Ruined Dominates Miami at Carbonell Awards

“I’ve wanted another one of these for so long,” a gracious Lela Elam said last night as she accepted the Carbonell Award for Best Actress in a Play for her work in GableStage’s Ruined. “I think they just look better as a set.”For Elam, who won a Carbonell in 2008 for GableStage’s…

Florida Grand Opera Gets Sexy and Sweaty at The Stage

Sexy. Seductive. Sweaty. These are three S’s not typically associated with opera, the favorite pastime of the monied elderly. But times have changed, and this ain’t your grandma’s opera anymore. On second thought, judging by the audience at last night’s Tango double-bill at The Stage, maybe it still is your…

Fela!: Challenging Kuti Bio-musical Will Make You Dance

Fela Kuti, the pioneering Nigerian Afrobeat musician, activist, presidential candidate and polygamist (at one point, he had 28 wives) seems an unlikely subject for an American musical. But that’s exactly why the show Fela!, based on a biography of Kuti’s tumultuous life, is so special. Like the musician himself, it’s…

In Pie Solo, Pioneer Winter Strips and Self-Flagellates

Last weekend, Miami Theater Center’s Sandbox Series presented the first of a three-weekend run of Pie Solo, Pioneer Winter’s “quarter-life” reinterpretation of the one-man show. The multimedia event is an autobiographical foray into Winter’s personal, family, religious, and queer history told in stages with contemporary dance, tap, a sax solo,…

4000 Miles at GableStage: A Profound, Near-Perfect Production

After smoking some weed with her 21-year-old grandson, a 91-year-old matron matter-of-factly discusses the intimate facts of her life. She’s sitting on an old couch in her Manhattan apartment while a solemn Karl Marx photo hangs on the wall behind her. “Neither of my husbands ever satisfied me,” she says…

With Brothers Beckett, Poop Jokes Abound at Arsht

When a character in the play you’re watching describes his incipient bowel movement as a “turtle head” poking out of his butthole, you know you’re in for some refined theater.Of course, playwright and co-star David Michael Sirois never intended his reprisal of Brothers Beckett, originally presented at the cozy Alliance…

Peter London Global Dance Company Stays Local in Little Haiti

Afro-Caribbean folklore entered Peter London’s soul at age six, and never left. In the hilly Trinidadian countryside, the then-youngster would take part in religious ceremonies often led by his family members, who were strong keepers of the Yoruba-derived faith and drumming. From there, his love for dance sprouted into classical…

Michelle Williams on Fela!, Blue Ivy, and Handling the Haters

Since the Super Bowl, pop-culture chatter has essentially revolved around Beyoncé — her HBO special, her world tour, her GQ cover. But let’s not forget about the other members of Destiny’s Child — especially the one who’s starring in a Broadway show, planning a new reality TV show, and dealing…

Tarell Alvin McCraney Wins $150,000 From Yale University

It’s been a good year for Tarell Alvin McCraney. The Miami playwright kicked off 2013 with his own punched-up, truncated version of Hamlet, which opened at GableStage in January to favorable reviews (including ours). Next, he’s working with London’s Royal Shakespeare Company and the New York Public Theatre to produce…

Alvin Ailey Explores Its Spiritual Side at the Arsht

Alvin Ailey Dance Theater’s performance at the Arsht Center last Friday night began and ended with a prayer — or rather, with an electrifying, raging, shimmering, sassy, full-bodied reminder of what prayer can mean. A work by choreographer Garth Fagan, of Lion King fame, opened the show. Fagan has often…