The 2024 Pulitzer-Prize winning play, Primary Trust, is receiving a highly satisfying production at Theaterworks Hartford, running through May 11. The show is a deep-dive into an individual’s personal trauma and how it has affected his employment, relationships, self-confidence, and interactions with the world. The strength of playwright Eboni Booth’s work is its realism and pacing. Information and reveals unfold at steady, incremental pace. Unlike many plays I’ve seen, Primary Trust does not unload a character’s background story and emotional framework at its climax.
Stu on Broadway
Stuart Brown is the founder of the 24/7 online Broadway music radio station, Sounds of Broadway (http://www.SoundsofBroadway.com), which plays the best from the Off-Broadway, Broadway, and London stage. Thousands of songs from hundreds of cast albums are in rotation. He reviews NYC theater as a member of the Outer Critics Circle and reviews CT stage productions as a member of the CT Critics Circle. He is also a member of the Dramatist Guild.
Thursday, April 24, 2025
Primary Trust - Theaterworks Hartford
Thursday, April 10, 2025
Operation Mincemeat - Broadway
I have been a fan of the musical Operation Mincemeat ever since I heard the original cast recording almost two years ago. However, I had some trepidation before seeing the show once it opened on Broadway. Fortunately, any concerns were short-lived. Operation Mincemeat is wild, manic, and exhaustively inventive. The show is the brainchild of the comedy troupe SpitLip and members David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson, and Zoë Roberts wrote the book, music, and lyrics. The quartet takes their inspiration from such thoroughly British sources as Monty Python’s Flying Circus, Benny Hill, and the theatrical productions of The 39 Steps and The Play That Goes Wrong.
Good Night, and Good Luck - Broadway
Tuesday, April 1, 2025
Agnes of God - Westport Community Theatre
The psychologically intense, Agnes of God, is receiving a superb production at the Westport Community Theatre. Under Director Tom Holehan’s assured guidance, the three-character play is a penetrating examination of faith, spirituality, and their intersection with science. In some sense, the production can also be viewed as a cryptic murder mystery.
![]() |
The cast of Agnes of God at the Westport Community Theatre. |
Monday, March 31, 2025
Theatre People - Westport Country Playhouse
Thank goodness for Olga! In Paul Slade Smith’s agreeable comedy Theatre People, the actress Erin Noel Grennan embodies the character of Olga, a no-nonsense, slightly irritable maid working in a Newport Mansion, circa 1948. She delivers the show's funniest lines, with well-timed bon mots and snarky retorts.
The cast of Theatre People at Westport Country Playhouse. Photo by T. Charles Erickson |
Theatre People, adapted from Ferenc Molnár’s work, Play at the Castle, is part farce, part straightaway comedy. Two down-on-their-luck playwrights, Arthur Sanders (played by the always enjoyable Michael McCormick), and his wife Charlotte (portrayed with mirthful glee by Isabel Keating), have escorted Oliver (Rodolfo Soto), a lovesick author, to a coastal manor for a secret rendezvous with his lady love. His soon-to-be-published book, based on his affection for actress Margot Bell (Mia Pinero), has been transformed by the Sanders into a stage show. All that needs to be done is for Oliver to sign his book contract. Unfortunately, the best-laid plans come to a screeching halt when Margot’s hanky-panky with rakish baritone Victor Pratt (Michael McCorry Rose) is overheard from the thin hotel room walls. Chaos ensues as Oliver, his love life now in ruins, wants to shred his novel and the Sanders’ would-be success suddenly evaporates. Olga’s intrusions and snappy comebacks don’t help matters. What can be done to save the day? A little bit of mayhem, chaos, and general frivolity on the way to a happy ending for all.
Isabel Keating and Michael McCormick of Theatre People at Westport Country Playhouse. Photo by T. Charles Erickson |
Erin Noel Grennan and Isabel Keating of Theatre People at Westport Country Playhouse. Photo by T. Charles Erickson |
Mia Pinero and Michael McCorry Rose of Theatre People at Westport Country Playhouse. Photo by T. Charles Erickson |
Saturday, March 22, 2025
Laughs in Spanish - Hartford Stage
The latest offering at Hartford Stage, Laughs in Spanish, is an agreeable, breezy story with enough amusing plot twists to keep audiences satiated during its 90-minute, intermission-less run. The high spirits, though, by Playwright Alexis Scheer, is primarily window-dressing for her exploration of the mother-daughter relationship and cultural ruminations.
![]() |
María
Victoria Martínez and Luis Vega in Laughs in Spanish. Photo by T. Charles Erickson. |
Mariana (Stephanie Machado), a young woman runs an art gallery in Miami
and is readying for the Art Basel art show.
Upon arriving at work, she discovers all the paintings have been
stolen. Her intern, Carolina (María
Victoria Martínez), an artist in her own right, is clueless about what could
have happened. Her boyfriend, Juan (Luis
Vega), a police officer, is equally ignorant of how the perpetrators could have
absconded with the artworks. To complicate
matters, Mariana’s mother Estrella (Maggie Bofill), a famous actress, has
suddenly arrived in town, looking to pursue her own agenda. Her new assistant, Jenny (Olivia Hebert),
also just happens to be a college acquaintance of Mariana. Or is it more than that?
![]() |
Olivia Hebert and Stephanie Machado in Laughs in Spanish. Photo by T. Charles Erickson. |
The hijinks Ms. Scheer infuses into Laughs in Spanish are used to great effect as commentary on harmonizing life within two cultures and how language is varied when communicating in each world. Marina, a latine, seeks to balance her heritage within a realm where she is not an insider. For example, she, and other characters, to great comic effect, modulate their voice – being more Anglo - when answering the phone. The playwright nimbly layers the aforementioned with the tenuous relationships mothers can have with their daughters. Ms. Scheer adeptly augments the conflicts by having Marina’s mother be a hugely successful celebrity who wants nothing more than to have her child be equally well-off. While the machinations of the play work well, there are moments that seem forced, such as the intimate exchange between Marina and Jenny. Estrella’s monologue near the show’s conclusion comes across as overly long.
The Director Lisa Portes paces the show at a brisk tempo, only coming up short during Estrella’s performance art piece. She succeeds in creating a troupe of actor/actresses that mesh well together. She effectively integrates Scenic Designer Brian Sidney Bembridge’s three distinct sets into the flow of the play.
Maggie Bofill in Laughs in Spanish. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
The cast is uniformly wonderful. Some of the characters are underwritten - Carolina (María Victoria Martínez), Juan (Luis Vega), and Jenny (Olivia Hebert) – but the performers are able to imbue their roles with enough personality to gloss over character shortcomings. The focus is on Stephanie Machado as Mariana and Maggie Bofill as Estrella. Each enlivens the stage individually and together, giving their roles a combination of sparkle and gravitas.
Laughs in Spanish, playing at Hartford Stage through March 30. Click here for dates, times, and ticket information.
Thursday, March 20, 2025
The Irish… And How They Got That Way - Playhouse on Park
The Irish… And How They Got That Way is a musical revue that combines snippets of Irish history with an assortment of Irish-centered songs performed by a multi-talented cast of six. The music includes folksongs, ballads, comedic numbers, and tunes written by Broadway legend George M. Cohan. Interspersed between the musical interludes are recitations, stories, facts and figures about the Irish – the good, the bad, and the ugly. The show, written by the Pulitzer Prize winning author, Frank McCourt, delves into the bitterness, joy, anger, and sadness of the Irish experience, both at home and abroad.
![]() |
The cast of The Irish… And How They
Got That Way. Photo by Meredith Longo. |
The show, at two and one-half hours (with intermission), would have been more satisfying at a shorter length. Sometimes the pacing by Director Danielle Paccione drags when the material focuses heavily on such sorrowful topics as with Act I’s lengthy scenes on the 1840 potato famine. While the stories and historical facts associated with this epoch of shortages and deprivations are eye-opening, as well as appalling, they bring a too somber tone to the production.
The material and song selections in Act II are more lively and, as with the first segment of the show, still tinged with sentimentality, humor, and a raucous merriment.
![]() |
The cast of The Irish… And How They
Got That Way. Photo by Meredith Longo. |
The production shines when the set, designed by Omid Akbari and reminiscent of a classic Irish pub, is turned over to the three actresses – Victoria Chaieb, Elleon Dobias, and Katrien van Riel – and three actors – Joe Boover, Josh Karam, and Jack Murphy. They all play, beautifully, a variety of musical instruments that you would find at a local Irish pub, from guitar, to piano, fiddle, recorder and a number of traditional Irish instruments. Ms. Paccione has molded an ensemble that works well together and clearly enjoys each other’s company as they recount, play music, and even perform a jig here and there.
Members of the cast of The Irish… And How They Got That Way. Photo by Meredith Longo.
The Irish… And How They Got That Way, playing at Playhouse on Park through March 30. Click here for dates, times, and ticket information.