by David Glen Robinson
Published on April 14, 2026
Kathleen Fletcher's script and performance is a rare record of a young life, inscribed on the world like a petroglyph etched on time. And a roadmap to the hinterland of self.
Kathleen Fletcher is an immensely powerful actor with great delivery, one who can change characters at the drop of a hat. In her work Take Care of My Friend she has evidently culled the nuggets out of years of personal journals kept during therapy and medical treatments. Regardless of the actual methodology, hers is an auspicious first play that concludes Filigree Theatre’s seventh season. Playwrights and producers often give audiences a content warning about shows …
by Brian Paul Scipione
Published on April 11, 2026
With a cast stacked with talent, The Game's Afoot is a night of very serious silliness. Worth a second viewing (but its final weekend is sold out!).
“Come, Watson, come!' he cried. 'The game is afoot. Not a word! Into your clothes and come!' Ten minutes later we were both in a cab and rattling through the silent streets on our way to Charing Cross Station.” ― Arthur Conan Doyle, The Return of Sherlock Holmes “Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more, or close the wall up with our English dead. (….) I see you stand like greyhounds in the …
by Michael Meigs
Published on April 08, 2026
In the comic absurdist style that evokes nightclub comedy of Germany’s Weimar years, Frisch's work is a savage satire of willful complacency. Highly recommended.
The Hidden Room Theatre of “Matriarch” Beth Burns is not only hidden; it’s a treasure repository. Burns titled her company after the odd, long rectangular room in a historic building in downtown Austin. That was back in 2010. Burns is an academic the way the imaginary Indiana Jones is—a scholar, an adventurer, and entirely unpredictable. She led her company through ten years of brainy, unexpected revelations, such as Nahum Tate’s revision of King Lear, Edwin …
by Hannah Neuhauser
Published on March 31, 2026
Juni Nguyen as Hedwig was an absolute riot! Attentive, clever audience interaction, never missing a beat, dropping the mask and revealing her soul—a showstopper.
How long did it take for you to become whole? There are two parts to every person – the mask and the heart. What we show to the world and what we forcibly repress in shadow. These parts coexist. In each of us that darkness is waiting to be heard and will come to the spotlight – whether we are ready or not. It is a necessary journey to reach completion through radical acceptance. Sacrificial …
by Michael Meigs
Published on March 26, 2026
Despite the gleeful handfuls of red herrings, in The Game's Afoot you may guess who's responsible for the murder. But it's more likely you'll simply be enjoying the antics and the farce.
Playwright Ken Ludwig is prolific, clever, and widely admired, both in the bigger drama houses across the nation and in community theatres. The man currently has thirty-four scripts to his credit, an impressive number; even more impressive is his near-ubiquity in the U.S. theatre landscape. Perhaps you know that he crafted the popular adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express, a version of which recently played at Austin's Zach Theatre; you probably aren't aware that …
by David Glen Robinson
Published on March 23, 2026
Altogether, Red Nightfall Dance Theatre's UNBECOMING was a multimodal treasure,
A nearly naked man lies in fetal position at center stage. A glaring, unfiltered white light fades up on him. Unclothed and without any ornamentation or nearby landscape of human objects, he could be anywhere or in anytime, but a primordial desert is the most obvious choice. In literature and theatre, a solo man with nothing at all symbolizes Everyman, but the audience recoils from looking at this man through that lens, fearful of what …