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11 Cape Cod theater shows our critics say you should see

11 Cape Cod theater shows our critics say you should see
capecodtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capecodtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Kelli O Hara, Elton John & more: 10 shows to watch on Cape Cod stages

Kelli O Hara, Elton John & more: 10 shows to watch on Cape Cod stages
capecodtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capecodtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

The Pink Unicorn Review: The Learning Curve of Love | Arts

Is this how everybody who is different feels? asks Trisha Lee, a white religious working-class widow and the titular character of the SpeakEasy Stage Company’s “The Pink Unicorn.” “Sittin’ at a table with not one person you can relate to or connect with, like you ain’t never gonna be understood, like nobody is ever gonna hold you and love you for who you are? It is the loneliest feeling in the world,” she concludes. Trisha, played by Stacy Fischer, is forced to reckon with her own beliefs and values when her teenager, Jo, comes out as genderqueer. Trisha becomes a determined ally, and armed with Wikipedia, takes on the local church and Jo’s conservative high school. “The Pink Unicorn” is streaming through March 18.

HomeFront: Anthony Hopkins at his best, pizza at its yummiest, plus an outlook for the arts

HomeFront: Anthony Hopkins at his best, pizza at its yummiest, plus an outlook for the arts By Marie Morris Globe Correspondent,Updated March 12, 2021, 11:33 a.m. Email to a Friend The Opera House and Paramount are some of the many performing arts spaces that are closed because of the COVID pandemic.Matthew J Lee/Globe staff Welcome once again to HomeFront, where we’re thanking friends and relatives, essential workers and businesses, educators and health-care providers, local restaurants, and of course kitchens and couches for keeping us going since the declaration of the pandemic a year ago. This week, some annual traditions that evaporated in 2020 are back — the

In A Brimful of Asha and The Pink Unicorn, mothers grapple with the independence and identities of their children

STAGE REVIEW In ‘A Brimful of Asha’ and ‘The Pink Unicorn,’ mothers grapple with the independence and identities of their children By Don Aucoin Globe Staff,Updated March 11, 2021, 12:59 p.m. Email to a Friend Ravi and Asha Jain in A Brimful of Asha. Erin Brubacher In ArtsEmerson’s “A Brimful of Asha,” a mother wants her child to be something he’s not. In SpeakEasy Stage Company’s “The Pink Unicorn,” a mother wants her child to not be something they are. And the offspring? What they want, unsurprisingly, is the freedom to be themselves. It’s a bumpy journey for everyone concerned in this pair of streaming productions.

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