The fifth in this series of comedies is another hilarious triumph. Get your tickets soon, since the NC Stage Co. run is already beginning to sell out.
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All in Comedy
The fifth in this series of comedies is another hilarious triumph. Get your tickets soon, since the NC Stage Co. run is already beginning to sell out.
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 zippy, hilarious musical send-up is more Broadway history lesson than “Hamilton” satire.
James Vaughn is brilliant as Kris Kringle, but the adaptation offers few moments for other characters and story lines to shine.
The beloved, annual vaudeville-style holiday sketch show comes to a glorious end after a 10-year run.
The English/Hebrew romantic comedy is a satisfying little stocking stuffer.
Subtitled “A Domestic Phantasmagoria with Song and Dance,” this is a world premiere perfect for those who enjoy a Fringe-y theatrical joyride.
A gifted quartet brings Donald Margulies’ Pulitzer Prize-winner to vivid life.
The latest winner at Flat Rock Playhouse manages to lovingly lampoon gospel performers while simultaneously presenting a reverent portrait of Christian life.
The musical adaptation of Roald Dahl’s beloved story yields plentiful nostalgic joy.
This autobiographical one-woman one-act from Murphy Funkhouser-Capps is confessional and often funny. And it’s one of two shows she’s doing in repertory.
The delightful duo of Scott Treadway and JP Sarro earn steady laughs as a pair of mismatched Little League baseball coaches.
The Elvis jukebox musical is so overwhelmingly positive that the Playhouse may as well offer theatergoers a satisfaction guarantee.