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What’s Onstage in the DMV

What’s Onstage in the DMV

Jordan Wright
January 14, 2025
Special to The Zebra

 

In The Heights (Image via Signature Theatre)

In the Heights
Signature Theatre
Feb 11th – May 4th
www.SigTheatre.org

Kunene and the King
Shakespeare Theatre Company
Feb 16th – Mar 16th
www.ShakespeareTheatre.org

Guac
Woolly Mammoth
through Feb 16th
www.WoollyMammoth.net

The City of Conversation
through Feb 15th
www.DominionStage.org

Image Via Toby’s Dinner Theatre

9 to 5 – The Musical
Toby’s Dinner Theatre
through Mar 16th
www.TobysDinnerTheatre.com

A Room in the Castle
Folger Theatre
Mar 4th – Apr 6th
www.Folger.edu

Waitress
Olney Theatre Center
Feb 30th – Mar 13th
 www.OlneyTheatre.org

Shucked
Broadway at The National
Feb 25th – Mar 2nd
www.BroadwayattheNational.com

Games Women Play
Broadway at The National
Feb 13th – 15th
www.BroadwayattheNational.com

Image via The National Theatre

Alton Brown: Live – Last Bite
Broadway at The National
Mar 8th
www.BroadwayattheNational.com

Insidious: The Further You Fear
Broadway at The National
Mar 14th & Mar 15th
www.BroadwayattheNational.com

Steel Magnolias
Creative Cauldron
Feb 13th – Mar 9th
www.CreativeCauldron.org

The Lake Effect
1stStage – through Feb 16th
www.1stStage.org

Hand to God
Keegan Theatre
Feb 1st – Mar 2nd
www.KeeganTheatre.com

Image via Arena Stage

Sarah Silverman’s The Bedwetter
Arena Stage
Feb 4th – Mar 16th
www.ArenaStage.org

The Age of Innocence
Arena Stage
Feb 28th – Mar 30th
www.ArenaStage.org

Native Gardens
Next Stop Theatre
through Feb 16th
www.NextStopTheatre.org

Schmigadoon
Kennedy Center
through Feb 9th
www.Kennedy-Center.org

The Scenarios
Studio Theatre
Feb 26th – April 6th
www.StudioTheatre.org

Dragons Love Tacos
Adventure Theatre
Feb 7th – Mar 30th
www.AdventureTheatre-MTC.org/shows

What the Constitution Means to Me
Round House Theatre
through Feb 16th
www.RoundhouseTheatre.org

Disney’s The Lion King
Hippodrome Theatre
Feb 12th – Mar 2nd
www.TicketMaster.com

The Play That Goes Wrong
Arlington Players
Feb 1st – Feb 16th
www.ArlingtonPlayers.org

Paper Dreams
Imagination Stage
through Feb 16th
www.ImaginationStage.org

Matilda
The Little Theatre of Alexandria
Feb 8th – Mar 1st
www.TheLittleTheatre.com

Escape from the Asylum: A Madcap Mystery (Image via Washington Stage Guild)

Escape from the Asylum: A Madcap Mystery
Washington Stage Guild
through Feb 23rd
www.StageGuild.org/

Downstate
through Feb 16th
Studio Theatre
www.StudioTheatre.org

The Garbologists
Theater Alliance
through Feb 23rd
www.TheaterAlliance.com

We Live in Time
Constellation Theatre
Feb 6th – Mar 9th
www.ConstellationTheatre.org

In The &Juliet Musical Rom-Com Juliet and Her BFFs Flip the Script at the Kennedy Center

In the &Juliet Musical Rom-Com Juliet and Her BFFs Flip the Script at the Kennedy Center

&Juliet
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Jordan Wright
December 23, 2024

The company of the North American Tour of & JULIET (Photo/Matthew Murphy)

Curious theatregoers are wondering, what happened to Romeo? Not to worry, readers, Romeo is in the house in full. But in this switcheroo, Anne Hathaway rewrites the classic play in which the ladies take charge. What if Juliet didn’t kill herself? So move over, Will, these ladies are on fire! In this female empowerment story, familiar pop hits from Max Martin, who wrote massive multi-platinum tracks for pop princesses like Taylor Swift, Pink, Katy Perry, Brittany Spears, Kelly Clarkson and Ariana Grande, collaborates on the music with fellow hitmakers tweaking the tunes to fit the plot. Speaking of the plot, sweet Juliet along with her kickass besties, Anne Hathaway as April and identity-confused May, “I’m Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman”, get to flip the script on our pal Romeo, here self-portrayed as an insecure dolt who’s still madly in love with Juliet. Yes! He comes back to life too.

Corey Mach and Teal Wicks (Photo/Matthew Murphy)

You’ll need to suspend all notions of ye olde Shakespearean plots and dialogue because this iteration is a rock concert on steroids. To picture how it’s presented, imagine your English Renaissance characters sporting Jacobean hip-hop gear while breakdancing and pop-locking, krumping and kicking to a ferociously fierce beat provided by the Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra who collaborate with the production’s own musicians.

While feisty Anne and Will trade barbs and witty quips – the adorable Will occasionally stealing back the plot from her – romance abounds. It’s a modern-day rom-com cum musical with the known-world characters finally having their say. Nurse, Angelique, is no shrinking violet either. In fact, she has her share of some of the snarkiest lines. It’s a huge, multi-diverse cast with killer voices, belting out 29 mega hits that keep the audience dancing in their seats. Because who can sit still for deliciously hot chart-toppers like “Oops, I Did It Again”, “Teenage Dream/Break Free”, “Roar”, “I Kissed a Girl”, “Baby One More Time” and “Whataya Want From Me” that François duets in a word-duel with May.

This multi-award-winning show is big fun! Catch it while you can!

Kathryn Allison (Photo/Matthew Murphy)

Directed by Luke Sheppard with Rachel Simone Webb as Juliet; Teal Wicks as Anne; Corey Mach as Shakespeare; Nick Drake as May; Kathryn Allison as Angélique; Michael Canu as Romeo; Paul-Jordan Jansen as Romeo; Mateus Leite Cardoso as François; Naima Alakham as Lady Capulet/Nell; Nella Cole as Eleanor/Benvolio; Camille Brooks as Judith; Lois Ellise as Susanna; Ishmael Gonzalez as Gregory; Kenneth Onesimus Goubran as Augustine; Shelby Griswold as Lucy; Christopher Robert Hanford as Henry; Jourdan Ibe as Lennox; Josh Jordan as Richard; Nichole Lamb as Margaret; Yoshi Maysonet as Dion; Usman Ali Mughal as Lord Capulet/Sly; Jaydon Nget as Kempe; Kyra Smith as Titania; and Francisco Thurston as Cuthbert.

Music and Lyrics by Max Martin and Friends; Book by David West Read; Music Supervisor, Orchestrations and Arrangements by Bill Sherman; Choreographed by Jennifer Weber; Scenic Design by Soutra Gilmore; Costume Design by Paloma Young; Lighting Design by Howard Hudson; Sound Design by Gareth Owen; Video & Projection Design by Andrzej Goulding; Hair/Wig & Makeup Design by J. Jared Janas; Dance Captain, Francisco Thurston.

Through January 5th in the Opera House at the Kennedy Center, 2700 F Street, NW, Washington, DC 20566. For tickets and information call the box office at 202.467.4600 or visit the website at www.Kennedy-Center.org

From Yann Martell’s Extraordinary Novel “Life of Pi” Comes a Captivating and Visionary Five Star Fantasy at the Kennedy Center

From Yann Martell’s Extraordinary Novel “Life of Pi” Comes a Captivating and Visionary Five Star Fantasy at the Kennedy Center

Life of Pi
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Jordan Wright
December 21, 2024

Taha Mandviwala as Pi, and Richard Parker (Toussaint Jeanlouis, Shiloh Goodin, Anna Leigh Gortner) (Photo/Evan Zimmerman)

This extraordinary production follows Yann Martell’s novel as closely as I can recall. Having read the philosophical novel in 2001 when it earned the worldwide attention of book critics, later garnering the Man Booker Prize, I recalled a most unusual story. It tells of Pi (Taha Mandviwala and on the night I saw it was performed admirably by his understudy Savidu Geevaratne), a teenager growing up in Pondicherry, India surrounded by his family and the wild animals at his father’s botanical zoo. He’s a playful boy full of questions about God. Each week he attends a mosque, a church and a temple searching for answers. His sister, Rani, keeps an eye on him. “I just want to love God,” he reveals, as the holy men offer up the virtues of their different religions.

Butterflies, neon-colored fish, an orangutan, a dog, a sea turtle, hyenas and a giraffe are among the myriads of creatures you will see during Pi’s adventures, with each one representing certain challenges to a boy faced with the unthinkable. “My story will make you believe in God,” he tells the audience.

The country is in turmoil when his father announces they are going to relocate to Canada by ship taking the animals with them to start a new life. Before leaving his father takes in a Bengal tiger with the odd name of Richard Parker. Pi foolishly sneaks into his cage and is caught by his father who wants to teach his son a lesson by tossing in a beloved goat which Richard Parker promptly devours. “This world is dangerous,” his father warns his son.

Taha Mandviwala as Pi, and Richard Parker (Toussaint Jeanlouis, Shiloh Goodin, Anna Leigh Gortner) (Photo/Evan Zimmerman)

When the ship sinks in a dangerous storm and everyone is lost at sea, Pi must fend for himself on a small lifeboat. Soon a zebra named Black & White as well as the menacing Richard Parker climb aboard the small boat and Pi must face the dangers that lie ahead. Months at sea with a small cache of food and water from a discovered survival kit force Pi to reckon with his dire situation when he is joined by an equally desperate hyena who climbs into the boat and makes a meal of the zebra eyeing Pi as his next victim. Pi, raised in a Muslim household, shuns meat, compounding his survival even more.

In his delirium and as conditions become more dire with the passing months, members of his long-lost family appear to him with advice on how to survive. Admiral Jackson who wrote the survival book Pi finds in his ration box, tells him, “Kill or be killed.” When Pi’s father appears in another dream, he advises Pi to dominate the big cat, and with a small whistle and a large oar, Pi bravely cows the beast.

The story incorporates his family life at the zoo and his colorful village to his confinement on the boat and later a raft tied to the boat to distance himself from the tiger, to Pi’s rescue from the middle of the Pacific Ocean to an infirmary in Tomatlán, Mexico where he is interviewed by Mr. Okamoto from the Department of Transportation and Lulu Chen from the Canadian Embassy – both determined to extract Pi’s story of the shipwreck and how he survived. Neither believe his report. “We want a different story,” they insist.

Taha Mandviwala as Pi and Richard Parker (Toussaint Jeanlouis, Shiloh Goodin, Anna Leigh Gortner), Back-Sinclair Mitchell, Rishi Jaiswal, Betsy Rosen (Photo/Evan Zimmerman)

I thought of the psychologist Carl Jung’s book, “Man and His Symbols” and Joseph Campbell’s work on mythologies to parallel Pi’s search for the answers to life’s greatest questions through dreams and imagination. Life of Pi is both an extraordinary fable and a brilliant production incorporating fantastical puppetry, which, if you are familiar with Julie Taymor’s puppetry in the musical The Lion King, will help you to understand how this highly inventive story is told with the most imaginative stagecraft. It’s true that the theme is complex, like life, yet the story is universal and told in a poetical manner with humor, grace and beauty.

Highly recommended!!! This is one of the most moving, intellectually stimulating and visionary productions. The cast is marvelous and the puppetry captivating and irresistibly clever.

LIFE_OF_PI_NATIONAL TOUR_Taha Mandviwala as Pi, and Richard Parker (Toussaint Jeanlouis, Shiloh Goodin, Anna Leigh Gortner)_Photo by EVAN_ZIMMERMAN (3)

With Ben Durocher and Emmanuel Elpenord as Cook/Voice of Richard Parker; Sorab Wadia as Father; Sinclair Mitchell as Admiral Jackson/Russian Sailor/Father Martin; Jessica Angleskhan as Amma/Nurse/Orange Juice; Mi Kang as Lulu Chen/Mrs. Biology Kumar/Zaida Khan; Rishi Jaiswal as Mamaji/Pandit-Ji; Alan Ariano as Mr. Okamoto/Captain/Jai; Sharayu Mahale as Rani; Ben Durocher,Emmanuel ElpenordShiloh GoodinAnna Leigh GortnerAustin Wong HarperToussaint JeanlouisIntae KimMaya RanguluBetsy Rosen and Anna Vomacka as Richard Parker/Puppeteer.

Novel adapted by Lolita Chakrabati; Directed by Max Webster; Scenic and Costume Design by Tim Hatley; Puppetry and Movement Director Finn Caldwell; Puppet Design by Nick Barnes & Finn Caldwell; Video & Animation Design by Andrzej Goulding; Lighting Design by Tim Lutkin & Tim Deiling; Sound Design by Carolyn Downing; Hair & Wig Design by David Brian Brown & Meg Murphy; Composer Andrew T. Mackay; Dramaturg Jack Bradley.

Through January 5th at the Kennedy Center, 2700 F Street, NW, Washington, DC 20566. For tickets and information call the box office at 202.467.4600 or visit the website at www.Kennedy-Center.org

Ken Ludwig’s Glamorous Stage Adaption of Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile Appeals to Murder Mystery Buffs

Ken Ludwig’s Glamorous Stage Adaption of Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile Appeals to Murder Mystery Buffs

Agatha Christie – Death on the Nile
Arena Stage
Jordan Wright
December 12, 2024

Eric Hissom (Septimus Troy), Nancy Robinette (Salomé Otterbourne), Sumié Yotsukura (Rosalie Otterbourne), Katie Kleiger (Jacqueline de Bellefort), Armando Durán (Hercule Poirot), Felicia Curry (Annabelle Pennington), and Jamil A.C. Mangan (Colonel Race) (Photo/Charles Erickson Photography)

Two lovers, Jacqueline de Bellefort (Kate Kleiger) and Simon Doyle (Travis Van Winkle), ooze passion in the opening scene of Ken Ludwig’s stage adaption of Death on the Nile. They have just gotten engaged. Jacqueline is an old friend of femme fatale and museum benefactress, Linnet Ridgeway (Olivia Cygan), and she is eager to renew her friendship that evening at a gala reception in the Egyptian rooms at the British Museum where museum curator, Atticus Praed (Robert Stanton), will be revealing the sarcophagus of Amun-Ra to the assembled guests.

The glittering crowd includes Linnet Ridgeway; Salomé Otterbourne (Nancy Robinette), an erstwhile author and aspiring actress and her beautiful daughter, Rosalie (Sumié Yotsukura). Salomé meets Septimus Troy, (Eric Hissom) a debonair gentleman whose former Shakespearean acting career has been reduced to playing American cowboys and somehow the two hit it off.

Armando Durán (Hercule Poirot) (Photo/Charles Erickson Photography)

Also in attendance is Hercule Poirot (Armando Durán), Agatha Christie’s famous Belgian detective; Colonel Race (Jamil A. C. Mangan), Poirot’s dear friend and former collaborator; Ramses Praed (Ryan Michael Neely), Atticus’s son, a handsome, young doctor who begins a love affair with Rosalie Otterbourne. A late arrival is Linnet’s attorney, Annabelle Pennington (Felicia Curry) who urges Linnet to sign a sheaf of contracts relating to her estate.

A voyage along the Nile to Karnak to return the sarcophagus to Egypt is planned for the guests and all gather on the ship. At this point you’ll need to brush up on your sleuthing powers, because this is a whodunnit with plenty of motives for murder, clues that lead nowhere, red herrings and leads that fall flat. “Wherever you go, a dead body shows up,” Colonel Race quips presciently to Poirot. And as the ship leaves the port, the plot thickens.

Travis Van Winkle (Simon Doyle) and Olivia Cygan (Linnet Ridgeway) (Photo/Charles Erickson Photography)

It will soon be revealed that there are suspects and a slew of motives for murder when Linnet is murdered in her bed. Linnet, who has hired Simon at Jacqueline’s suggestion, has married Simon and Jacqueline’s jealousy and retribution at both Simon and Linnet knows no bounds. Could it be her? Or Atticus, who was left in a financial lurch when Linnet’s father pulled his major donation to the museum? Perhaps it’s Annabelle who continues to press Linnet to sign some dubious contracts or Septimus who has a beef with Linnet’s father who pulled his funding out of film he was to star in.

This mystery has all the drama of the sinking of the Titanic – the glitter, the glamour and the dénouement. Alexander Dodge’s breathtaking set design (the ship’s elegantly appointed lounge and the massive sarcophagus) combined with Brittany Bland’s evocative video projections of Egypt’s history and atmospheric images of the Nile, and Karen Perry’s fabulous costume designs (Linnet’s gowns are jaw-dropping!) serve to elevate the entire production in which you will note a cast that is clearly up to the task.

A triumph and challenge for mystery buffs everywhere.

Jamil A.C. Mangan (Colonel Race), Travis Van Winkle (Simon Doyle), and Olivia Cygan (Linnet Ridgeway) (Photo/Charles Erickson Photography)

Directed by Hana S. Sharif, Lighting Design by Kenneth Posner, Original Music and Sound Design by Charles Coes and Nathan A. Roberts, Hair and Wig Design by LaShawn Melton, Fight Director Sordelet Inc. – Rick Sordelet, Dramaturg Otis Ramsey-Zöe, Dialect and Vocal Coach Lisa Nathans.

Through December 29th at Arena Stage in the Kreeger Theater – 1101 Sixth Street, SW, Washington, DC 20024. For tickets and information contact the box office at 202.488.3300 or visit www.ArenaStage.org

Leopoldstadt is Compelling and Complicated with a Perfect Cast to Showcase Tom Stoppard’s Award-Winning Drama

Leopoldstadt is Compelling and Complicated with a Perfect Cast to Showcase Tom Stoppard’s Award-Winning Drama

Leopoldstadt
Shakespeare Theatre Company
Jordan Wright
December 8, 2024

Samuel Adams and Brenda Meaney in Leopoldstadt. (Photo/Teresa Castracane, courtesy of Shakespeare Theatre Company)

To know where playwright Tom Stoppard’s drama is going, you’ll need to start with the meaning of Leopoldstadt. It was a shtetl where Jews from all walks of life were forced to live – a walled off ghetto with no escape and a life of unimaginable deprivation.

Set in the European cultural center of Vienna in 1899 where Mahler, Freud, Wittgenstein and other great Jewish minds were highly revered, we are introduced to members of a large haute bourgeois Austrian family. They are cultured and fashionable leading a charmed life – highly educated, completely assimilated into the greater society of the Viennese, and intermarried within the Jewish and Christian religions. Not unusual at the time, these interfaith families enjoyed meaningful positions in high society and academia where they were esteemed for their scholarly contributions.

The cast of Leopoldstadt. (Photo/Teresa Castracane, courtesy of Shakespeare Theatre Company)

Their life appears to be a series of dinners and family rituals where they celebrate both Christmas and Hannukah and a hilarious scene that complicates decisions of an upcoming bris. It is a close-knit family filled with children, young singles and married couples where Grandma Emilia presides over these light-hearted gatherings. Ken MacDonald’s set design reflects the family’s well-established social achievements with a grand interior space reflective of the Art Nouveau period. The trouble comes, as expected, with the Nazis’ rise to power and, with that, any Jewish birth or Jewish marital connection, becomes a death sentence.

We follow this extended family’s hopes and dreams through three generations, touching on the carefree days of 1924 and later the family’s removal to the concentration camps before ending with pre-millennial Britain in the last act, only to witness how swiftly their life of culture and prosperity prove insupportable as power and privilege are ripped away and their inevitable removal to the death camps is a foregone conclusion.

(L to R) Mishka Yarovoy, Nael Nacer, and Brenda Meaney (Photo/Liza Voll, courtesy of The Huntington)

Providing all manner of twists and turns, Stoppard has designed a series of intricate interactions within these relationships – an affair, a proposed duel, a mathematical improbability and a surprise conclusion as one family member discovers he is actually fully Christian and must grapple with his past. To find out how that came to be, you’ll have to wait till the last act. Stoppard, whose successes with plays like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, Travesties and most especially Arcadia, which follows the same theme, wants us to see how quickly unbridled political power combined with a dangerous brew of prejudice, fear and religious frenzy can destroy entire societies. In Leopoldstadt we witness the astonishing pace with which these dramatic shifts in public opinion can occur and thrive.

An extraordinary and compelling exploration into one family (Twenty-one cast members play multiple roles!) who become victims in the massive dragnet of the Nazi regime and how swiftly that unthinkable evil can decimate tens of millions of lives.

A powerful and compelling drama infused with the added warmth and camaraderie of a fascinatingly complicated and deeply connected Jewish family. Highly recommended for a supremely perfect cast and Carey Perloff’s brilliant direction.

Phyllis Kay, Firdous Bamji, Teddy Schechter, and Joshua Chessin-Yudin (Photo/Teresa Castracane, courtesy of Shakespeare Theatre Company)

With Samuel Adams as Fritz, Percy; Firdous Bamji as Kurt, Ludwig; Joshua Chessin-Yudin as Zac, Nathan; Sarah Corey as Wilma; Anna Theoni DiGiovanni as Hanna, Hermione; Samuel Douglas as Otto, Civilian; Maboud Ebrahimzadeh as Ernst; Rachel Felstein as Eva, Nellie: Rebecca Gibel as Hilde, Rosa; Adrianne Krstansky as Poldi, Hanna; Brenda Meaney as Gretl; Harrison Morford as Young Jacob, Heini; William Morford as Pauli, Young Leo; Nael Nacer as Hermann; Teddy Schechter as Young Jacob, Heini/Pauli, Young Leo; Anna Slate as Jana, Sally; Adrianna Weir as Young Sally, Mimi/Young Rosa, Bella; Mila Weir as Young Sally, Mimi; Audrey Ella Wolff as Young Rosa, Bella; and Mishka Yarovoy as Jacob, Leo.

Beautiful period costumes designed by Alex Jaeger; Lighting Design by Robert Wierzel; Sound Design & Original Music by Jane Shaw; Projection Design by Yuki Izumihara; Wig & Makeup Design by Tom Watson; Associate Director Dori A. Robinson.

Through December 29th at Shakespeare Theatre Company at Harman Hall, 610 F Street, NW, Washington, DC 20004. For tickets and information call the box office at 202.547.1122 or visit www.ShakespeareTheatre.org

What’s Onstage in the DMV – December

What’s Onstage in the DMV

for December 2024
Jordan Wright
November 10, 2024
Special to The Zebra

A Christmas Carol at the Little Theatre of Alexandria

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
The Little Theatre of Alexandria
Dec 7th – Dec 21st
www.TheLittleTheatre.com

A Magical Cirque Christmas
Broadway at the National
Dec 12th – Dec 15th
www.TicketMaster.com  

All the Devils Are Here: How Shakespeare Invented the Villain
Shakespeare Theatre Company
Dec 6th – Dec 29th
www.ShakespeareTheatre.org

Leopoldstadt
Shakespeare Theatre Company
through Dec 29th
www.ShakespeareTheatre.org

Frozen (image Via Olney Theatre)

Frozen
Olney Theatre
Through January 5th
www.OlneyTheatre.org

Finn – A New Musical
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
through Dec 22nd
www.Kennnedy-Center.org

Shear Madness
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
through 2025
www.Kennnedy-Center.org

Memories of a Child’s Christmas in Wales
MetroStage at The Lyceum
Dec 16th and Dec 17th
www.metrostage.org 

BalletX
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Dec 4th – Dec 7th 
www.Kennnedy-Center.org

The Improvised Shakespeare Company
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
through Dec 23rd
www.Kennnedy-Center.org

Jungle Book
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Dec 13th – Dec 15th
www.Kennnedy-Center.org

& Juliet at The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Image via Kennedy-Center.org.

& Juliet
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Dec 17th – Jan 5th
www.Kennnedy-Center.org

Life of Pi
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Dec 17th – Jan 5th  
www.Kennnedy-Center.org

An Irish Carol
Keegan Theatre
Dec 4th – Dec 31st
www.KeeganTheatre.com

Laughs in Spanish
1st Stage
Dec 12th – Dec 29th
www.1stStage.org

A Christmas Carol: A Ghost Story Christmas at Olney Theatre. Image via Olney Theatre.

A Christmas Carol: A Ghost Story of Christmas
Olney Theatre Center
through Dec 29th
www.OlneyTheatre.org

Data
Arena Stage
through Dec 19
www.ArenaStage.org

Agatha Christie Death on the Nile
Arena Stage
through Dec 19th
www.ArenaStage.org

A Hanukkah Carol, or Gelt Trip! The Musical
Round House Theater – through Dec 22nd
www.RoundHouseTheatre.org

‘Twas the Night Before Christmas
Adventure Theatre
Dec 6th – Jan 5th
www.AdventureTheatre-MTC.org

Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Workhouse Arts Center
Dec 7th – Jan 12th
www.WorkhouseArts.org

The Sound of Music at Toby’s Dinner Theatre. (Image via www.tobysdinnertheatre.com)


The Sound of Music

Toby’s Dinner Theatre
through Jan 12th
www.TobysDinnerTheatre.com

The Trial of Ebenezer Scrooge
Port Tobacco Players
through Dec 15th
www.PTPlayers.com

The Life of Pi
 Hippodrome Theatre
Dec 7th – Dec 14th
www.TicketMaster.com

A Beautiful Noise: The Neil Diamond Musical
Broadway at the National
Dec 3rd – Dec – 8th
www.TicketMaster.com

The Hip Hop Nutcracker
Broadway at the National
Dec 20th – Dec 22nd
www.TicketMaster.com

The cast of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum at Signature Theatre. Photo by Christopher Mueller

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
Signature Theatre
through Jan 12th
 www.SigTheatre.org

Rigoletto (a circus version)
Dec 7th, 8th, 14th & 15th
The Goldman Theater DCJCC
www.InSeries.org

Dot
Silver Spring Stage
Dec 6th – Dec 15th
www.SSStage.org

A Christmas Carol
Ford’s Theatre
through Dec 31st
www.My.Fords.org/overview/11078

El Canuto Del Rock 
GALA Hispanic Theatre
Dec 13th – Dec 15th
www.GALATheatre.org