh Avenue, between 56th and 57th streets, $35-55, tickets/info)

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GO→The Bridge Project is back at BAM with the Shakespearean classic As You Like It, directed by company head, Academy Award-winning director Sam Mendes. Cast includes Tony Award-winner Stephen Dillane (The Real Thing), Christian Camargo (All My Sons), and Thomas Sadoski (reasons to be pretty). (Through March 13, Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Harvey Theater, 651 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, $25-$95, info/tickets)

Saturday, January 16
GO→ Feeling disgruntled by your devotion to the theatre? The Public’s Under the Radar Festival has you covered. A two-day seminar entitled “Devoted and Disgruntled” sets out to dissect the ups and downs of devoting your professional life to the theatre, and finding ways to prevail in the crazy biz of show! (Through January 17, The Church of St Paul The Apostle, 405 W. 59th Street, Entrance on 60th and Columbus, $30, info)

Sunday, January 17
BEFORE IT CLOSES→ Three notable shows are closing up shop this Sunday. They are:

Finian’s Rainbow→ This whimsical “oldie but a goodie,” featuring wondrous performances by Kate Baldwin, Cheyenne Jackson and Tony winner Jim Norton, is set in the magical, mystical world of Missitucky. (St. James Theatre, 246 West 44th Street, between Broadway and Eighth Avenues, Click here for Playbill Club discount tickets)

Wishful Drinking→ This one-woman show features hilarious and sobering stories from the life of Carrie Fisher. From the dish on parents Eddie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds, to her own marriage to Paul Simon, to her ugly battle with depression and substance abuse, nothing is off-limits. (Studio 54, 254 W. 54th Street, between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, Click here for Playbill Club discount tickets)

The Understudy→ Tony winner Julie White, Marc-Paul Gosselaar and Justin Kirk star in this onstage comedy about backstage drama. Written by the always sharp Theresa Rebeck. (The Harold and Miriam Steinberg Center for Theatre/Laura Pels Theatre, 111 West 46th Street, Between Sixth and Seventh Avenues, Click here for Playbill Club discount tickets)

Mark-Paul Gosselaar and Justin Kirk in The Understudy

GO→Memphis and The Actors Fund—two of our favorite things! If you haven’t yet seen this new musical featuring the rocking tunes of Joe DiPietro and Bon Jovi’s David Bryan, performed by the amazing Montego Glover and Chad Kimball, then go on Sunday for a special performance to benefit The Actors Fund. (8pm, Shubert Theatre, 225 W. 44th Street, between Broadway and Eight Avenues, tickets)

Monday, January 18
GO→ With A Little Night Music killing at the BO and another show, Sondheim on Sondheim, up on the boards this spring, it’s hard to believe that Stephen Sondheim is celebrating his 80th birthday this March. The Manhattan School of Music will pay tribute to the legendary songs of the legendary song-man with Beautiful Girls, a showcase featuring tunes from West Side Story, Gypsy, Sunday in the Park with George, Into the Woods, Company, Sweeney Todd and more. Performing in the Lonny Price-conceived show is Zoe Caldwell, Jenn Colella, Marin Mazzie and Donna McKechnie; under the baton of Paul Gemignani. Sondheim leading lady Angela Lansbury is expected to make an appearance at the reception. (7:30pm, The John C. Borden Auditorium at the Manhattan School of Music, 120 Claremont Avenue at the corner of Broadway and 122nd Street, $12 seniors, $20 adults, VIP packages available, info/tickets)

Tuesday, January 19
Rachel Calloway and Marco NisticòGO→ Celebrated Hair director, Diane Paulus, brings her unique vision to a show of intergalactic proportions. The Gotham Chamber Opera will perform Il mondo della luna (The World on the Moon) “under the stars” at the Hayden Planetarium. (Through January 28, The Hayden Planetarium at The Museum of Natural History, West 81st Street, between Central Park West and Columbus Avenue, $30-$125, info)

Wednesday, January 20
GO→ Rock of Ages front man, Constantine Maroulis, takes a solo spin at the Highline Ballroom with A Night At The Rock Show. (8pm, $20, full dinner menu available, info/tickets)

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Thursday, January 21
presentlaughterOPENING→ Noël Coward’s Present Laughter returns to Broadway with Victor Garber as the silk-robed matinee idol, Garry Essendine. (American Airlines Theatre, 227 W. 42nd Street, between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, Click here for Playbill Club discount tickets)

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Playbill cover for Hair Al Hirschfeld Theatre  2009AUDITION→ Ever dream of being on Broadway?  Well Thursday may be your lucky day. The Tony Award-winning revival of Hair is on the look out for new tribe members.  A non-equity open casting call is being held at the Public Theatre from 10am-6pm. Come prepared with 16 bars of an up-tempo rock or pop song (with sheet music) and bring a headshot/resume and some canned food for a tandem food drive for NY’s City Harvest.  Break a leg! (Doors open at 9am, The Public Theatre, 425 Lafayette Street)