Bring your ponchos for this riotous (and very very bloody) horror comedy.
Welcome to my blog. I document my adventures in travel, style, and food. Hope you have a nice stay!
All tagged The Magnetic Theatre
Bring your ponchos for this riotous (and very very bloody) horror comedy.
Actors become directors, writers become actors, and actors pull off double or triple roles throughout the productions.
The dozen plays cover everything from the 1800s to the indeterminate future, and the middle of the ocean to a colony on Mars.
Over the course of 28 short vignettes, the performance employs monologues, music, poetry, and skits to add layer after layer to the complexity of the situations teachers and students confront every day.
Cindy Williams’ play lures you in, making it impossible to abandon the things it has revealed without seeing how it resolves.
The rock opera from Asheville-based band Smooth Goose is full of self-aware silliness.
Writer/director Skyler Goff puts a darkly comic twist on the Dickens classic.
Mary Shelley’s novel and its legacy receive a fascinating, immersive stage adaptation.
This witty take on familiar material is an absolute delight.
Thanks to sharp direction and engaging performances, the speculative sci-fi drama avoids feeling heavy-handed.
The original and timely “Sketches!” is a well-built comedy machine that will have you laughing uproariously into your mask.
The Magnetic Theatre resumes live, indoor performances with this modern telling of the Persephone myth.
After a long pandemic winter, the Magnetic’s outdoor theater show, “something i cared about,” feels authentic and radical.
Siobhan O’Loughlin is the artist who, thus far, has come closest to creating an intimate virtual theatrical experience.
Was Spanko the best show at this past weekend’s Asheville Fringe Arts Festival? Also, visits with Charlie Mean and Tales from the Chernobyl Disaster.
The beloved, annual vaudeville-style holiday sketch show comes to a glorious end after a 10-year run.
A sort-of ghost story, the world premiere drama plays with time travel in order to address the complicated legacy of female artists.