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January 26, 2011, City Stage

Theatre through mid-February

Tue, Jan 18, 2011

“One Flea Spare” at Metropolitan Ensemble Theatre; “Maybe, Baby, It’s You” at the American Heartland Theatre; “Another American: Asking and Telling” at Kansas City Repertory Theatre; “Blues in the Night: The Lyrics of Johnny Mercer” at Quality Hill Playhouse; “Bridge to Terabithia” at the Coterie Theatre. And coming in February—“Oh What A Lovely War” at Kansas City Actors Theatre; “A Night with Martin Short” at Johnson County Community College; “Musical Monday” at Musical Theatre Heritage.

For complete Theatre listings through 2011, click here to visit the KC Events calendar.

Metropolitan Ensemble Theatre
One Flea Spare

Runs January 4 through January 23 at MET Space
For tickets call 816-569-3226 or online at www.metkc.org
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

In Naomi Wallace’s award-winning play, the plague rages in London—1665. Locked in a world where normal constructs have fallen away, a wealthy couple, a child, and a sailor face fear and each other, jockeying for position and in their life and death struggle to survive.

Click here to read KCM's review.

American Heartland Theatre
Maybe, Baby, It’s You

Runs January 7 through February 20
For tickets call 816-842-9999 or online at www.ahtkc.com
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

The blockbuster comedy about the search for that most elusive of all entities...your soul mate. We take a raucous ride through male-female relationships with the two searchers with a laundry list of must-have qualities for a mate that swiftly dwindles down to "warm and breathing" as the only prerequisite; a mild mannered Midwesterner whose blind date turns out to be the Greek goddess Medea; a film noir couple who realize that their razor-sharp banter is hiding their fear and vulnerability; a gorgeous, charming brain surgeon who is always "Mr.Wrong" due to his penchant for spastic, arrhythmic club dancing; a couple celebrating their wedding anniversary who realize that marriage may not have ended their search for a soul mate; an elderly divorced couple who entertain the fantasy of a reconciliation at their grandson's soccer game; and other would-be and shouldn't be couples trying to find each other. Maybe Baby, It's You. Or maybe...it isn't.

 

Kansas City Repertory Theatre
Another American: Asking and Telling

Runs January 14 through February 6
For tickets call 816-235-2700 or online at www.kcrep.org
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

After interviewing over 150 people over a three-year period on both sides of the government’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy regarding the rights of gay men and women to serve in the military, playwright/actor Marc Wolf has created a powerful, provocative performance that brings you face-to-face with every point of view about this controversial issue. As compelling as it is entertaining, Wolf’s celebrated, Obie Award-winning play has been acclaimed across the nation – and now finds its most important home in the American heartland.

Quality Hill Playhouse
Blues in the Night: The Lyrics of Johnny Mercer

Runs January 14 through February 13
For tickets call 816-421-1700 or online at  www.qualityhillplayhouse.com
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

One of our most popular shows of all time is back! Johnny Mercer wrote more than fifteen hundred songs, making him one of the best-known American lyricists. Join our jazzy singers and combo as they sizzle again on numbers like "One for My Baby," "Autumn Leaves," "Skylark" and "Dream."

Click here to read KCM's review.

The Coterie Theatre
The Bridge to Terabithia

Runs January 18 through February 27
For tickets call 816-474-6552 or online at www.coterietheatre.org
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

This powerful production focuses the humor, warmth, and emotional intensity of Katherine Paterson's Newbery Award winning novel. Jesse, a budding artist who feels separate from his family and rural Virginia culture, dreams of becoming something special. Leslie, the new girl from the city and the ultimate outsider, opens up a world of imagination, art, and literature for him. Together they create Terabithia, a fantasy kingdom where they are safe from those who don't understand them. Their friendship grows as Jesse's world expands. When tragedy strikes, the strength gained in Terabithia lets Jesse move forward on his own, and lets him share the magic of his dreams. 

Unicorn Theatre
In The Next Room or the vibrator play

Runs January 29 through February 13
For tickets call 816-531-7529 x10 or online at www.unicorntheatre.org
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

In this Sarah Ruhl play set at the dawn of the age of electricity in a well-to-do 1880s Victorian home, proper gentleman and scientist Dr. Givings has innocently invented an extraordinary device for treating “hysteria” in women (and, occasionally, men): the vibrator. His young wife tends to their newborn daughter and wonders exactly what is going on in the next room. This 2010 Tony Nominee for Best Play is based on actual bizarre history.

Kansas City Actors Theatre
Oh What A Lovely War

Runs February 11 through February 27
For tickets call 816-235-6222 or online at www.kcactors.org
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

In a unique collaboration between the National WWI Museum, UMKC Theatre and the Kansas City Actors Theatre, we bring you one of the 20th century’s theatrical masterpieces. A carnival of song, battle and heartbreak as the war to end all wars blazes its way on to the stage at America’s national museum dedicated to that war.

One Night Only

Johnson County Community College
An Evening with Martin Short

February 12, 8 p.m., at Yardley Hall
For tickets call 913-469-4445 or online at www.jccc.edu/performing-arts-series

See one of America’s premier funny men in a hilarious one-man show. He’s a comedic chameleon with an uncanny lineup of hijinks, impressions and stunts. His talent spans from playing animated zany characters in feel-good flicks (Father of the Bride) to co-starring with Glenn Close (FX’s legal thriller Damages).

One Night Only

Musical Theater Heritage
Musical Monday

February 14, at Off Center Theatre, Crown Center
For tickets, call 816-842-9999 or online at www.mthkc.org
Call or visit the website for performance days and times

The first of 2011’s six occasional “Musical Mondays”—an impromptu night of musical theatre in a nightclub setting, featuring a few headliners as well as other voices from KC’s pool of musical talent. (Look for more Musical Mondays on March 21, April 25, and again in the fall).

For complete Theatre listings through 2011, click here to visit the KC Events calendar.

By Victor Wishna

Victor  Wishna

Senior Editor, Theatre; Theatre and Features Contributor
Victor Wishna is a writer, editor, and author, among other things. A graduate of Stanford University and the New School's creative writing MFA program, he has written for the Wall Street Journal, the Baltimore Sun, the Miami Herald, the Kansas City Star, Humanities, and other major magazines and newspapers. He contributes a weekly real estate feature to the New York Post and his column “Letter from New York” is syndicated nationally.

With photographer Ken Collins, he published In Their Company: Portraits of American Playwrights (Umbrage Editions, 2006), for which he conducted and edited interviews with 61 prominent stage writers including Edward Albee, August Wilson, Tony Kushner, Wendy Wasserstein, and many others. The book won a 2007 Independent Publisher Book Awards Silver Medal (www.intheircompany.com).

He has always maintained a love for theatre, as a writer, an audience member, and even an actor, appearing in several community and semi-professional productions. As an undergraduate, he studied acting and playwriting with Anna Deavere Smith, in addition to journalism and psychology (and not engineering or medicine).

After nearly 12 years in New York City, Victor recently returned to his hometown with his wife, Annie, also a K.C. native. When not writing for publication or pleasure, Victor is honing his stand-up routine, which he has performed at numerous clubs and special events around New York, the Midwest, and elsewhere. In June 2010, he was named New York’s second-funniest amateur Jewish comedian by The Jewish Week. Seriously.

 

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