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Signature Theatre’s Pippin Brings Medieval Swagger with Sassy Steampunk, Magical Illusions and Steamy Burlesque

Signature Theatre’s Pippin Brings Medieval Swagger with Sassy Steampunk, Magical Illusions and Steamy Burlesque

Pippin

Signature Theatre

Jordan Wright

June 22, 2026

Cedric Neal (Leading Player) and the cast of Pippin at Signature Theatre (Photo/Daniel Rader).

 

Oh, Pippin, you adorable, self-entitled, properly Paduan University-educated idealist! What a wild, oft catastrophic, medieval adventure you take us on!

 

Prince Pippin has friends, but mostly he takes his cues from “Leading Player”, a character so entirely magical, and yet insistently believable, in a most demanding way. Where the odd couple goes, we go, in company with a fantastical and hyper-sexual coterie of “Players”, as they’re referred to in the cast list. The Players will steal your heart, but they are not to be trusted. They are unpredictable spirits, though they ultimately kowtow to Leading Player and will trot off with their tails between their legs when chastised.

 

Pippin has arrived home after his studies to greet his father, the autocratic King Charlemagne aka Charles, his voluptuous mother Queen Fastrada, and his super macho, entirely witless half-brother Lewis who prefers to slay the Visigoths with the encouragement of his beloved mother.

 

Brayden Bambino (Pippin), Hank von Kolnitz (Player), Calvin L’mont Cooper (Player), and Ben Bogen (Player) (Photo/Daniel Rader).

 

“I’m going to live a life that’s extraordinary… and completely fulfilling,” Pippin announces ingenuously with the song, “Corner of the Sky”, one of composer and lyricist Stephen Schwartz’s most memorable and frequently covered songs. Determined to find his niche without his overbearing father, he murders him, (which thankfully for the character and the audience is only temporary as the king is later resurrected) and takes over the country, vowing to end all wars, tax the rich and gift land to the serfs. Very noble, you’d say. But the aristocracy revolts, countries invade, sack and pillage and our sweet, disillusioned Pippin realizes he’s not cut out for such things as ruling the country. And after a brief stint as a soldier, involving slaughter and mayhem and a disembodied talking head, off he scurries off to the countryside where amid pastoral joys he meets a fair maiden, Catherine, her little boy, Theo, and finds his free-wheeling grandmother, Berthe, whose sage advice comes via the song “No Time At All”.

 

There Pippin is introduced to an orgiastic lifestyle by Berthe and the Players. The musical Hair popped into my head, though that was far tamer than this hyper-erotic approach to free love as portrayed by the Players cavorting in every imaginable coupling. Pippin, ever the seeker, tries all the combinations and is left bereft. “It wasn’t fulfilling,” he declares.

 

I have to say, in the end, I was left disappointed by Pippin in his campaign to find himself. He caved far too quickly when he was king, conceded too readily to his scheming mother and took the easy way out by killing off his challengers.

 

Naomi Jacobson (Berthe) and Brayden Bambino (Pippin) with the cast of Pippin (Daniel Rader).

 

What you will take away is a razzle-dazzle, helluva show with 14 wonderful musical numbers, terrific performances by all, powerhouse voices backed by a 12-piece orchestra, stage magic, comic highs, burlesque, and quirky characters who absolutely slay costumed in Victorian Steampunk lace and leather living la vida loca and dancing their tailfeathers off on a glassy circular stage… in France! Did I mention the duck? Holy wow!!!

 

Go! Have fun!!!

 

With Cedric Neal as Leading Player; Brayden Bambino as Pippin, Eric Hissom as Charles (King Charlemagne); Maria Rizzo as Fastrada; Ryan Sellers as Lewis; Naomi Jacobson as Berthe; Awa Sal Secka as Catherine; and Ellison Bihm as Theo.

 

The Players: Ben BogenCalvin L’mont CooperCandice HatakeyamaGeorgia Monroe (Dance Captain), Alanna SibriánJacob Taylor StarksEmily Steinhardt and Hank von Kulnitz.

 

Book by Roger O. Hirson; Music and Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz; Originally Directed and Choreographed on Broadway by Bob Fosse; Directed by Matthew Gardiner; Choreographed by Rachel Leigh Dolan; Music Direction by Jon Kalbfleisch; Scenic Design by Christopher & Justin Swader; Costume Design by Eric Teague; Lighting Design by Adam Honoré; Wig Design by Anne Nesmith; Sound Design by Eric Norris; Fight Choreography by Casey Kaleba; Intimacy Choreography by Chelsea Pace; Illusions Consultant and Fight Captain Ryan Sellers.

 

Through July 26th at Signature Theatre, Shirlington Village, 4200 Campbell Avenue, Arlington, VA. For tickets and information call the box office at 703.820.9771 or visit www.SigTheatre.org.

Suffs Brings the Must-See Story of the Suffragists Struggles to Get the Vote for Women to The National Theatre with a Tony Award-Winning Score and a Brilliant Cast

Suffs Brings the Must-See Story of the Suffragists Struggles to Get the Vote for Women to The National Theatre with a Tony Award-Winning Score and a Brilliant Cast

Suffs

Broadway at The National

Jordan Wright

June 20, 2026

Monica Tulia Ramirez (Inez Milholland) and company in the First National Touring Company of SUFFS (Photo/Joan Marcus).

 

Some women of today do not know the struggles our grandmothers and great-grandmothers went through to get the right to vote. Suffs is a captivating musical that tells the story of the selfless women who pleaded, protested, marched, starved, and literally put their lives on the line to achieve parity in the American voting booth. And it’s all set in Washington, DC.

 

The story seems drawn from a galaxy far, far away – but it isn’t. Suffs opens in 1913 with a group of suffragists headed by the formidable Carrie Chapman Catt, who led a movement of well-coiffed and genteel ladies who spent years seeking a meeting with President Woodrow Wilson and decades trying politely to present their case. Despite his refusal to meet, the ladies continue in their quest by selling doughnuts and holding ladylike tea parties in fancy dresses. They’ve been trying to get the vote for 60 years – yes, you read that right – with zero success, when along comes young Swarthmore graduate Alice Paul, an inspired, take-no-prisoners, all-or-nothing activist to shake things up. (And please, the correct terminology is suffragists, not suffragettes. They deplore the cutesy -ette ending.)

 

Alice soon breaks ranks with Carrie and forms her own organization bringing in a deeply committed and radical group of women activists – women unafraid to make personal sacrifices to the cause. Alice conceives of a massive women’s march on Washington to include Ida B. Wells, a co-founder of the NAACP and advocate for African American women, and Mary Church Terrell, Well’s cohort, two formidable African American women who had been sidelined by Carrie Catt. The historic march of 200,000 women from around the United States is led by a shield-carrying, helmet-wearing Inez Milholland, a labor lawyer and socialite, riding atop a magnificent white steed.

 

Joyce Meimei Zheng (Ruza Wenclawska) and the the First National Touring Company of SUFFS (Photo/Joan Marcus).

 

The musical stars an impressive cast of actors portraying the most influential women activists of the century and gifts us with 33 powerhouse numbers – some stirring, others with a comical touch, especially in the sweet number with Doris Stevens, the organization’s young secretary and Dudley Malone, Wilson’s administrative aide who becomes her ally. The two fall in love despite their differences sealing their commitment with the tune. “If We Were Married”.

 

Women eventually got the right to vote in 1920, but you may not know about the ongoing struggles to achieve parity for women in all aspects of American life. Women are still waiting for the Equal Rights Amendment to be ratified! These early fights are truly an eye-opener delivered with both brio and aplomb by the show’s brilliant creatives and this tremendous cast.

 

If you have ever had to fight for your rights, marched to be heard, been sidelined as a woman, or want to teach your children and grandchildren what women went through to achieve the vote, this show is a must see. I can report that the audience of young, old, women, children, and men too, went wild with every song and every joke. This 2024 Tony Award-winning “Best Book of a Musical” and “Best Original Score”, both won by Shaina Taub, offers a history lesson cleverly presented with humor, pathos, vigor and a Broadway-worthy cast.

 

Marya Grandy (Carrie Chapman Catt) and the First National Touring Company of SUFFS (Photo/Joan Marcus).

 

The all-female cast features Marya Grandy as Carrie Chapman Catt; Maya Keleher as Alice Paul; Livvy Marcus as Doris Stevens; Brandi Porter as Dudley Malone; Monica Tulia Ramirez as Inez Milholland; Danyel Fulton as Ida B. Wells; Gwynne Wood as Lucy Burns; Joyce Meimei Zheng as Ruza Wenclawska; Victoria Pekel as Phyllis Terrell/Robin; Trisha Jeffrey as Mary Church Terrell; Laura Stracko as Alva Belmont/Phoebe Burn; Tami Dahbura as Mollie Hay; Jenny Ashman as President Woodrow Wilson; Anna Bakun as Speaker of the House; Jenna Lea Rosen, Ensemble/Major Sylvester/Senator Burn; and Gretchen Shope, Ensemble/Mrs. Herndon.

 

Directed by Leigh Silverman; Book, Music & Lyrics by Shaina Taub; Choreography by Mayte Natalio; Music Supervisor, Andrea Grody; Original Broadway Scenic Design by Ricardo Hernandez; Tour Scenic Design by Christine Peters; Music Director Dani Lee Hutch; Costume Design by Paul Tazewell; Lighting Design by Lap Chi Chu; Makeup Design by Joe Dulude II; Sound Design by Jason Crystal; Hair & Wig Design by Charles G. LaPointe; Orchestrations by Michael Starobin; Vocal Arrangements by Shaina Taub & Andrea Grody.

 

Through June 28th at The National Theatre DC, 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20004. For tickets and information call the box office at 202.628.6161 or visit www.BroadwayatTheNational.com

A Riveting and Relevant Reimagining of Othello Starring Wendell Pierce and Directed by Simon Godwin at STC’s Harman Hall

A Riveting and Relevant Reimagining of Othello Starring Wendell Pierce and Directed by Simon Godwin at STC’s Harman Hall

Othello

Shakespeare Theatre Company

Jordan Wright

June 16, 2026

Ben Turner (Iago) and Wendell Pierce (Othello) in Othello at Shakespeare Theatre Company (Photo/Teresa Castracane).

 

Iago to Othello, “O, beware, my lord, of jealousy; It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock the meat it feeds on.”

 

A modern reimagining of Shakespeare’s Othello by Director Simon Godwin puts us smack dab in contemporary bro culture with camo-clad soldiers hell bent on waging war and throwing shade on women. We watch helpless as Iago, the duplicitous deceiver and his bosom buddy Rodrigo, cook up an intricate plot to bring down their general Othello, the Moor and former slave. Unbeknownst to the hapless Rodrigo, the lieutenant Cassio and his paramour Bianca, they are all being set up by Iago. In fact, no one is spared in Iago’s quest to discredit Othello as he uses both the women and the men in his murderous quest.

 

Leaning into today’s incel zeitgeist, Iago conscripts these chest-thumping cluster of jarheads to do his bidding as he manipulates Othello with outright lies and flattery convincing the general that his beloved wife Desdemona is cheating on him. A purloined ladies’ handkerchief is all it takes to consummate Iago’s power grab – setting up Othello’s jealous rage and murder of his beloved, and truly chaste bride.

 

The length and breadth of who, what and how Iago subverts to undermine his superior is incontestably Machiavellian. Plots and subplots undermine friendships and question marital devotion until we are left to wonder why the hell Iago’s wife Emilia won’t spill the beans about her husband Iago’s nefarious plot and tell Desdemona the truth before the horrific slaughter of the two women.

 

The cast of Othello (Photo/Teresa Castracane).

 

Wendell Pierce was made to play this role. His character portrayals in edgy dramas have proven undeniably riveting – Death of a Salesman, Treme, The Wire, Clybourne Park and so many more power roles in film, TV and onstageHis performance here is the glue that cements the entire cast.

 

Heavy metal music ushers in many of the scenes and the soundscape of armies at war creates the modern military ethos. Paired with Godwin’s crisp staging, it contributes to the overall effect, and I couldn’t help but reflect on aspects of our current state of political drama – its subterfuge, hegemony and flouting of established law to achieve power and control. Oh, Iago, how clearly we see you and your victims in our daily news feed.

 

Godwin loves to paint scenes with ghastly amounts of gore and, if you’re a fan of crime drama whose fascination by the American public is just as popular today as it was to the audiences of classic playwrights, you won’t want to miss a beat in this reimagining of the classic tale.

 

Relevant and riveting.

 

Olivia Cygan (Desdemona) and Wendell Pierce (Othello) (Photo/Teresa Castracane).

 

Starring Wendell Pierce as Othello with Ben Turner as Iago; Olivia Cygan as Desdemona; Lucas Iverson as,  Cassio; Daniel Velez as Roderigo; Giovanna Drummond as Bianca; Melanie Field as Emilia; Todd Scofield as Duke of Venice; Derek Garza as Montano/Senator Romano; Joey Collins as Brabantio/Salarino.

 

Ensemble: Jon BealC. J. CraigSofia Hernandez MoralesClaire HiltonAnna MarzulloVish ShuklaCole SitilidesJames Whelan and Em Whitworth.

 

Scenic & Co-Costume Design by Susan Hilferty with Co-Costume Designer Sarita P. Fellows; Lighting Design by Amith A. Chandrashaker; Sound Design by Christopher Shutt; Composer Shiloh Coke; Fight Choreographer Robb Hunter; Fight Captain Jon Beal; and Dramaturg Drew Lichtenberg.

 

Through June 28th 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 for July and Early August 2026

What’s Onstage in the DMV for July and Early August 2026

Jordan Wright

June 16, 2026

Cedric Neal (Leading Player) and the cast of Pippin at Signature Theatre (Photo/Daniel Rader)

 

Signature Theatre  www.SigTheatre.org

Pippin through Jul 26

What Became of Us  through Jul 26

Play On  Aug 12 – Oct 5

 

Contemporary American Theatre Festival 2026 Season  Shepherdstown, WVA  Jul 10 – Aug 2  www.CATF.org

 

Shakespeare Theatre Company  www.ShakespeareTheatre.org

Twelfth Night (in repertory)  Jul 15 – Jul 25

Macbeth (in repertory)  Jul 16 – Jul 25

 

The Little Theatre of Alexandria www.TheLittleTheatre.com

Catch Me If You Can  Jul 17 – Aug 8

 

Adventure Theatre MTC  www.My.AdventureTheatre-MTC.org

Sleeping Beauty: The Time Traveler  through Aug 23

 

Beetlejuice via Broadway at the National (Photo/Michelle Grace Hunder)

 

Broadway at the National  www.BoxOfficeTicketSales.com

Beetlejuice  Jul 7 – Jul 19

The Notebook: The Musical  (DC premiere) Aug 8 – Aug 30

 

Woolly Mammoth  www.WoollyMammoth.net

We The Woolly: Remixing 25  Jul 1 – 31

Dead Inside  Jul 9 – Aug 3

 

Arena Stage  www.ArenaStage.org

CrazySexyCool – The TLC Musical  through Aug 9

 

Dominion Stage  www.DominionStage.org

First Date – The Musical  Jul 17 – Jul 25

 

MetroStage  www.MetroStage.org

Celebrating America’s 250th in Song  one night only July 27

 

Legally Blonde: The Musical via Port Tobacco Players

 

Port Tobacco Players  www.PTPlayers.com

Legally Blonde: The Musical  Jul 10 – Aug 2

 

Faction of Fools  www.FactionofFools.org

Leftover Lazzi: A Commedia Cabaret  Jul 23 – Aug 3

 

Actors Theatre at the ARTfactory  www.VirginiaArtFactory

Beyond Therapy  Jul 24 – Aug 2

 

Keegan Theatre  www.KeeganTheatre.com

The Play That Goes Wrong  through Jul 12

 

The Puppet Company  www.ThePuppetCompany.org

The Three Billy Goats Gruff  Jul 11 – Aug 10

 

Mean Girls via Toby’s Dinner Theatre

 

Toby’s Dinner Theatre  www.TobysDinnerTheatre.com

Mean Girls  through Aug 23

 

Olney Theater Center  www.OlneyTheatre.org

A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder  Jul 2 – Aug 23

Carla Hall in Please Underestimate Me  through Jul 12

 

Imagination Stage  www.ImaginationStage.org

Pete the Cat  through Jul 26

 

McLean Community Players  www.McLeanPlayers.org

1776  Jul 17 – Aug 2

 

1stStage Theatre  www.IstStage.org

Logan Festival of Solo Performance  Aug 20 – 30

 

The Immigrant via Synetic Theater

 

Synetic Theater  www.SyneticTheatre.org

The Immigrant  Jul 31 – Aug 2

 

Round House Theatre  www.RoundHouseTheatre.org

Adrift – A Medieval Wayward Folly  Jul 16 – Aug 2

 

Creative Cauldron  www.CreativeCauldron.org

Passport Music Festival – through Sept 13

 

Scena Theatre  www.AtlasArts.my.salesforce-sites.com

No Exit by Jean-Paul Sartre  through July 19

 

Maryland Ensemble Theater  www.MarylandEnsemble.org

How to Train Your Dragon the Musical, Jr.  Jul 30 – Aug 2

 

The Colored Museum via Silver Spring Stage

 

Silver Spring Stage  www.SSStage.org

The Colored Museum  through Jul 19

 

Rorschach Theatre  www.RorschachTheatre.thundertix.com/events

American Apparitions – A Psychogeographies Project  through Sept 19

 

Compass Rose Theater  www.CompassRoseTheater.org

A Midsummer Night’s Dream  Jul 31 – Aug 8

 

Nu Sass Productions  www.Nusass.com

Brönte Sister House Party  Aug 14 – Sept 12

 

The Colonial Players  www.TheColonialPlayers.org

10 Minute Play Festival  Jul 17 – Jul 26

 

Laurel Mill Playhouse  www.LaurelMillPlayhouse.org

Four Old Broads on the High Seas  July 10 – Jul 19

The Great Gatsby Brings a Dazzling Musical Extravaganza Full of Glamour and Pizazz to the National Theatre

 The Great Gatsby Brings a Dazzling Musical Extravaganza Full of Glamour and Pizazz to the National Theatre

The Great Gatsby – A New Musical

Broadway at the National DC

Jordan Wright

May 13, 2026

Special to The Zebra

Cast of the First National Touring Company of The Great Gatsby. (Photo/Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade)

 

The Broadway hit musical The Great Gatsby is a razzamatazz retro showcase for the glitz and glamour of the Jazz Age. Set in the Roaring Twenties when flappers wore short skirts and thumbed their noses at the proprieties of the Victorian Era, danced the Shimmy and the Charleston too. All when Prohibition meant having a secret password to enter a speakeasy, where mobsters and rum-runners hobnobbed with robber barons and East Coast aristocracy. Opening with the allure of a green light from a lighthouse on the shoreline of the Long Island Sound where the bay separated the swells from the elite, this lavish production draws from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel of the same name.

 

Those with a proper pedigree lived in posh East Egg, a reference to the landed gentry of East Hampton, while the nouveau riche and their shady neighbors lived in West Egg, where the residents were new money. Knowing Fitzgerald’s life and works can deepen your connection to this story as it parallels his life in New York City and his passionate romance with the Southern belle and darling debutante, Zelda, his muse, whom he would later wed. Here is where I urge you to read the book and everything this iconic American author ever wrote. It will deepen your understanding of the period and Fitzgerald’s genius for capturing the gilded life.

 

Brought to the big stage after four movie versions (hello, Robert Redford and Leonardo DiCaprio who each played Jay Gatsby), the show manages to pack in 22 numbers, a 26-person cast, crime drama, emotional breakups, a murder, a mansion, slinky flappers and a massive chorus line backed by a terrific orchestra. In other words, it’s an extravaganza.

 

Jake David Smith (Jay Gatsby). (Photo/Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade)

 

Directed by Marc Bruni; with book by Kait Kerrigan, music by two Broadway veterans, composer Jason Howland and lyricist Nathan Tysen, this show is a paean to the big productions from that era from Florenz Ziegfeld to George White to Earl Carroll with all the elements of sass and pizazz from the Great White Way in its heyday.

 

Gorgeous Art Deco-influenced sets by the marvelous Paul Tate dePoo III, who earned a well-deserved Outer Critic’s Circle award for “Outstanding Scenic Design”, are stunning, and I’m tossing bouquets to costume designer Linda Cho, who won for “Outstanding Costume Design” for her designs of lavish silks, satins, feathers, hats and mountains of crystals and sequins to the switched up gangster dancers in black trench coats. And an armful of red roses to choreographer Dominique Kelly, who turned the dancers inside out with flips and throws, a knockout tap competition between two male dancers that lit up the theater, and a host of chorines’ legs kicked high into the stratosphere. Another wowza moment reveals a royal blue 1920’s convertible driven on stage and later a jaw-dropping yellow Rolls Royce.

 

All you need to do is sit back and watch the romances and marriages self-destruct while the fast set is feasting on lobster and champagne and burning up the stage like firecrackers. Ain’t it grand?

 

Flashy and splashy with buckets of pizazz!

 

Cast of the First National Touring Company of The Great Gatsby. (Photo/Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade)

 

Starring Jake David Smith as Jay Gatsby; Senzel Ahmady as Daisy Buchanan; Joshua Grosso as Nick Caraway; Leanne Robinson as Jordan Baker; Lila Coogan as Myrtle Wilson; Will Branner as Tom Buchanan; Tally Sessions as George Wilson; Edward Staudenmayer as Meyer Wolfsheim; Joann Gilliam as Catherine and Gilda Gray; Alli Sutton as Mrs. McKee; D’Marreon Alexander as Mr. McKee and Bystander #1; Anna GassettJosiah HicksTyler Johnson-Campion, and Macy McKown as The Sugars; Shai Yammanee as Cop; Valeria Ceballos as Bystander #1; plus Joi D. McCoyMaya PetropolisTim QuartierRyan Vogt in the ensemble. Partygoers include Kyle CaressRosie GranitoKurt Kempner and Charlotte McKinley.

 

Lighting Design by Cory Pattak; Hair Design by Charles G. LaPointe and Rachel Geier; Orchestrations by Jason Howland and Kim Scharnberg.

 

Through May 24th at The National Theatre, 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, DC 20004. For tickets and information call the box office at 202.628.6161 or visit www.BroadwayatTheNational.com   

What’s Onstage in the DMV For June and July 2026

What’s Onstage in the DMV For June and July 2026

Jordan Wright

May 13, 2026

Special to The Zebra

Suffs via Broadway at the National (Photo/Joan Marcus)

 

Broadway at The National  www.TicketMaster.com

Suffs  Jun 16 – 28

Beetlejuice  Jul 7 – 19

 

Shakespeare Theatre Company  www.ShakespeareTheatre.org

Othello  through Jun 28

 

Woolly Mammoth  www.WoollyMammoth.net

A Fine Madness  through Jun 28

 

1st Stage  www.1stStage.org

 Indecent Jun 4 – 21

 

Dominion Stage  www.DominionStage.org

Dead Air through Jun 13

 

The Play That Goes Wrong via Keegan Theatre (Photo/Cameron Whitman)

 

Keegan Theatre  www.KeeganTheatre.com

The Play That Goes Wrong  Jun 6 – Jul 12

 

Workhouse Arts Center www.WorkhouseArts.org

 The Sponge Bob Musical  through June 14

 

Mosaic Theater  www.MosaicTheater.org

Bad Kreyòl  through Jun 13

Precarious  Jun 4 – 28

 

Folger Theatre www.Folger.edu

How Shakespeare Saved My Life  Jun 9 – Jul 12

 

IN Series  www.INSeries.org

The Song of Sakuntala  Jun 6 – 14

 

Nick Fradiani as Neil – Then and The Noise in A Beautiful Noise: The Neil Diamond Musical (Photo/Jeremy Daniel)

 

Hippodrome Baltimore  www.Baltimore.Broadway.com

A Beautiful Noise: The Neil Diamond Musical  Jun 23 – 28

 

Signature Theatre   www.SigTheatre.org

Pippin  through Jul 26

What Became of Us  Jun 16 – Jul 26

Broadway in the Park at Wolf Trap  Jun 20

 

Arena Stage  www.ArenaStage.org

The Motion  through Jun 14

CrazySexyCool The TLC Musical  Jun 12 – Aug 9

 

The Puppet Company  www.ThePuppetCompany.org

The Little Prince  Jun 5 – Jul 6

 

Imagination Stage  www.ImaginationStage.org

Pete the Cat  Jun 17 – Jul 26

 

(pray) via Baltimore Center Stage

 

Baltimore Center Stage  www.CenterStage.org

(pray)  Jun 12 – Jul 5

 

Toby’s Dinner Theatre  www.TobysDinnerTheatre.com

Mean Girls – The Musical  Jun 12 – Aug 23

 

Olney Theater Center  www.OlneyTheatre.org

Carla Hall in Please Underestimate Me  Jun 3 – Jul 12

A Gentlemen’s Guide to Love and Murder  Jul 2 – Aug 23

 

Providence Players of Fairfax  www.ProvidencePlayers.org

I Love You Because  Jun 12 – 27

 

Round House Theatre  www.RoundHouseTheatre.org

Sally and Tom  through Jun 28

 

Feeling Afraid As If Something Terrible Is Going to Happen via Studio Theatre

 

Studio Theatre   www.StudioTheatre.org

Feeling Afraid As If Something Terrible Is Going To Happen

Jun 4 – July 12

Purlie Victorious  through Jun 21

 

NextStop Theatre  www.NextStopTheatre.org

Once  through Jun 21

 

Adventure Theatre  www.My.AdventureTheatre-MTC.org

Sleeping Beauty – The Time Traveler  Jun 17 – 29

 

Everyman Theatre  www.EverymanTheatre.org

Emma   through Jun 14

 

Yellow Door Concert Series  www.YellowDoorConcertSeries.com

Eric Williams and Justin Mendez  Jun 28