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Entertainment Reviews
Review: “Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet) by Ann-Marie MacDonald (July 5) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Barry Gaines   
Saturday, 05 July 2008

I returned from my summer travels just in time to join a capacity opening-night audience for “Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet)” at the Vortex.
 

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Review: Figaro (June 30) PDF Print E-mail
Written by D.S. Crafts   
Monday, 30 June 2008

It was comedy and more comedy this opening weekend of the Santa Fe Opera. Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro followed swiftly on the heels of Verdi’s Falstaff. This exquisite new production directed by Jonathan Kent fully captures the radical spirit of a play once banned throughout Europe.
 

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Review: SFO Falstaff (June 28) PDF Print E-mail
Written by D.S. Crafts   
Saturday, 28 June 2008

Who better to welcome everyone to opening night at the Santa Fe Opera than that lovable rogue Falstaff? Even Queen Lizzy couldn’t resist his nefarious charm, so legend would have it.
 

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Dance Review: 10th Annual New Mexico Tap Dance Jam (June 21) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jennifer Noyer   
Saturday, 21 June 2008

Bill Evans founded the tap jams in 1999 to bring world class artists together with local artists and regional dance studios. The new Jam, directed by Jackie Oliver, opened for a 10th year at Keller Hall on Friday, with three of Evans’ classic pieces full of wit, inventive style and enormous variety. Young dancers from the National Dance Institutes of both Albuquerque and Santa Fe performed energy-packed choreography by Jackie Oliver and Ben Nathan.

 

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Review: The Voices of Theater's Future (June 21) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Marissa Greenberg   
Saturday, 21 June 2008

In Jen Silverman’s “The Education of Macoloco,” Anessa teaches her son bizarre trivia and the so-called “facts of life.”  But Anessa withholds the truth of Macoloco’s paternity and, until the play’s conclusion, of her inner life.  Such silences befit the winner of the Jury Prize of “The Seven: Something Left Unsaid,” FUSION Theatre Company’s New Works Festival. 

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About Reviewers 

D.S. Crafts (Website)

Composer Daniel Steven Crafts came to New Mexico from San Francisco where he had hosted a classical music radio program on KPFA. His first commission from opera star Jerry Hadley, "The Song & the Slogan" based on texts by Carl Sandburg, was made into a TV program for the PBS network and aired nationally in 2004 and won an Emmy for Best Music.

His latest opera La Llorona is a collaboration with novelist Rudolfo Anaya based on his play "The Season of La Llorona."

Mr. Crafts is currently working on another commission from Jerry Hadley for a piece about the American Southwest which includes texts by Rudolfo Anaya and V.B. Price.

Two CDs of his music, Contemporaries (short, satirical keyboard works) and ARIAS (excerpts from his various operas) have been released on the BACAT label in San Francisco.


David Steinberg

David Steinberg has covered state government, the courts, city and county government in Santa Fe for the Albuquerque Journal.

He's been an arts writer for the past 20 years, and serves as the book editor, for the Journal.

Over the years, he's also acted in plays, sung in choruses and played trumpet.


Jennifer Noyer

Jennifer Noyer has been writing dance reviews for the Albuquerque Journal for 17 years, as well as contributing articles for Dance Magazine and other art journals. She trained in dance with Hanya Holm in New York City and Colorado Springs, and studied several dance techniques at the graduate level at the University of Michigan. After teaching dance at Wayne State University she entered and completed a Masters Degree in Humanities there.

In New Mexico Ms. Noyer has taught, directed, and choreographed contemporary dance for several years. Her writing on dance includes a monograph accompanying the video of choreographer Bill Evens’ ballet “The Legacy.” An overview of Evans’s world wide career, it was written and published during his tenure at the University of New Mexico.

Ms. Noyer’s studies in the humanities, and her studio dance work influence her approach to dance as an integrative art form in the United States.


Barry Gaines

Barry Gaines has taught Shakespeare in the University of New Mexico English Department for over twenty-five years and has received two outstanding teaching awards.

He has written theater reviews for the Journal since 2000. He has attended theater all over the world including Shakespeare productions in Russia, South Africa, Denmark, and Poland. He has also served as literary advisor for two professional theater companies and written performance reviews for Shakespeare Quarterly.

Gaines has taken two years of acting with Paul Ford and appeared in small parts in three plays at the Albuquerque Little Theater. He believes that he is probably a better reviewer than actor.


Joanne Sheehy Hoover

Joanne Sheehy Hoover, music critic emeritus of the Albuquerque Journal, has written for NPR, PBS, the Lyric Opera of Chicago, the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Symphony, among others.

She has also been a music lecturer for the Smithsonian Associates and a music critic and arts writer for The Washington Post. She was director of the Levine School of Music, one of the country’s largest community music schools, in Washington, D. C. 1980-1993.

She and her husband moved to Corrales, New Mexico in July 1993. Also a poet, her fifth collection, “Einstein in New Mexico,” was published in 2002.


Marissa Greenberg

Marissa Greenberg is a member of the faculty of the University of New Mexico English Department, where she teaches Shakespeare and early English literature. A prior guest reviewer for the Albuquerque Journal, Greenberg will be reviewing theater while Barry Gaines is out of town. She also composed and edited the program notes for last year’s Albuquerque Shakespeare Festival and has written performance reviews for Shakespeare Bulletin.

A graduate of Columbia University and the University of Pennsylvania, Greenberg has been performing and studying drama for most of her life. She is thrilled to have this opportunity to review for the Journal.

 

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