Musings In Intermissions
A blog about theatre.
Thursday, July 9, 2020
Seraglio review: An opera from the lost season reimagined as a daringly modern miniseries
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In Irish National Opera's hands, Mozart's orientalist singspiel loses the arabesques and makes the move to lockdown Dublin.
Friday, July 3, 2020
Binge review: A gleeful performance installation on Zoom where treasured television shows hold life’s answers
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This interactive performance, presented by Cork Midsummer Festival, makes reassuring parallels between the audience's stories and the...
Wednesday, June 24, 2020
Ulysses review: RTÉ’s staggering 29½-hour radio play of James Joyce’s wild gibberish novel
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In Joyce's story, Leopold Bloom navigates an unhappy marriage and Stephen Dedalus searches to elevate everyday heartache into epic po...
Thursday, June 11, 2020
Exotic v. Baskin review: An operatic riff on a trashy pleasure struggles to tame its subjects
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Carlow Arts Festival's Tiger King -inspired opera sees a showdown between zookeeper Joe Exotic and animal conservationist Carole Bas...
Thursday, June 4, 2020
Black Lives Matter protests: Irish theatre has blindfolded itself to race
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Boy Child , Felispeak's swooning spoken word drama about a man's coming of age in Nigeria, is one play that has felt like a drop ...
Thursday, May 28, 2020
Howie the Rookie review: A vivid poignant broadcast from Mark O’Rowe’s Dublin underworld
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Glass Mask's streamed theatre production, in conjunction with the Lock Inn, rediscovers the darkness and violence of Mark O'Rowe&...
Thursday, May 14, 2020
Coronavirus arts measures: The Culture Ministry is a carriage waiting to turn into a pumpkin
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Bewley's Café Theatre is the first venue to be seriously impacted by the pandemic. Photo: Bewley's
Thursday, April 30, 2020
We’re in Here review: A sly contemporary play about temporary disconnection and lasting gratitude
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The narratives of a drama facilitator, a counsellor, and a son remembering his mother intermingle in John Doran's consoling new play....
Friday, April 24, 2020
The Little Foxes: Can the flapper generation of the Gate’s plays become the theatre’s playwrights?
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Lillian Hellman in 1976. A revival of her 1939 drama The Little Foxes , now sadly postponed, could signal a new trend for how the Gate ...
Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Coronavirus arts measures: Politicians like talking art, just not the work involved in making it
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Taoiseach Leo Varadkar aimed for a piece of rhetoric by quoting Seamus Heaney, but when politicians talk about the work involved in makin...
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