The best summer shows on Broadway and beyond to see in New York include Othello in Central Park and a musical adaptation of Pretty Woman.
By
T. Michelle Murphy, Metro
Whether you’re looking for a new cultural experience or a feel-good show to take your summer vacation visitors to, here are the on- and off-Broadway productions you’ll want to check out.
The LGBT version of Pride & Prejudice
The Boys in the Band
is a take-no-prisoners play written by Mart Crowley in 1968 to show how
gay men self-eviscerate and lash out when they have no other way to
process society’s subtle rejection and overt discrimination. Churning
with hilarious one-liners that mask brutally honest insights, the sharp
and stunningly current script is a wake-up call for how we treat each
other today — and why. Starring Jim Parsons as the alcoholic host of a
birthday party for his insecure friend (Zachary Quinto) and their circle
(including Matt Bomer and Andrew Rannells), the historic 50th
anniversary production is directed by Joe Mantello.
Through Aug. 11, boysintheband.com
Theater in the Great Outdoors
The Bard’s masterpieces return to the Delacorte Theater in
Central Park this month with the Public Theater’s annual Free
Shakespeare in the Park series, starting with a Chukwudi Iwuji-led
Othello, directed by Ruben Santiago-Hudson and set in the 1600s Mediterranean (opening June 18). Next is a musical adaptation of
Twelfth Night
(opening July 31) starring Nikki M. James (“Book of Mormon”) as Viola,
with music and lyrics by Shaina Taub, co-directed by Oskar Eustis
(Public Theater Artistic Director) and Kwame Kwei-Armah, who conceived
the piece and is the new artistic director of London’s Young Vic.
shakespeareinthepark.org
Star Power Off-Broadway
Broadway superstar Idina Menzel returns to the stage this
summer, but she’ll be sidestepping the Great White Way with the lead in
Roundabout Theatre’s
Skintight.
The show examines the truth about beauty in today’s society and the
lies we tell ourselves (and our kids) about how much it really matters.
Menzel’s character learns that her ex-husband is engaged to a much
younger woman — and her father is now living with a man who’s the same
age as her own son. She questions how looks, sexuality and, of course,
age factor into our worth and values in 2018.
Opens June 21, roundabouttheatre.org
Impress Your Intellectual Date
See one of Shakespeare’s most popular and frequently staged tragedies like you’ve never seen it before — and never will again.
Ninagawa Macbeth
brings the Scottish play to feudal Japan, with gorgeous iconography
from cherry blossom trees to samurai. The Bard’s language is performed
entirely in Japanese (with English subtitles) and features a western
classical musical score. Director Yukio Ninagawa oversaw the revival
before passing away in 2016, making this the last time this production
will be staged. This piece of theatrical history is produced through the
Mostly Mozart Festival.
July 21-25, mostlymozart.org
For the Rom-Com Lovers
Yes, it’s another movie is being given the musical treatment, but we’ve got high hopes for
Pretty Woman.
The musical adds balance to your hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold trope (led
by Samantha Barks as Vivian, the role that made Julia Roberts famous)
when she also saves her white knight from his playboy ways (with Andy
Karl taking over the lead from Richard Gere). He just won an Olivier
Award for converting Phil Connors from cynic to small-town hero in the
musical version of Groundhog Day, so we’ve got high hopes for this modern production.
Opens Aug. 16, prettywomanthemusical.com
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