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Best Of theatre

Best of 2024 – Theater/Opera/Dance

An astonishing year for performance art in its broadest sense – every Columbus troupe was hitting, supplemented by killer work I was lucky enough to see in Chicago and New York. Also celebrating the 10th anniversary of Columbus Underground publishing my more formal thoughts, so all thanks to Anne and Walker Evans and everyone else I work with and I’m happy to call friends.

As usual, in chronological order and in Columbus unless otherwise specified.

  • Fairview by Jackie Sibblies Drury, directed by Aviva Neff; Available Light – A decade ago, before I had an outlet, I was so struck by my introduction to Jackie Sibblies Drury’s plays I felt compelled to blog about it on my old Blogspot spot as part of the season that cemented my affinity for Available Light. In January, Available Light set the bar high for my 2024 with her powerful, uncomfortably hilarious satire Fairview. In Columbus Underground, I said, “Fairview is a Philip K. Dick-inflected MAD Magazine special with a full Three Stooges episode nested inside about race in America, how the act of looking twists both the observer and the observed, the impossibility of truly knowing other people, and the Sisyphean quest for ‘Fairness,’ to accomplish it and even define it.” In December, I’m still citing and thinking about this amazing feat of creation.
Available Light’s Fairview, photo by Kyle Long
  • Second Servings by Nancy Shelton Williams, directed by Sue Wismar; eMBer Women’s Theatre – Sue Wismar’s long been one of my favorite actors in town; on that short list where I can have no interest in subject matter or a writer, but when I hear she’s involved? Now I’m interested. This first exposure to her directing delivered on those expectations and then some, finding breathing room and also a coiled tightness that felt right for these characters in this world. As I said for Columbus Underground, “I’ve seen all three of these actors be very good in many things over my years of seeing theater in town; I’ve never seen them better. The tenuous chemistry of the three, the layers of shifting alliances, feel like they go back decades and are as fresh as an open wound.”
  • You Will Get Sick by Noah Diaz, directed by Eleni Papaleonardos; Available Light – The fact that all three of the Available Light productions I saw this year ended up on this list isn’t an act of intentional favoritism; it’s because all three of them sent me out into the night not just rethinking my perceptions of theater but of the world. Nowhere was that more evident than in this piece, which I called in my CU review, “A play I haven’t seen before, a rare blend of commentary, voice, characters, and love—leavened with appropriate disgust—for the world.”
  • Night, Mother by Marsha Norman, directed by Michelle Batt; eMBer Women’s Theatre – Ember Women’s Theatre had an excellent year – I still regret not being able to make their third production because of family and job travel responsibilities and this bracing, note-perfect production of a great play no one’s done in Columbus for a very long time was a shining example. I said of Melissa Bair’s scorching Thelma, for CU, “Everything feels natural and also like an accumulating snowball in a way that’s as dark and dazzling as a Goya painting.”
eMBer Women’s Theatre’s ‘Night, Mother, photo by Michelle Batt
  • Purpose by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by Phylicia Rashad; Steppenwolf, Chicago – It was a good year for Branden Jacobs-Jenkins as he further cemented himself as one of our two or three finest voices for the stage and a hell of a year for me as a theater-goer as I got to see two brand new works. Purpose took the black family drama as microcosm, with a civil rights leader patriarch (Cedric Young the week I was there) trying to keep his reputation spotless, with children who took varied paths. The wire-tight pacing given life by Rashad’s direction, the whiplash blending of distance and immediacy, and the best performances I’ve ever seen by actors I’ve been watching for a very long time – including Alana Arenas, Glenn Davis, and Jon Michael Hill – meant this is still reverberating around in my bones.
  • An Enemy of the People by Henrik Ibsen, directed by Amy Herzog; Circle in the Square, New York – My favorite Ibsen, adapted and tightened without losing any of its ferocious ambiguity as the intensity ramped up, by Amy Herzog whose 4000 Miles killed me at Lincoln Center in 2012, and directed by Sam Gold deploying all of the fascinating experiments that haven’t always coalesced in his recent work firing on all cylinders this time, centered around volcanic performances from Michael Imperioli and Jeremy Strong.
  • Legally Blonde by Heather Hach, Laurence O’Keefe, and Nell Benjamin, directed by Dionysia Williams Velazco; Short North Stage – This was a stellar year for Short North Stage – their The Color Purple, Ain’t Misbehavin’, and Jersey Boys were all also evidence of a company working at the height of its powers and perfect versions of the material – but Legally Blonde stuck with me both because of my surprise (I knew it was a musical and I saw the movie years ago, but didn’t know a single song) and because it was one of the purest distillations of delight I had all year, one of the key tenets of the stage, centered around jaw-dropping performances from Laura Overby, about whom I said, “Doesn’t just rise to that challenge; she sails into space, making it look easy,” and Vera Cremeans, whose “Virtuosic performance [let] the character’s hard-won wisdom, wit, and charm shine brilliantly,” (both from Columbus Underground) and a consistently killer ensemble.
  • An Iliad by Lisa Peterson and Denis O’Hare, directed by Cat McAlpine; Actors’ Theatre of Columbus – Actors Theatre was a mixed bag for my taste this year – their Twelfth Night was also beautiful, other two didn’t work for me – but this was the apotheosis of the risks they’re taking and the more adult subject matter they’re working with over the last few years and left me a blubbering mess. I’ve been a fan of Cat McAlpine’s work both as an actor and a director for years, but this sailed over those high expectations. For Columbus Underground, I called it “A riveting night of theater that’s a reminder of the challenges inherent in telling stories, in showing up for and with people, and how easily everything can fall apart.”
Actors’ Theatre’s An Iliad, photo by Nina Martin
  • Black on Earth by Orlando and Riccardo Hunter-Valentine, Brother(hood) Dance; Wexner Center for the Arts – Brother(hood) Dance’s first collaboration between OSU’s dance department and the resources of the Wex made my Best Of list last year and the wider lens they took to grapple with Black farming and integrated society took my breath away. This year had more of the “I can’t picture this anywhere else in Columbus” feeling the Wexner Center’s performing arts program used to give me constantly than I’ve had in years – all props to Elena Perantoni and Kathleen Felder – and this was a prime example.
  • Lunch Bunch by Adrian Einspanier, directed by Eleni Papaleonardos; Available Light – This was another of the most exciting playwrighting voices I’ve ever seen brought to vibrant, touching, and hilariously vicious life by Eleni Papaleonardos with a perfect cast – I was especially struck by Wilma Hatton, Michelle Schroeder-Lowrey, and Whitney Thomas Eads. I said in Columbus Underground, “[It’s] a reminder that we’re all trying to get through and be better, and some of us have to try much harder than others. A reminder of how easy it is to turn into a bully with just a little bit of power. And an uproarious workplace comedy. And it’s more than all those things.”
  • Max Roach 100 by Ayodele Casel, Rennie Harris, Ronald K. Brown, directed by Ayodele Casel, Rennie Harris, Ronald K. Brown, Torya Beard, and Kit Fitzgerald; Wexner Center for the Arts – This was another example of what the Wex does better than anyone else when it clicks – co-commissioning with New York’s Joyce Theater; finding the perfect curator for this, Richard Colton who I interviewed for a preview in one of my favorite interviews this year; and bringing together film, three of the finest choreographers, and astonishing dancers in tribute to one of the great composers of the last century.
Ayodele Casel at Mershon Auditorium, October 2024
  • Good People by David Lindsay-Abaire, directed by Pamela Hill; Tipping Point – First time in 10 or 11 years anyone had done this gut-punch, sadly-even-more relevant gritty poetic look at Boston’s working class from David Lindsay-Abaire, and Pamela Hill and a terrific cast led by a warm, powerful performance from Sonda Staley, broke me with this terrific production that (as I said in Columbus Underground), “Refreshed and deepened my understanding of this play I love while making me dig deeper into my assumptions and reflexive responses to luck, choice, and how I treat other people.”
  • Wife of a Salesman by Eleanor Burgess, directed by Leda Hoffmann; The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio – This was a stunning home run, born of the Contemporary’s keen eye for new plays and recontextualizing some of the American theater history CATCO made its bones on, with two knockout performances from Megan Lear and Teri Clark Linden at its heart, that I said in my CU review, “Give the density of ideas – the value of duty, the ephemerality of choice, the conflicting approaches of different waves of feminism, the commonality between people if we let our guards down enough – a visceral punch that kept me on the edge of my seat.”
The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio’s Wife of a Salesman, photo by Kyle Long
  • Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 by Dave Malloy after Leo Tolstoy, directed by Melissa Lusher; Otterbein University – I tried to review a lot of college theater in my first couple of years writing for CU. I think it’s important and the two great programs here – OSU and Otterbein – are a lot of people’s introduction to live theater; including me, the first play I remember seeing that wasn’t a Broadway Across America was at OSU (I think; that same High School year also had my first Actors’ Theatre performance). A professor made the great comment on one of my reviews that sometimes a “watchable play” isn’t the best yardstick, sometimes it’s necessary to remember kids are trying their hardest even if I couldn’t recommend something to anyone else, so I backed way off and try to choose what I cover from these programs more carefully. But Otterbein’s musical theater pedigree and the fact this was the first time anyone in central Ohio did this Dave Malloy masterpiece gave me confidence in signing up to review it and I was blown the hell away. Some work fits perfectly with college students and I definitely had that sense the overheated emotion, complicated melodies and harmonies, and large cast all aligned in this phenomenal production. In my CU Review, I said “It drove home the way scale and scope excavate different feelings than smaller-scale work and how beautiful that scope is when everything comes together.”
  • Give Me Carmelita Tropicana! by Alina Troyano and Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by Eric Ting; Soho Rep, New York – Of any non-Columbus venue, I’ve seen the most change-my-head-around work at SoHo Rep’s tiny Off-Broadway space on Walker Street. Beyond what I’ve personally seen and been blown away by there, it’s also been a huge source of the work that made Available Light the theater company that reinvigorated my love of theater in Columbus. So when a New York trip coincided with not only the final production before they search for a new home but also a collaboration between Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and downtown performance art legend – and Jacobs-Jenkins’ former professor – who I’d never gotten to see live, Alina Troyano – made this a no-brainer. With rapid-fire wit, Troyano (as herself and longtime alter ego Camerlita Tropicana) and Jacobs-Jenkins (played brilliantly by Ugo Chukwu) pay loving tribute to experimental theater, a shifting and sometimes hard-to-find “downtown” sensibility, the various characters in Troyano’s Tropicana-verse, and the sense of possibility that hits differently being in a room full of strangers and loved ones seeing it live. There was an almost karmic sense of a circle closing in this being the final play I saw of the year being a perfect summation of what I’m hoping for any time the house lights go down. May this set the tone for another year of wonder and possibility.
Curtain Call for Give Me Carmelita Tropicana! at SoHo Rep, November 2024
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Best Of theatre

Best of 2023 – Theater/Opera/Dance

Brother/Hood/Dance, photo by Ryan Muir, courtesy of the Wexner Center

What a great year for theater – seeing 53 shows over four cities, with particularly good batting averages on the three New York trips. Also, every company in Columbus was hitting this year. Some of the best work I’ve seen in years from MadLab, Opera Columbus, and Evolution, lined up with front-to-back strong seasons from The Contemporary (formerly CATCO) and Available Light, a renewed interest in dance and theater from the Wexner Center, Short North Stage stretching its wings, all added up to more I wanted to see than I could make happen. Even when I didn’t love some of the work, almost every single thing I saw, I admired the effort and the swing they took. It’s a good time to be a fan of theater in town, get out and see as much as possible,

Everything listed here is in chronological order and in Columbus unless otherwise noted. The companies provided all photos for promotion, either sent to me directly or taken from websites.

Wilma Hatton and Ricardo Jones in ‘Snowville Cafe’, photo by Steve Malone
  • KL II by Kaneza Schaal, directed by Kaneza Schaal and Christopher Myers (Under the Radar Festival, NYC) – I only made it to one thing out of the three I had booked at Under the Radar this year – one canceled early, one canceled while I was at the Public – but this reaffirmed what a great thing the festival is for those of us who love experimental theater. Kaneza Schaal braided the text of Mark Twain’s King Leopold’s Soliloquy with a personal history with Patrice Lumumba’s independence speech with personal history with so much else and fused it to a blue flame of a performance and fascinating design and direction choices.
  • Snowville Cafe by Julie Whitney-Scott, directed by James Blackmon (MadLab) – Julie Whitney-Scott, one of my favorite theater artists in town, had an astonishing year directing a regional premiere of Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Lynn Nottage, classics like Lorraine Hansberry’s Raisin in the Sun, leading her spectacular tradition of Columbus Black Theater Festival, writing her first novel, it was a dazzling record of work. But my favorite piece, the thing that I kept talking about months after it closed, was this luminous slice of life James Blackmon directed for MadLab. I called it “a poetic character study that also makes its setting a vibrant, fascinating character, with a real love for its characters but a sometimes unsparing eye for their faults. The empathy of the writing and direction are so perfectly in sync they almost seem invisible,” in my review for Columbus Underground.
  • Everybody by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by David Glover (Available Light) – Available Light continued their astonishing streak this year. Everything they did had the unshakable feeling of “I can’t picture anyone else doing this.” David Glover’s stunning production and brilliant cast were up to the challenge of fusing the technical difficulty – the main five actors pull their characters out of a hat – to the piece’s deep themes and rich humor. I said it, “[highlights the shifting volatility, the danger of using our friends as a mirror of ourselves, but the absolute necessity of friends,” in my review for  Columbus Underground.
  • Afro/Solo/Man by Orlando Zane Hunter, Jr. and Ricarrdo Valentine (Brother(hood) Dance, presented by Wexner Center for the Arts) – The Wexner Center also pulled itself up this year, drawing on some local talent and some far-flung relationships, to put out work I can’t picture any other presenting organization bringing to town. This gut-wrenching dance piece by Hunter and Valentine, about generational trauma and internalized shame but also abundant, bursting-at-the-seams joy, had me babbling about it for weeks after seeing it.
Monica Danilov-Marquez, Maria de Buenos Aires, Opera Columbus; photo by Terry Gilliam
  • Maria de Buenos Aires by Astor Piazzolla and Horacio Ferrer, directed by Christopher Darling (Opera Columbus) – Opera Columbus continues killing it and this Piazzolla operetta lined up with my tastes with sniper-like precision. I said, “The parallel singing and dancing choruses also set the world of the play, accentuating the collage aspects and the surging drama and eroticism. This riff on an opera-ballet with tango feels simultaneously organic and surprising,” in my piece for Columbus Underground.
  • Seven Guitars by August Wilson, directed by Ron OJ Parson (Playhouse in the Park, Cincinnati) – Finally got to see the last of the August Wilson Pittsburgh cycle with this sumptuous production at one of Ohio’s shining theaters, Cincy’s Playhouse in the Park. Bryant Bentley’s Red Carter and Dimonte Henning’s Schoolboy Barton are performances burned into my brain.
Sue Wismar in foreground, Elizabeth Girvin and Sydney Jordan Baker in background, When We Were Young and Unafraid, photo by Cat McAlpine
  • When We Were Young and Unafraid by Sarah Treem, directed by Michelle Batt (eMBer Women’s Theatre) – eMBer Women’s Theatre has come into its own over the last few years, and this year they blew me the hell away with a gorgeous, knife-twisting look at shifting social mores, pervasive sexual violence, the need to connect – and the way that can be a source of strength or twisted into something terrible, with astonishing performances, especially by Sue Wismar and Matthew Sierra. I said, “[The] characters’ arguments about the times changing and the chilling prescient words “They’ll change back,” resonate long after the lights go back on the play,” in my review for Columbus Underground.
  • The Wolves by Sarah DeLappe, directed by Aviva Helena Neff (The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio) – The second production of Sarah DeLappe’s magnificent coming-of-age play The Wolves I’ve seen in a few years, and I’m still knocked out by the play and the synchronicity in coming together and splitting apart personified by the cast hear left my jaw in my lap with awe and broke me in the right measures. For Columbus Underground, I said, “[It] reminded me of its ability to surprise through the quality and sharpness of its execution. It’s hard for me to picture seeing a better production of this beautiful, life-affirming, heartbreaking play.
  • Machinal by Sophie Treadwell, directed by Ryan Naughton (The Sound Company) – Ryan Naughton and Jessica Hughes gave the Columbus theatrical scene a powerful shot in the arm in their few years here, teaching at OSU, and their crowning achievement was a powerful production of landmark expressionist play Machinal by their Sound Company. I said, This production is rich with jagged beauty and a perfect example of how irony can be used to make something hurt more, not less. How much more potent can abstraction be at evoking a feeling than spelling something,” for Columbus Underground.
Jessica Hughes, Machinal, photo by Blake Mintz
  • Beautiful by Doug McGrath and the music of Carole King et al, directed by Dionysia Williams (Short North Stage) – I didn’t see a bad production by Short North Stage all year, but this jukebox musical – which might have had the hardest go with me walking in, given the depth of my familiarity and love of the Carole King-Gerry Goffin songs and the milieu around them, and this captured it so perfectly, anchored by brilliant performances by Britta Rae, Corbin Payne, and Nick Lingnofski. For Columbus Underground, I said, “The book has enough pain and richness to give ballast to the material, but Beautiful never lets anything get in the way of the power and beauty of these songs.”
  • The Comeuppance by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by Eric Ting (Signature Theatre Company, NYC) – Branden Jacobs-Jenkins is one of the playwrights I’ll see anything that comes out if I can at all make work. I was overjoyed that one of the last matinees overlapped with our middle trip to New York this year. I got there – after two hours a few blocks north of the Signature complex having some drinks and laughs at staple Rudy’s Bar and Grill- and was dismayed to find out the performance was over two hours with no intermission. I’m used to that meaning, “We don’t trust the material/we want to exert some dominance over the audience/people will leave.” But for 2:15, I was staggered, enraptured, blown away. Every tool Jacobs-Jenkins has carefully sharpened is deployed in heartbreaking, unsettling ways with a phenomenal cast in this mythopoetic riff on The Big Chill that tells a story about reckoning with youth, trauma, and who has the right to a story; to pain; that I haven’t heard before. I’m dying to see this again and have already pre-ordered the script in book form (coming out next summer). I saw a couple of things this year where I both immediately said, “This is the best thing I’ve seen,” and I still think that later in the year (you’ll see the other further down this list); this was one of them.
  • Sweeney Todd by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler, directed by Thomas Kail (Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, NYC) – I’ve seen a good number of the recent Sweeney Todd revivals, the first Sondheim I loved thanks to an introduction to the taped George Hearn/Angela Lansbury performance from childhood friend Matt Porreca, and I love the attempts at realism, psychological or otherwise. But it was an unalloyed joy to see this Thomas Kail-directed version that focused on the sumptuous music, playing the original orchestrations and with a dynamite lead from Josh Groban, in almost a sharp-edged comic book interpretation. And as with the Sunday Anne and I saw a few years ago, Annaleigh Ashford’s Mrs. Lovett runs away with the whole goddam show, just a dynamite performance.
The Comeuppance photo by Monique Carboni
  • The Inheritance by Matthew Lopez, directed by Joe Bishara (Evolution Theatre Company) – Evolution has been swinging for the fences the last couple of years, and, in my eyes, it’s really paid off. The ambition of this huge cast recasting of Howard’s End to deal with the aftermath of the AIDS crisis, which was the play everyone was talking about when Anne and I were in London (and I couldn’t fit it into the schedule), follows great work Evolution has done with Lopez’s writing like the intimate character-driven Poz and gets to luxuriate in this over two three-hour parts. I called it, “About how we tell stories, how stories bring us together, give us a framework for living, and in the same breath – and sometimes the same story – let us delude ourselves and others, build walls, and slowly (or slowly-then-suddenly) rot us from the inside,” as I reviewed Part 1 and Part 2 for Columbus Underground.
  • POTUS by Selena Fillinger, directed by Leda Hoffmann (The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio) – Fresh off Broadway, POTUS affirmed Hoffmann’s commitment to brand new work and stewardship as CATCO transitioned into The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio. It’s a crackling burlesquing of the highest hallways of power and riotous, hilarious entertainment. It may have been the hardest I laughed all year. I said the production was “A springloaded machine of everything getting worse in ways we see coming, but at just enough of an angle, the wind is knocked from our lungs as a precursor to the following laughs. Hoffmann and her cast excel at this, ratcheting in the tension up, weaving in call-backs (if there’s another inflection you can put on “ass play” we don’t see in this play, I can’t think of it) so they embed in our brains and still getting that jolt of surprise when they detonate, with just enough release to make the pace feel frenzied without being exhausting,” in Columbus Underground.
  • What the Constitution Means to Me by Heidi Schreck, directed by Dakota Thorn (Available Light) – Dakota Thorn, who I’ve long admired as an actor, hit it out of the park with her first – I think – directing and Available Light member Michelle Schroeder-Lowrey is the perfect fit for this funny, intensely moving snapshot of a slice of America from Heidi Schreck. I said, “Hilarity – starting with the 15-year-old Heidi talking about the constitution in bodice-ripper terms (“a sweaty, steamy document”), deep dives into specifics of language, and abject horror bump right up against one another, without feeling unbalanced. In the late-play discussion of Town of Castle Rock v. Gonzales, the play draws a clear line between an abstraction being the point, the nitpicking of “shall” as a dodge, a way to avoid letting people into the argument being seen by the court, and the breathless, sometimes delirious love of words as a way to let people in, to truly see them, instead of shutting them out, as the play does,” in my review for Columbus Underground.
  • Infinite Life by Annie Baker, directed by James Macdonald (Atlantic Theatre, NYC) – I can’t think of a contemporary writer who burrows into the most banal – and simultaneously most intimate – spaces of modern life with more agility and a sharper knife than Annie Baker. This look at seven women in a spa/health retreat that’s not explicitly described is a master class in interweaving perspectives; the way we talk with the knob turned all the way up until it seems strange. Anne and I talked about this all the way down 8th Avenue to the Vanguard (see this year’s live music list), and I’m still turning it over in my head, trying to make sense of it in the best way.
Laurie Carter Rose, Arriah Ratanapan, Noelle Anderson, and Shanelle Marie, POTUS, photo by Terry Gilliam
  • Merrily We Roll Along by Stephen Sondheim and George Furth, directed by Maria Friedman (Hudson Theatre, NYC) – Everything you’ve heard about this is true. Easily the strongest, most fully realized version of this underdog of the Sondheim canon, directed with a sure hand and razor-sharp timing by Maria Friedman, who uses her storied history with Sondheim and her internalizing of those rhythms to make everything breathe and, crucially, peels back a little more of the onion on Franklin Shepherd (a stunning Jonathan Groff) to show the people pleaser quality at the heart of all that grasping – the first time I really believed that line, “I’ve only made one mistake in my life but I’ve made it over and over again: saying ‘Yes’ when I meant ‘No.’” Daniel Radcliffe kills me as the righteous purist Charley Kringus, and Lindsay Mendez, new to me, gives a more fleshed-out version of Mary Flynn, taking her out of the Dorothy Parker caricature while still nailing those lines than I’d previously seen.
  • Which Way to the Stage? by Ana Nogueira, directed by Edward Carignan (Short North Stage) – I didn’t realize how much I’d missed Short North Stage’s taste in non-musical plays until this breath of fresh air reminded me. It felt really good being back in the Green Room, laughing and thinking. In Columbus Underground, I said, “[It] treats these heavier themes with the gravity they need – how does this thing you love change, and what happens when it doesn’t? How do we look to other people? – but they never get in the way of the laughs. It’s a delightful comedy with a sniper-targeted sense of its audience.”
  • Ghost Quartet by Dave Malloy, directed by Drew Eberly (Available Light) – The other thing that stood out to me as the best thing I saw all year, a song cycle with theater running through its veins, that denied my easy understanding as much as it made me love it. For Columbus Underground, I said, “Malloy and the cast, under Eberly’s sure hand, dig into a purer emotional landscape, the way a song feels as it moves through you, and the late nights of wanting to one-up one another because you love the people you’re with so much; while still having all the insecurities and viciousness that makes us human.”
  • Good Grief by Ngozi Anyanwu, directed by Shanelle Marie and Alan Tyson (Contemporary Theatre of Ohio) – Shanelle Marie and Alan Tyson collaborated on directing this lovely meditation on loss, friendship, and growing up by Ngozi Anyanwu, a jewel in a very strong season from The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio. For Columbus Underground, I said, “The ability, starting in Anyanwu’s text and emphasized by Marie and Tyson’s direction, not to demonize anyone, to find drama without making anyone a villain, showing us people who are all doing their best is a rare gift and a pleasure I don’t get often enough in any medium.”
Amy Rittberger in the foreground, Katie Giffin and Jo Michelle Shafer in background on the bar, Ghost Quartet, photo by Kyle Long