Entries from DCist tagged with 'roundhouse'
December 11, 2007
Yarrrrrr. Forget Jacob Marley and Sugarplum Fairies. What DCist wants for Christmas this year is pirates. And Round House is more than happy to oblige. Their production of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island (a new version by Broadway vet Ken Ludwig) fully embraces the pirate fascination that our culture has embraced even before Johnny Depp made the word "savvy" his own. The story is one familiar to many who grew up with the tale --......
Continue Reading "Round House Gives Us Pirates For Christmas"April 24, 2007
This review was written by contributor Chris Klimek The Director: The Third Act of Elia Kazan, now in its world premiere run at Round House Theatre in Silver Spring, takes a few more liberties with its subject than did Orson's Shadow, another recent Round House production about titans of the stage and screen. The latter play imagined what Orson Welles and Laurence Olivier might have talked about during their real-life collaboration on Eugene Ionesco's Rhinoceros,......
Continue Reading "Round House's Director Too One-Dimensional"March 19, 2007
MONDAY At Chapters, they’re mad for mystery writers on Mondays in March, and for alliteration at all other times. Today, they have a fine guest: Laura Lippman, who’ll be reading from her latest, What the Dead Know. 445 11th Street, NW, 1 p.m. TUESDAY Tom Bissell and his father, an ex-Marine who served in the Vietnam War, travel back to Vietnam on a journey that retraces both national and personal history. He’ll be in town......
Continue Reading "Reader, Meet Author"November 2, 2006
Editorial Disclosure: DCist Jason Linkins has a supporting role in this production Quite a few interpretations of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein have been gracing the D.C. stages lately. Round House Silver Spring has a take, and we were impressed with the lyrical, atmospheric vibe that Synetic Theatre's production captured in September. While Rorschach Theatre's most recent effort may not have the same melancholy moodiness that Synetic achieved through striking set design and choreography, the work still......
Continue Reading "Some Kind of Monster At Rorschach"November 1, 2006
So if October's the month for spooky productions and December is the time to get in the holiday spirit, what does November mean for D.C. Theater? Looks like this month, it means a diverse catalogue of everything from Chinese Elvises to Katie Couric (ok, maybe some theaters are apparently still thinking "scary"). Actors' Theater of Washington has the camp-tastic Fatal Attraction: A Greek Tragedy, which will serve as a late-night follow-up to its current production,......
Continue Reading "DCist's November Theater Preview"October 2, 2006
Sure, with Free Night of Theater on the horizon, it may be hard to justify shelling out for a ticket to a stage show, but trust us — with all the intriguing offerings that local companies have in store, you'll want to see more than one show this month. Previously at the Fringe Festival, Round House Silver Spring presents Bushwa: A Modern Ubu, about an intellectually-challenged king. Hmm. Wonder what it's like to have your......
Continue Reading "DCist's October Theater Preview"May 18, 2006
Ah, the ambiguous ending. For some, it’s infuriating; for others, it can be part of the fun of going to the theatre. But what about the ending when you’re not exactly sure what happened, the kind that has you questioning what the play was even about in the first place? A Body of Water, now being staged at Round House Theatre in Silver Spring, delivers that kind of conclusion. And while it will give you......
Continue Reading "Despite Ambiguity, A Body Of Water Remains Afloat"May 2, 2006
In May, the D.C. theater community has devils, Dorian and the deformed — and in Round House Bethesda's case, an affection for alliteration that we apparently share. We love the work that Actors Theatre of Washington does, and their latest effort is "Mondays In May", where for three days this month, they showcase new talent. We Wildephiles are particularly interested in what they're going to do with The Picture Of Dorian Gray on May 8.......
Continue Reading "DCist's May Theater Preview"November 4, 2005
DCist apologizes for this month's theater preview being a bit behind schedule (its resident critic keeps ending up travelling out of state), but there's no reason to fret, as there's plenty of interesting options playing at area venues during November. Bunnies: Not just cute like everybody supposes? Or man's real best friend? The lead character of Vpstart Crow's production of Harvey would say they fall into the "friend" camp, but everybody just thinks he's......
Continue Reading "DCist's November Theater Preview"September 23, 2005
Boy meets courtesan. Families disapprove. Tuberculosis gets in the way. The tale may border on predictable. But Neil Bartlett's Camille, making its American debut at the Round House Theatre in Bethesda, in the tradition of the many adaptions which came before it, proves that it's not always about a complex plot, if you know how to tell a story right. The play is based on the allegedly-autobiographical novel by Alexandre Dumas fils, (son of that......
Continue Reading "Camille a More Contemporary Courtesan"
