Your publisher and editor were lucky enough to be invited to attend the opening night of “Love Actually Live” at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. At this memorable event we enjoyed this year’s version of this multimedia spectacle that left the audience on their feet cheering for more from the uber-talented cast!
After the show, we exited the theater to attend the outstanding reception in the Wallis Grand Hall upstairs, where we were treated to a champagne toast with delicious deserts in the magnificent marble covered reception room…
… and had our pictures taken several times as well!
Everyone had a fantastic time at the event, and we want to thank all of the staff at the Wallis Public Relations Department for hosting such a stellar event!
Covid protocols continue to be dictated by each individual venue, so bring a face mask to wear during the show in case the venue requires it. It’s a good idea to check with the theater before you attend a show to find out what their current policy is.
The information presented in this column is the latest available at the time of printing, however you should verify it with the theater to confirm it before making definite plans. Here are the shows that have announced opening dates for this month, or are already running:
OPENING
“Inherit the Wind” Two of the nation’s leading lawyers go head-to-head in the ultimate battle of wit, wisdom, and will in this powerful drama. With freedom of speech hanging in the balance, will this small-town courtroom bring us together or tear the nation apart? In a fresh production boldly reimagined for today, this will make you rethink what you know and dare you to question just how much society has evolved. Written by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, and directed by Michael Michetti, it runs November 1 through November 26 at the Pasadena Playhouse in Pasadena. For tickets call 626-356-7529 or visit www.pasadenaplayhouse.org.
“Towards Zero” When a house party gathers at Gull’s Point, the seaside home of Lady Tressilian, Neville Strange finds himself caught between his old wife Audrey and his new flame Kay. A nail-biting thriller, the play probes the psychology of jealousy in the shadow of a savage and brutal murder. A carefully unpeeled investigation before our eyes brings the story to a pointed ending. Written by Agatha Christie and Gerald Verner, and directed by Hannah Jackson, it runs November 3 through December 10 at the Theatre Palisades in Pacific Palisades. For tickets call 310-454-1970 or visit www.theatrepalisades.org.
“A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder” When the low-born Monty Navarro finds out that he’s eighth in line for an earldom in the lofty D’Ysquith family, he figures his chances of outliving his predecessors are slight and sets off down a far more ghoulish path. But can he knock off his unsuspecting relatives without being caught and become the ninth Earl of Highhurst? And what of love? Because murder isn’t the only thing on Monty’s mind… Written by Robert L. Freedman, with music by Steven Lutvak, lyrics by Robert L. Freedman, and directed by Catherine Rahm, it runs November 10 through December 9 at the Westchester Playhouse in Los Angeles. For tickets call 310-645-5156 or visit www.kentwoodplayers.org.
“Mama Mama Can’t You See” There is no “I” or “me” in combat. Dangerously imaginative Coin & Ghost theater company presents Mama Mama Can’t You See, an explosive new play about human connection and the mythology of war. Highly physical, sensual, funny, angry and surreal, it is inspired by playwright Stan Mayer’s life as a U.S. Marine. But don’t get it twisted: this is not a play about war. Rather, it’s a play about how to tell a war story. Written by Stan Mayer and Cecilia Fairchild, and directed by Zachary Reeve Davidson, it runs November 10 through December 10 at the Studio/Stage in Los Angeles. For tickets call 818-925-4928 or visit www.coinandghost.org.
“Beautiful: The Carole King Musical” Follow the inspiring true story of Carole King’s remarkable rise to stardom – from being part of a hit songwriting team with her husband Gerry Goffin to becoming one of the most successful solo acts in popular music history. Along the way, she wrote the soundtrack to a generation, with countless classics like “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” “Take Good Care of My Baby,” “You’ve Got a Friend,” “So Far Away,” “It Might as Well Rain Until September,” “Up on the Roof,” and “The Locomotion.” Don’t miss this smash Broadway hit that ran for 6 years! Written by Douglas McGrath, with music by Gerry Goffin & Carole King, Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil, and directed by David Ruttura, it runs November 11 through December 3 at the La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts in La Mirada. For tickets call 562-944-9801 or visit www.LaMiradaTheatre.com.
“The Talented Tenth” Portrays graduates of Howard University who have succeeded (the big house, the new cars, the lavish vacations, the families). Bernard in particular feels conflicted about betraying his original principles. Bernard is a hard-driving executive at a small chain of Black radio stations. His programming decisions have boosted the stations’ ratings and significantly increased its commercial value. Now, the owner of the chain, Griggs, is considering selling the chain to an international white corporation, which would ravage Bernard’s plans for the company. Bernard’s life outside of work is becoming problematic, too. He has a beautiful, capable wife of many gifts who has given him four children. He also has a smart, hot, younger mistress who is making increasing demands on him. Bernard has had plans for these Black radio stations that would serve and uplift his community. What will happen to them now? What will do Bernard do about the two beautiful women in his life? Written by Richard Wesley, and directed by Ben Guillory, it runs November 11 through December 10 at the Robey Theatre Company at Los Angeles Theatre Center in Los Angeles. For tickets call 213-489-7402 or visit www.therobeytheatrecompany.org.
“Freight: The Five Incarnations of Abel Green” An African American everyman travels through time in different incarnations, including a 19th Century minstrel, a faith healer, an FBI informant, a struggling actor and an out-of-work mortgage broker. In each life, Abel is guided, distracted, helped or hindered by a handful of characters with whom his destiny is forever intertwined. We meet each new iteration of Abel Green on a train, which changes in appearance in accordance with each time period and serves as a link between dimensions. Written by Howard L. Craft, and directed by Joseph Megel, it runs November 12 through December 16 at the Fountain Theatre in Los Angeles. For tickets call 323-663-1525 or visit www.FountainTheatre.com.
“The Half-Light” A drama with warmth and humor. After an intriguing encounter with a psychic, a college secretary asks herself: Can certain people be trained to see the dead? Iris’s pursuit of an answer leads to a more earthbound challenge when her beloved colleague, Andrew, is suddenly stricken by grief. Armed with her own intuition and the garrulous enthusiasm of her friend Helen, Iris attempts to coax Andrew back to the land of the living. In the meantime, Helen faces off with her daughter, Teresa, who believes her house is haunted. These four characters’ entwined journeys all tilt toward the same goal: to be fully seen in the light and the half-light by another living being. Written by Monica Wood, and directed by Ann Hearn Tobolowsky, it runs November 16 through December 17 at the Theatre Forty in the Mary Levin Cutler Theatre in Beverly Hills. For tickets call 310-364-0535 or visit www.theatre40.org.
“Radical or, Are You Gonna Miss Me?” What do you do when the people you call family are the ones who hurt you the most? This is the sweeping story of three women on the Mexican American border who, more than anything, desperately want to be seen — and who will do anything in their power to make themselves known, no matter how great the cost. Written by Isaac Gómez, and directed by Jess McLeod, it runs November 16 through December 11 at the Atwater Village Theatre in Atwater Village. For tickets call 323-380-8843 or visit www.iamatheatre.com.
“A Family Business” Rose Klein, a budding, talented chef, and her boyfriend Julio, are cooking dinner tonight for Rose’s mother Harmony, a spiritual psychologist, and her father Seth, an unrepentant child of the sixties. Joining them will be Julio’s parents: Max Gold, the feared tyrannical head of Gold Studios, and Julio’s mother Elena, Max’s brilliant, acerbic, trophy wife. Rose and Julio hope this will be a night to remember. It will be, although not in the way that any of them could have imagined. Written by Matt Chait, and directed by Brian Shnipper, it runs November 17 through December 31 at the Hudson Main Stage Theatre in Hollywood. For tickets visit www.onstage411.com/newsite/show/play_info.asp?show_id=6389.
“Frozen Fluid” In a mythic Antarctica (but one resonant with our current climate crisis), two scientists study glaciers and whales. When a third phytoplankton scientist arrives — Tay, who identifies as nonbinary — Herman and Terra begin to confront their own ideas of gender and their control of the natural world. As things unravel for all three of them, a new world begins to take shape — one where gender, identity, religion, climate, and time itself become new, expansive, and free of human interference. Written by Fly Jamerson, and directed by Amanda McRaven, it runs November 18 through December 17 at the Los Angeles LGBT Center Davidson/Valentini Theatre in Hollywood. For tickets visit www.coeurage.org.
“Cori Cable Kidder’s Holiday Spectacular. A 1940s Christmas Revue” The decade was a rich one for memorable songs remembered fondly decades later. The first half of the decade reflected the fact that so many of our brave young men and women were overseas, fighting to ensure that a free America would endure. The second half of the Forties celebrated an America flush with victory, with a booming economy, a booming population and a vision of an ever-brighter future. The music was performed by crooners, small combos and big bands. The songs touched upon the world at war (Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy, We’ll Meet Again, I’ll Be Seeing You), marked our coming home (It’s Been a Long, Long Time), and celebrated the holidays (White Christmas, The Christmas Song, Let It Snow!). The music varied from ballads to boogie to swing. Some of it we call The Great American Songbook and much of it we still want to hear when the holidays approach. Written and directed by Cori Cable Kidder, it runs November 24 through December 23 at the Sierra Madre Playhouse in Sierra Madre. For tickets call 626-355-4318 or visit www.sierramadreplayhouse.org.
“The Very Hungry Caterpillar Holiday Show” Each performance features four Eric Carle stories brought to life by a menagerie of 75 eye-popping, award-winning puppets. Audiences will meet the colorful characters of Brown Bear, Brown Bear; travel the world with 10 Little Rubber Ducks; get whisked away to a winter wonderland in Dream Snow; and of course, spend time with the star of the show, The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Each story features a variety of enchanting puppets and audience participation elements, brought to life by a captivating cast of storytellers, sweeping original music, and stunning puppetry. The pre-show experience includes a free activity station for little ones, plus, all attendees will have the opportunity to purchase a photo with The Very Hungry Caterpillar himself. Written by Eric Carle, and directed by Jonathan Rockefeller, it runs November 25 through January 21 at the El Portal Theatre in North Hollywood. For tickets call 818-508-4200 or visit www.hungrycaterpillarshow.com.
“Love Actually Live” transports friends and families into a three-dimensional world where the film and live action seamlessly blend, immersing audiences in the heartwarming London setting. Iconic scenes from the movie are displayed on screens that move throughout the set, complemented by an all-star cast of singers and a live orchestra, delivering a reimagined soundtrack featuring beloved songs such as “Christmas is All Around,” “Trouble with Love,” and Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now.” Written by Richard Curtis, adapted by Anderson Davis, with music by Jesse Vargas, and directed by Anderson Davis, it runs November 29 through December 30 at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. For tickets call 310-746-4000 or visit www.TheWallis.org/LAL.
CONTINUING
“The Sound of Music” Join Maria Rainer, a free-spirited young woman, and the von Trapp family, as they find love and hope in an uncertain time. Based on the true story of the von Trapp Family Singers and later adapted into the hit movie starring Julie Andrews, The Sound of Music has been a cultural staple for decades. Audiences of all ages will be charmed by classic hit songs including the titular “The Sound of Music” and “My Favorite Things.” The incredible sets, costumes, and powerful vocal performances from the Nun Chorus are also sure to delight ticket holders. Written by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, suggested by “The Trapp Family Singers” by Maria Augusta Trapp, with music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, it runs through November 5 at the Carpenter Performing Arts Center in Long Beach. For tickets call 562-856-1999 or visit www.musical.org.
“Monster” Hannah’s life is a total mess. To get back on track, she must face the Monster who haunts her every thought, trying to destroy her and everyone who loves her. Written by April Littlejohn, and directed by Bree Pavey, it runs through November 12 at the Loft Ensemble in North Hollywood. For tickets call 818-452-3153 or visit www.loftensemble.org.
“Outrage” Ethan is an acting and writing teacher who runs a prestigious school. He confronts increasing tensions in his life, as friends and students seem eager to lash out in anger and recrimination over the election of a controversial President, all while Los Angeles anxiously awaits the verdict in an incendiary criminal trial involving a racially charged police shooting. The midnight beeping of a defective smoke alarm is the harbinger of all that is about to sweep life as Ethan knew it away. As the city takes in the verdict, Ethan’s world is quite suddenly changed forever. Forced to look at life from the other side of cancellation, Ethan attempts to reconcile relationships while determining where his creative life went, and how it might re-emerge. Written and directed by Allen Barton, it runs through November 12 at the Beverly Hills Playhouse (Main Stage) in Beverly Hills. For tickets call 323-657-5992 or visit www.crimsonsquare.org/buy-tickets.
“A Raisin in the Sun” Each of the Youngers, a Black family, has a different view of how to spend their father’s life insurance settlement to better the family. Will they open a business, send Beneatha to medical school or move to an all-white suburb? Hansberry’s masterpiece seeks answers to the still-relevant questions posed in Langston Hughes’ poem Harlem: What happens to a dream deferred? Written by Lorraine Hansberry, and directed by Khanisha Foster, it runs through November 12 at the South Coast Repertory Julianne Argyros Stage in Costa Mesa. For tickets call 714-708-5555 or visit www.scr.org.
“Baby Foot” Two seemingly mismatched souls find themselves on the cusp of a life-changing connection. Blackie’s first night in rehab intersects with Alexis’s 90-day release. A long night’s journey into day drives their sensation seeking impulsivities full throttle into the same lane where hearts and minds are torn between the seductive allure of the drug and an elusive promise of a brighter, sober future. Written and directed by Tim Venable, it runs through November 20 at the Rogue Machine, in the Matrix Theatre in Los Angeles. For tickets call 855-585-5185 or visit www.roguemachinetheatre.org.
“Lewis and Tolkien” Set in Oxford, England in the autumn of 1963 at the famous “Rabbit Room” of the Eagle and Child Pub, this play is something of a return to the familiar for C.S. Lewis (author of The Chronicles of Narnia) and J.R.R. Tolkien (who wrote The Lord of the Rings). Filled with humor, rousing debate, and reconciliation, the two men learn the true value of their friendship with a little help from a few pints of beer and the energetically curious barmaid, Veronica. Written and directed by Dean Batali, it runs through December 3 at the Actors Co-op Crossley Theater in Hollywood. For tickets call 323-462-8460 or visit www.ActorsCo-op.org.
Our local theme parks are operating at full capacity. Most require advance reservations online, as well as advance ticket, and possibly food, purchases. You will need an app in some to be able to take full advantage of all attractions and restaurants. Please check their websites for details, restrictions, and availability before planning a visit:
Some theaters still provide online offerings in addition to or in lieu of live performances, with many events you can experience on a virtual basis. A few of these online events are only available on a one-time basis, while others are ongoing and can be viewed on-demand anytime. Visit each of the web sites below to see what they are currently offering. You will find free content as well as pay-per-view to choose from. Here are the links to web sites with online offerings:
Please help keep our theaters open by supporting live theater whenever you can. On behalf of the publisher Steve Zall, and the co-publisher & editor Sid Fish, we want to send our heartfelt thanks to the publicists who supply us with this content, the editors and publishers who deliver it to you, and most of all, to our readers who enjoy our columns. We wish everyone good health, prosperity, and happy times throughout the year.
Sincerely,
Steve Zall, Publisher Sid Fish, Co-Publisher and Editor