Your resource for New York City theater Off- and Off-Off-Broadway.
Theater Reviews
EDITOR’S NOTE
Trio of one-acts scheduled at Teatro Circulo
Almost Tamed Productions will present Beyond Encounters, an evening of three one-act plays that explore the ways people meet one another, from June 17 to 21 at Teatro Circulo (64 E. 4th St.). Directed by Lorca Peress, the one-acts include Lanford Wilson’s A Betrothal (1985), along with two new works: Bound by Miriam Kulick, and The Call by Hannah Benitez. The Call is based on H.P. Lovecraft’s story “The Call of Cthulhu,” in which a private investigator and a sailor “are trapped in a barricaded pub during the rise of a cosmic horror from the sea.” Bound tells the true story of a young Jewish couple who meet, fall in love, and separated by the rise of the Nazis in Eastern Europe. For tickets and more information, click here. —Edward Karam
The Broadway Bound Theatre Festival has announced the productions for its 10th anniversary, to be held July 23 to Aug. 16 at AMT Theater (354 West 45th St.). Among the play offerings are Be a Mensch, by Daniel Takacs; Funeral of God by Brian Brijbag; Society 2.0 by Eric Pzena; and One Night at the Blackbird, by Thomas Mullen and Maria Messias Mendes. The musical offerings include Homebound (book, music and lyrics by Zach Adam) and Once in a Lifetime, Again (book, music and lyrics by Stephen Gardner). For a fuller schedule and ticket information, visit broadwayboundfest.com. —Edward Karam

The pub in Irish dramas is a center not just of drinking, but also of telling tall tales. In J.M. Synge’s Playboy of the Western World, a new arrival, Christy Mahon, boasts of killing his father. In Conor McPherson’s The Weir, the regulars exchange ghost stories. But the atmosphere of Catch of the Day, by Megan Jenkins and the Red Fox Theatre company, is different. There’s music already happening on stage when one enters, and the gregarious cast may be engaging the audience in conversation or offering potato chips up and down the aisle or sniping at one another. The slapdash mix of music and comedy is more goulash than ghoulish, yet the lack of structure turns out to be one of the show’s charms.