Vagabond Players Open Ira Levin's INTERLOCK Tonight
by BWW News Desk - Jan 9, 2015
The Vagabond Players continues its 99th season with the Baltimore premiere of Ira Levin's Interlock, opening tonight, January 9 and running weekends through February 8. Author of Deathtrap, Rosemary's Baby and Veronica's Room, Levin here again weaves a haunting tale of romantic obsession and betrayal with intriguing twists and turns.
Vagabond Players to Present Ira Levin's INTERLOCK, Begin. 1/9
by Tyler Peterson - Dec 26, 2014
The Vagabond Players continues its 99th season with the Baltimore premiere of Ira Levin's Interlock, opening January 9 and running weekends through February 8. Author of Deathtrap, Rosemary's Baby and Veronica's Room, Levin here again weaves a haunting tale of romantic obsession and betrayal with intriguing twists and turns.
BWW Reviews: HARVEY Is a Bounding Success at Vagabonds
by Cybele Pomeroy - Feb 5, 2014
Oddball Elwood P. Dowd embarrasses his family with his insistent devotion to an unsuitable friend. Historical Vagabonds Theater in Fells Point delivers laughs with this Pulitzer Prize-winning drawing room comedy.
Photo Flash: First Look at Vagabond Players' HARVEY, Opening Tonight
by BWW News Desk - Jan 10, 2014
The Pulitzer Prize winning comedy, Harvey, by Mary Chase opens tonight, January 10, at Vagabond Players and runs weekends through February 9. This beloved classic is directed by Sherrionne Brown. BroadwayWorld has a first look at the cast in action below!
Photo Flash: First Look at Vagabond Players' HARVEY
by BWW News Desk - Dec 27, 2013
The Pulitzer Prize winning comedy, Harvey, by Mary Chase opens January 10, at Vagabond Players and runs weekends through February 9. This beloved classic is directed by Sherrionne Brown. BroadwayWorld has a first look at the cast in action below!
BWW Reviews: Superb EQUUS at the Spotlighters
by Tina Saratsiotis - Apr 11, 2013
With EQUUS, the Spotlighters Theatre puts on what may well be the best show I've seen them perform. All aspects of the production are superbly executed, and the intimate space is an ideal venue for this taut psychodrama written by Peter Shaffer (Amadeus).
Spotlighters Theatre Opens Peter Shaffer's EQUUS Tonight
by BWW News Desk - Apr 5, 2013
Spotlighters Theatre presents Peter Shaffer's Tony Award winning play EQUUS, opening tonight, April 5, 2013 at 8pm, and running through Sunday, May 5, 2013 at 2pm. Performances are Today and Saturday at 8pm, and Sunday at 2pm. Directed by Sherrionne Brown.
Spotlighters Theatre Presents EQUUS, Opening 4/5
by Kelsey Denette - Apr 1, 2013
Spotlighters Theatre will present Peter Shaffer's, Tony Award winning, EQUUS opening Friday, April 5, 2013 at 8pm, and running through Sunday, May 5, 2013 at 2pm. Performances are Friday and Saturday at 8pm, and Sunday at 2pm. Directed by Sherrionne Brown.
Spotlighters Theatre to Open Peter Shaffer's EQUUS, 4/5
by BWW News Desk - Mar 30, 2013
Spotlighters Theatre presents Peter Shaffer's Tony Award winning play EQUUS, opening Friday, April 5, 2013 at 8pm, and running through Sunday, May 5, 2013 at 2pm. Performances are Friday and Saturday at 8pm, and Sunday at 2pm. Directed by Sherrionne Brown.
BWW Reviews: Queer Eye - TEA & SYMPATHY
by Daniel Collins - Oct 3, 2011
When a young man at a 1950s boarding school isn't deemed a 'regular guy' by his peers, he seeks out 'tea and sympathy' and much more than that in Robert Anderson's famed play.
A Play Well Done, No Doubt
by Daniel Collins - May 15, 2011
It's 1964 in a small Catholic school in the Bronx. A priest has taken St. Nicholas' only black student under his wing. Is he protector or something else? This is just one of many questions posed in John Patrick Shanley's award-winning play, 'Doubt: A Parable,' now at Baltimore's Spotlighters Theatre.
BWW Reviews: GREAT AMERICAN TRAILER PARK MUSICAL Is A Hoot at Spotlighters
by Jack L. B. Gohn - Apr 4, 2011
The Spotlighters' performance space is an interesting and often frustrating challenge - a theater-in-the-round (or really in the square) with four columns supporting the ceiling and interfering with sight-lines. But it is actually an excellent space for a chamber musical. The singers can be extremely close to each other, playing off each other rather than each other's amplified voices, as well as right on top of the audience, and when, as here, they're on pitch and on fire, even the most trivial musical fluff can get pretty intense.
Midsummer Madness: Twelfth Night
by Daniel Collins - Oct 24, 2010
Shakespeare's comic tale of unrequited love, mistaken identities, cross-dressing, cross-garters, fights and duels, a drunken lord of misrule, and a spoilsport's come-uppance adorns the Spotlighters' diminutive stage.