A shaky premiere for San Francisco Opera: John Adams and Peter Sellars’ “Girls of the Golden West”

In the first act of Girls of the Golden West a huge gold frame descends to the stage and a black-and-white engraving of wilderness appears in its center. A stagehand in black turns a crank moving the spools that wind the picture along until another engraving replaces it. This special effect, the moving panorama, was popular in the mid 19th-century. And it’s not a bad metaphor for John Adams and Peter Sellars’ new opera Girls of the Golden West. For although the moving...

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William Kentridge’s stunning turn through time

“There is a utopian perfection in inverting time,” explains South African artist William Kentridge. Time and how film changes time and the material world, which he as a visual artist is deeply connected to, are a focus of his drawings and videos. He sees the ability to use film to reverse and control time as connected to “the longing to undo things we’ve done.” Although he may not have achieved this form of utopianism in his performance opera, Refuse the Hour, presented by...

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Girls just want to have jewels: San Francisco Opera’s “Manon”

San Francisco Opera has opened a sleek new production of Jules Massenet’s Manon with colorful balloons, vivid costumes and elegantly conducted music. Perhaps a cautionary tale on the dangers of leaving naive and ethically ambiguous young women unchaperoned in the courtyard of an inn while traveling, the opera follows its greedy heroine from her escape from convent life into the arms of the ardent Chevalier des Grieux. And then through a high life of champagne, jewels, lovers and ennui...

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On the comforts of furry rabbits: Berkeley Rep’s new play

A man leaps into center stage. He’s dressed in a bunny suit, with a large cardboard mask with long droopy ears, whiskers and buckteeth. He postures and threatens an invisible person placed somewhere out in the audience: The rabbit will haunt them, lurking in the shadows, for ever. So begins Berkeley Rep’s new play by Daniel Handler, more often known by his pen name Lemony Snicket, the author of the best selling children’s books, A Series of Unfortunate...

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A.C.T. presents “Hamlet”

Hamlet. You may have seen it. Once or twice. Or read it. Once or twice. For over 400 years, Shakespeare’s Hamlet has reigned supreme over theatrical dramas, and has been in continuous production since it first appeared in London, likely in the year 1602. The list of actors who have played the role of the Prince of Denmark is formidable and long. From Richard Burbage, the...

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