Broome Arts Mirror – Local Theatre Reviews
The Broome Arts Mirror is a group of volunteers affiliated with the Broome County Arts Council who write previews and reviews about local performances and arts shows. For inquiries, including having someone review your local production, please contact us at bamirror@broomearts.org.
KNOW’s ‘La Mancha’ features top-notch acting
Reviewed by Katherine Karlson KNOW Theatre launched its new season last weekend (Sept. 13-15) with a rare musical, Man of La Mancha, which was groundbreaking when it debuted in 1965. With a book by Dale Wasserman, music by Mitch Leigh and lyrics by Joe Darion, it continues to make [...]
S.T.A.R.’s ‘Mastergate’ is timely, hilarious
Reviewed by Nancy Oliveri If you are a news junkie who plans your vacation or sick days around the next televised congressional hearing, or sets your DVR to keep abreast of the political news of the day, Larry Gelbart’s Mastergate, A Play on Words is for you. Gelbart, you’ll [...]
Find stellar performances at ‘End of the Rainbow’
Reviewed by Tony Villecco As the fabulous Bette Davis said, "Fasten your seat belts; it’s going to be a bumpy night." And it was Saturday (Sept. 7) -- and also spectacular, as Peter Quilter’s love letter to Judy Garland, End of the Rainbow, opened at the Cider Mill Stage [...]
CRT’s ‘The Immigrant’ is heartwarming if, at time, predictable
Reviewed by George Basler The Immigrant, now playing at the Chenango River Theatre in Greene, was written more than 30 years ago, but it’s hard not to think about the current controversy over refugees as the play unfolds. First produced in 1985, Mark Harelik’s play, which runs through Sept. [...]
SPARE’s original take on Holmes/Watson falls short despite actors’ efforts
Reviewed by Katherine Karlson SPARE Production’s latest offering, Haslop & Holmes: Art of the Steal, which opened Friday night (Aug. 16) in Owego, purports to “take its cues from film noir” as well as to “introduce the next generation of Holmes and Watson.” Instead, C. Alexander Park's original play [...]
SPARE’s energetic, likable ‘Anything Goes’ rises above dated plot
Reviewed by George Basler The classic musical Anything Goes is a production that shows its age in ways that are both good and bad. On the good side is a spectacular score by the great Cole Porter that is filled with nuggets from the golden age of the Great [...]
Strong singing abounds in Savoyards’ colorful ‘Yeomen’
Reviewed by Katherine Karlson This year’s annual offering from the Summer Savoyards is the darkest of all the Gilbert & Sullivan operettas, but The Yeomen of the Guard is no less the enjoyable musical farce for all its grim emotional underpinnings. Stage Director William Clark Snyder and Music Director [...]
CRT’s ‘Incident’ is a funny, engaging work
Reviewed by George Basler The Chenango River Theatre deserves credit for “truth in advertising.” The Greene-based company has billed its current production, Incident at Our Lady of Perpetual Help, as a comedy with heart, and that pretty much sums it up. The play by Seattle-based playwright Katie Forgette is [...]
KNOW finishes season with two complex and challenging plays
Reviewed by George Basler No one can accuse the KNOW Theatre of coasting into the lazy summer months. Instead, for its final production of the season, the downtown Binghamton theater is staging two one-act plays that seem certain to puzzle, challenge and/or frustrate audiences. Harold Pinter’s The Dumb Waiter [...]
Comedy, romance skillfully blended in Ti-Ahwaga’s ‘Wedding Singer’
Reviewed by Katherine Karlson Love is in the air in Owego, as the Ti-Ahwaga Community Players wrap up their current season with The Wedding Singer, a musical by Chad Beguelin and Tim Herlihy with music by Matthew Sklar. It is based on the 1998 Adam Sandler/Drew Barrymore movie. June [...]
Fab Arts Company walks on the dark side with ‘A Steady Rain’
Reviewed by George Basler A Steady Rain could be the biggest horror show that you’ll see all summer, but monsters, ghouls or zombies are nowhere in sight. Instead the characters are two flawed, and floundering, Chicago policemen who battle their own demons in an urban dystopia filled [...]
CRT presents smart, well-acted take on Ibsen update
Reviewed by George Basler Henrik Ibsen’s 1879 masterpiece, A Doll's House, ends with a shocker as Nora, the main character, walks out the door, leaving behind a suffocating marriage and abandoning three young children. Lucas Hnath’s A Doll’s House, Part 2 begins with Nora walking back through the door [...]
BPO ends season right ‘en pointe’
Reviewed by Nancy Oliveri The Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra, under the baton of Music Director Daniel Hege, closed its 2018-2019 season (and Hege’s first season as conductor) on Saturday (May 11) with “A Night at the Ballet” -- minus toe shoes or tutus. According to Hege, in remarks introducing the [...]
Actors’ scripts disappear in S.T.A.R.’s reading of ‘A Doll’s House’
Reviewed by Nancy Oliveri Don’t miss your opportunity to see how scripts in the hands of competent, talented actors all but disappear in a staged reading of Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House, presented by Southern Tier Actors Read (S.T.A.R.) and directed by Chris Nickerson. A series of readings opened [...]
TCO presents strong, sprightly ‘Pinafore’
Reviewed by Sherri Strichman The Forum in downtown Binghamton hummed with excitement Sunday afternoon (April 28) for Tri-Cities Opera's single performance of Gilbert & Sullivan's operetta H.M.S. Pinafore. From the downbeat, the orchestra was light and together under the direction of Joshua Horsch. Director Nicholas Wuehrmann had his leads [...]