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#so stayed tuned for future Palestine drawings!!!
lovelyheartclover · 3 months
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GLOBAL STRIKE: DAY 8 (FINAL DAY)
CEASEFIRE NOW 🍉🍉🍉
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BONUS DRAWING!! INSPIRED BY @astronic-fr Uzi Palestine drawing 🍉🫒
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newyorktheater · 4 years
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A Soldier’s Play
Medea
Grand Horizons
My Name is Lucy Barton
Below is a selection of New York theater openings in January, organized chronologically by opening date.* Three shows  are opening on Broadway this month —  Laura Linney in “My Name Is Lucy Barton,” David Alan Grier and Blair Underwood in “A Soldier’s Play,” Jane Alexander and James Cromwell in “Grand Horizons.” There are also a handful of exciting shows Off-Broadway — Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale in a modern update of a Greek tragedy; Charles Busch in his lastest comic melodrama. What makes January one of the busiest months of the year for theater in New York are the annual January theater festivals.
Although several of these festivals have died recently, those that remain offer collectively more than 70 theater pieces; most are experimental, often hybrids that redefine what theater is, and are often difficult to describe; many run for as little as one or two performances.
The festivals seem to set the tone for some of the non-festival works this month. When else but in January would there be two adaptations of Medea, and a trio of plays from New Zealand?
Each title below is linked to a relevant website. Color key: Broadway: Red. Off Broadway: Black or Blue.. Off Off Broadway: Green. Theater festival: Orange. Immersive: Magenta. 
*The festival shows and many Off-Off Broadway don’t have official opening nights, so they are listed according to their first performance.
January 2
Exponential Festival, though February 3
The festival begins with “Fear in the Western World” (Target Margin)
Digital puppetry that examines the apparatus of fear by telling the story of a young couple whose young daughter is attacked and kidnapped by spirits
January 3
Term of Art (Exponential at Jack)
In fragmentary scenes with four actors moving through many voices, the piece draws on recent transcripts of Supreme Court justices wrestling with how to police the borders of citizenship in order to deny rights that ought to be inalienable.
January 4
Wild Dogs Under My Skirt (Soho Playhouse)
In this first of three plays from New Zealand this month at Soho Playhouse this stage adaptation of the poetry of Tusiata Avia examines and celebrates what it means to be a Samoan woman
Or, An Astronaut Play (The Tank)
The Astronaut School has four students—but only one can actually make it to outer space.
January 6
Love, Medea (The Center at West Park)
Part theater piece, part dance show, part haute couture runway and part art installation, this adaptation of Euripides’ play presents the title character as a woman who was stripped of voice and homeland, who sacrificed her heart to put a man’s heroic epic before her own, but will stay in the shadows no more.
January 7
The 8th (The Secret Theater)
A year after the death of their father, an Irish family argues over the suspicious circumstances surrounding his demise, while outside the people of Ireland are equally divided as they prepare to vote on whether to repeal the eighth amendment and legalize abortion i
January 8
Under The Radar Festival through January 19
The festival begins with six shows (listed in order of what time they begin today):
To The Moon
A virtual reality experience created by Laurie Anderson and Hsin-Chien Huang.  During the 15-minute experience, the viewer is shot out from Earth, walks on the surface of the Moon, glides through space debris, flies through DNA skeletons, and is lifted up a lunar mountain.
Ryan J. Haddad: Falling For Make Believe
A memoir full of show tunes whimsically recalling the “Haddad Theater” he ran as a child.
The Shadow Whose Prey The Hunter Becomes
The story of a public meeting, whose topics include “the ethics of mass food production, human rights, the social impact of automation and the projected dominance of artificial intelligence in the world.”
Grey Rock  
A play by Palestine’s leading playwright/director, Amir Nizar Zuabi in which a Palestinian man dreams of reaching the moon, building a rocket inside his shed in the West Bank.
Susan
Ahamefule J. Oluo’s darkly comic musical portrait of his mother builds one story out of many, a journey from Section 8 housing in 1980s Seattle, to the mangrove swamps of the Niger Delta, to the Clallam Bay Correctional Facility.
Triple Threat
Casting herself in all the main roles, McCormick will attempt to re-connect to her own moral conscience by re-enacting the New Testament via a Nu-wave holy trinity of dance, power ballads, and performance.
Queens Row (The Kitchen)
In a near-future America after a civil war has left the country reeling, three women one by one get on a pedestal and tell the story of their struggles.
January 9
Prototype Festival through January 19
The festival begins with Blood Moon (Baruch), an opera-theatre piece with puppetry and a Taiko-infused score, in which three characters encounter the past on the night of a full moon: a nephew who returns to the mountain-top where he left his aunt to die forty years earlier, the ghost of the aunt he abandoned, and the moon that presides over this night of reckoning.
Modern Maori Quartet: Two Worlds (Soho Playhouse)
In this second of three shows from New Zealand this month, the group sings songs and tells stories.
January 10
Cartography (New Victory)
Inflatable rafts on the Mediterranean. Dark holds of cargo trucks. Family photos hidden carefully in a backpack. Hear the stories of young refugees in this multimedia theatrical work for ages 10 and up;
  Iron and Coal (Prototype)
A rock opera by Jeremy Schonfeld that weaves together his personal experiences with excerpts from his father, an Auschwitz survivor, brought to life through animation, a rock band, an orchestra, and 200-member multigenerational choruses.
January 11
Contours of Heaven (Soho Playhouse)
In the last of the three plays from New Zealand, this verbatim work is based on interviews with six rangatahi (Maori youth.)
January 12
Medea (BAM)
Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale star in writer-director Simon Stone’s rewrite of the Euripides tragedy.
Daydream Tutorial (Under the Radar)
Japanese collagist, animator, and puppeteer, Maiko Kikuchi, mixes mediums in this solo show, inviting us to the whimsical nexus of her surreal series of daydreams.
January 15
My Name Is Lucy Barton (MTC’s Samuel Friedman Theater)
In this solo play adapted from the best-selling novel by Elizabeth Strout, Laura Linney stars as Lucy Barton, a woman who wakes after an operation to find – much to her surprise – her mother at the foot of her bed. They haven’t seen each other in years.
January 17
Miss America’s Ugly Daughter (Marjorie Deane Little Theater)
Barra Grant explores her life growing up in the shadow of her mother Bess Myerson, the first and only Jewish Miss America.
January 19
Josh Lamon as Prince and Lesli Magherita as Princess
Emojiland (The Duke on 42nd Street)
A musical that  is set inside a smart phone, with the resident emojis facing a “textistential” crisis —  the phone is due for a software update. That’s in the first act. In the second act, they face a virus.
My review of Emojiland when it was part of the New York Musical Festival
  January 21
A Soldier’s Play (Roundabout’s American Airlines Theater)
The Pulitzer Prize-winning mystery about the murder of a black sergeant on a Louisiana army base in 1944 comes to Broadway for the first time, starring David Alan Grier and Blair Underwood.
Paris (Atlantic)
Emmie is one of the only black people living in Paris, Vermont, and she desperately needs a job. When she is hired at Berry’s, a store off the interstate selling everything from baby carrots to lawnmowers, she begins to understand a new kind of isolation.
January 23
Grand Horizons (Helen Hayes)
In this new play by Bess Wohl, James Cromwell and Jane Alexander portray Bill and Nancy, who have spent 50 years as husband and wife. But just as they settle comfortably into their new home in Grand Horizons, the unthinkable happens: Nancy suddenly wants out. As their two adult sons struggle to cope with the shocking news, they are forced to question everything they assumed about the people they thought they knew best.
Fire This Time Festival through February 2
seven ten-minute plays by writers of African descent.
January 26
Das Barbecü  
A nod to Wagner’s Ring Cycle merged with a comedic Texas fable, the songbook ranges from Broadway to Texas swing, from jazz to twangy country and western as mismatched lovers meet on the day of their double shotgun wedding with five actors playing more than 30 characters. It takes place at the Hill Country Barbecue Market, which is a restaurant and nightclub in the Flatiron District.
January 29
The Confession of Lily Dare (Primary Stages at Cherry Lane) The latest comic melodrama written by and starring Charles Busch tells the story of one woman’s tumultuous passage from convent girl to glittering cabaret chanteuse to infamous madame of a string of brothels.
January 30
Sister Calling My Name (Sheen Center)
A brother reluctantly holds a reunion with his developmentally disabled sister who has become an extraordinary artist.  When he discovers his sister’s guardian, a nun, is a woman he knew from his past, the three are all thrown into an emotionally charged encounter that leaves them forever changed.
January 2020 New York Theater Openings Below is a selection of New York theater openings in January, organized chronologically by opening date.* Three shows  are opening on Broadway this month --  Laura Linney in "My Name Is Lucy Barton," David Alan Grier and Blair Underwood in "A Soldier's Play," Jane Alexander and James Cromwell in "Grand Horizons." There are also a handful of exciting shows Off-Broadway -- Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale in a modern update of a Greek tragedy; Charles Busch in his lastest comic melodrama.
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