Stage Reviews


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A …. My Name Will Always Be Alice Studio Theatre’s Jackie Schultz loves her audiences. And Schultz’s audiences love her productions. This mutual admiration has resulted in a successful seven-year run of Studio Theatre’s musical revue Six Women With Brain Death. Banking on her success, Schultz has come out with a similar all-women revue that touches on the angst of womanhood, both tragic and comic, as sung to basic piano tunes and acted out in funny skits. This new show tones down the bitterness of Six Women and ups the triumphs while including more women on the fringe—singles, single moms, divorcées and widows.
Studio Theatre , 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday and 2 p.m. Sunday, $15-$17. 1028 R Street, (916) 446-2668. Through May 18. P.R.


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Ain’t Misbehavin’ Cats are jump jivin’ in Rancho Cordova, singing and swinging to the beats of Fats Waller. This musical montage honors the musician and composer that helped define African-American jazz and swing music during the Harlem Renaissance. The theater is transposed into a 1930s nightclub while the jazzy singers, the jamming band and the audience all get caught up in the show’s riffs and rhythms.
Garbeau’s Dinner Theatre ; 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday (dinner seating at 6 p.m.) and 2:30 p.m. Sunday (brunch seating at 1 p.m.); $34-$39 for the show and a meal or $20 for the show only. 12401 Folsom Boulevard in Rancho Cordova, (916) 985-6361. Through May 18. P.R.

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Bertolt Brecht’s Berlin First up is Berlin Cabaret, offering Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill standards from the 1930s—hilarious, pessimistic, sassy, sexy and morally ambiguous dark songs from a dark time. After intermission, it’s The Exception and the Rule, a tragicomic polemic about a Western businessman desperately trying to secure an oil deal in a distant desert land. Written 70 years ago, the play is still sharp as a tack.
River Stage ; 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday; $12-$14. Cosumnes River College, 8401 Center Parkway, (916) 691-7364. Through May 4. J.H.


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Circus Minimus This 75-minute show displays several hallmarks of Doniel Soto’s previous “movement theater” shows: few spoken words; lots of bending and stretching and visual pictures created with intertwined human forms; minimal props; and chanting and a cappella singing. Soto’s focus this time is a tongue-in-cheek takedown of the once ultra-hip but now mainstream Cirque du Soleil. The show opens as farce: The performers execute entirely ordinary “feats” and then strike heroic poses, inviting applause. But gradually, Circus Minimus opens into several lovely tricks, which simultaneously resemble and satirize the whole cirque genre. Good fun from Abandon Productions.
The Space , 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, $10-$13. 2509 R Street, (916) 737-2304. Extended through May 17. J.H.


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Jar the Floor Four generations of women from an African-American family—and a visiting Jewish girlfriend—gather for the matriarch’s 90th birthday and discuss their dreams and goals, sexual satisfaction and men (do women really need them?). They also debate who’s been selfish and who’s made sacrifices as mother or daughter. Each woman represents a different era and attitudes—sometimes in obvious ways—but the cast and director Linda Goodrich make a strong case for Cheryl West’s script.
Celebration Arts ; 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday; $10-$12 ($6 on Thursday). 4469 D Street, (916) 455-2787. Through May 3. J.H.


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Jodie’s Body Aviva Jane Carlin returns with her best (and best-known) solo show. It’s a monologue that hits on many topics, the most important being what it means to stand up on your own as a free person. And the thrilling events of South Africa in the early 1990s (the end of apartheid and Nelson Mandela’s election as president) are the central metaphor. First performed here in October 1999, it’s still a very impressive piece.
Sacramento Theatre Company ; 7 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, with matinees at 12:30 p.m. Thursday and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday; $25. 1419 H Street, (916) 443-6722. Nudity, in the form of a model posing for an art class. Advance ticket purchase recommended. Through May 4. J.H.


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The Play About the Baby This spiky absurdist drama—one of Edward Albee’s more recent plays—opens with a sexy, vulnerable young couple who have a baby. Their domestic bliss is interrupted by a mysterious, somewhat sinister middle-aged couple who ask questions and issue commands. The older pair know something; the atmosphere darkens. This show is outrageously funny and desperately sad—sometimes simultaneously. Vista Players director Aram Kouyoumdjian gets fine performances from locals Blair Leatherwood, Jan Ahders, J.D. Rudometkin and Mçgan Biolchini.
Actors Theatre , 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, $12-$14. 1616 Del Paso Boulevard, (916) 498-0477. Brief nudity. Through April 26. J.H.

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Red Herring This 1950s pastiche with attitude satirizes genre after genre—hard-boiled detectives, Soviet espionage and gonzo nuclear-mad militarists—actually, there are a few too many targets. The show’s also undermined by the choppy way it unfolds, with too many set changes diffusing the momentum of the short, snappy scenes. Individual moments are as funny as anything in town—such as Richard Winters’ hilarious barroom scene, in which he sips vodka by the spoonful so he won’t get drunk too fast, or Anthony D’Juan as an ebullient coroner wearing “I Like Ike” campaign buttons. But these funny scenes don’t link up into an ascending sequence with an enhanced payoff at the end.
B Street Theatre ; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, 2 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, 5 p.m. and 9 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday; $15.50-$21.50. 2711 B Street, (916) 443-5300. Through May 4. J.H.