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Theater Reviews
EDITOR’S NOTE
Variety of productions slated for Circle Festival 2025
Circle Festival 2025 will present 12 new productions through Oct. 19 at AMT Theater (354 West 45th St.). The lineup includes family dramas (Sunbreak, by Jonathan Goetzman; Packed, by Elise Wilkes), dark comedies (Don’t Push the Red Button, by Zachary Mailhot; Late Night Cabaret, by Ariella Carmel) and movement and multimedia productions (Enmeshment, by Caity Ladda; Lodestone, by Constance Lake). For tickets and more information, visit rjtheatrecompany.com. —Edward Karam
The Japan Society will present the world premiere of Kinkakuji, adapted from Yukio Mishima’s novel and directed for the stage by Leon Ingulsrud, beginning Sept. 11. Commissioned by and presented at the Society (333 E. 47th St.), the production launches its 2025–26 Performing Arts Season and the Fall 2025 Series, which celebrates the centennial of Mishima’s birth. Kinkakuji (aka, The Temple of the Golden Pavilion) is based on a 1950 arson in Kyoto, in which a young Buddhist monk set fire to the gold-leaf-clad Kinkakuji temple, whose structure dated from the 14th century. For tickets and more information, visit japansociety.org/events/yukio-mishimas-kinkakuji. —Edward Karam
The Essentialisn’t is the most awkward title of the theater season so far, but never mind that. Eisa Davis’s intimate musical enfolds its spectators in the cultural recollection of the earliest Africans brought to this country and in Davis’s own search for identity through music, acting, and dance. It’s an ambitious undertaking focused on what Davis calls “personal sovereignty.” Davis, who is billed as creator, performer, and director, poses a multivalent question—“Can you be Black and not perform”—which appears in bright fuchsia neon onstage throughout the play.