Broadway
OPERATION MINCEMEAT A sneaky compassion lies on the coronary heart of this caper of a present, a deliciously eccentric London import that received the 2024 Olivier Award for greatest new musical. Starring the unique West Finish solid, it’s a riff on a weird true story from World Struggle II, when British Intelligence, eager to misdirect the Germans, dressed up a useless man as a Royal Marines main, planted a pretend invasion plan on him and dropped him within the sea for the enemy to search out. Via June 15 on the Golden Theater. (All theater listings by LAURA COLLINS-HUGHES)
BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB This jukebox musical concerning the Cuban artists who made the Grammy Award-winning 1997 album of the title isn’t straight biography. Developed and directed by Saheem Ali (“Fats Ham”), it makes use of actual individuals and occasions as a jumping-off level for its storytelling. Rooted within the recording periods, and choreographed by Patricia Delgado and the Tony winner Justin Peck (“Illinoise”), it was an Off Broadway hit final season for Atlantic Theater Firm. Performances start Feb. 21 on the Gerald Schoenfeld Theater.
OTHELLO Denzel Washington made a Broadway box-office hit out of “Julius Caesar” 20 years in the past. On the massive display screen, he has performed Macbeth. Now he takes on Shakespeare’s Othello — the honorable basic and smitten newlywed. Jake Gyllenhaal is his foil because the perfidious Iago, who goads Othello into unreasoning jealousy with lies about his beloved Desdemona (Molly Osborne). Directed by Kenny Leon, a Tony winner for his revival of “A Raisin within the Solar,” which additionally starred Washington. Feb. 24-June 8 on the Barrymore Theater.
PURPOSE Contemporary off his Tony win for “Acceptable,” the playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins returns with a brand new drama concerning the members of a well-known, albeit fictional, Black political dynasty in Chicago, reckoning with historical past, morality and legacy as they collect for a celebration. Phylicia Rashad directs this Steppenwolf Theater manufacturing, whose ensemble solid consists of Alana Arenas, Glenn Davis, Jon Michael Hill, LaTanya Richardson Jackson, Harry Lennix and one other 2024 Tony winner, Kara Younger. Feb. 25-July 6 on the Helen Hayes Theater.
GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS David Mamet’s luxuriantly crude, bare-knuckled actual property drama, which received the 1984 Pulitzer Prize, will get its third Broadway revival. Kieran Culkin, final on Broadway a decade in the past in “This Is Our Youth,” stars as Richard Roma — the Al Pacino function within the film adaptation — reverse Bob Odenkirk, Invoice Burr, Michael McKean, Donald Webber Jr., Howard W. Overshown and John Pirruccello. Patrick Marber, a 2023 Tony winner for his manufacturing of “Leopoldstadt,” directs. How’s that for a lead? March 10-Could 31 on the Palace Theater.
THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY Theatergoing admirers of the HBO drama “Succession” like to ascribe its savvy artistry partly to the appreciable stage chops amongst its solid. Now Sarah Snook, the Australian actor who performed Shiv Roy — older sister to Kieran Culkin’s Roman — makes her Broadway debut in Kip Williams’s intricately high-tech retelling of Oscar Wilde’s basic novel. Snook takes on all 26 characters, a feat that received her raves, and a 2024 Olivier Award, within the London run of this Sydney Theater Firm manufacturing. March 10-June 15 on the Music Field Theater.
BOOP! THE MUSICAL The black-and-white Nineteen Thirties cartoon character Betty Boop time-travels to a richly chromatic future on this new present, with Jasmine Amy Rogers making her Broadway debut within the title function, and Religion Prince and Stephen DeRosa among the many supporting solid. Directed and choreographed by the Tony-winning Jerry Mitchell, the present has a e-book by Bob Martin (“The Drowsy Chaperone”), music by David Foster, lyrics by Susan Birkenhead and a set by David Rockwell. Performances start March 11 on the Broadhurst Theater.
JOHN PROCTOR IS THE VILLAIN In Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible,” a skewering of McCarthyism set amid the witch trials of Seventeenth-century Massachusetts, John Proctor is supposed to be the hero. This #MeToo play by Kimberly Belflower turns that presumption on its head, with a gaggle of latest highschool women who detect similarities between Miller’s putative good man and the boys in their very own world. Sadie Sink (“Stranger Issues”) stars; Danya Taymor, a Tony winner for “The Outsiders,” directs. March 20-June 22 on the Sales space Theater.
STRANGER THINGS: THE FIRST SHADOW Set in Hawkins, Ind., in 1959, this Olivier-winning sensory spectacle of a play is a prequel to the supernatural Netflix collection “Stranger Issues.” Directed by Stephen Daldry, it has a script by Kate Trefry, a author on the hit collection, and an unique story by Trefry, Jack Thorne and the Duffer brothers, who created the collection. Transferring from London’s West Finish, the place it opened in 2023, the present is advisable for ages 12 and up. Performances start March 28 on the Marquis Theater.
REAL WOMEN HAVE CURVES: THE MUSICAL Josefina López’s 1990 play has by no means been as nicely often known as the 2002 movie it spawned, which starred America Ferrera in her breakthrough function. Now each of these kind the bases of this new musical about Ana (Tatianna Córdoba), an American teenager in Nineteen Eighties Los Angeles attempting to reconcile her aspirations for herself together with her obligations to her undocumented immigrant household. Directed and choreographed by the Tony winner Sergio Trujillo, with music and lyrics by Pleasure Huerta and Benjamin Velez. Performances start April 1 on the James Earl Jones Theater.
DEAD OUTLAW The hapless Elmer McCurdy wasn’t a lot good as an Outdated West prison, however the real-life, sideshow-attraction saga of his mummified corpse made for a rollicking sleeper-hit musical comedy Off Broadway final yr. As soon as once more starring Andrew Durand as Elmer, taking part in useless like no one’s enterprise, it’s a country-tinged story with a conscience from the e-book author Itamar Moses, the composer-lyricist David Yazbek and the director David Cromer — Tony winners all for “The Band’s Go to” — and the composer-lyricist Erik Della Penna. Performances start April 12 on the Longacre Theater.
GODDESS The director Saheem Ali returns to a ardour venture with this musical impressed by the parable of Marimba, the goddess of music, which Ali heard as a toddler rising up in Kenya. Conceived by Ali, who directed the premiere at Berkeley Repertory Theater in 2022, the present has a e-book by Jocelyn Bioh (“Jaja’s African Hair Braiding”), music and lyrics by Michael Thurber and choreography by Darrell Grand Moultrie, all of whom made “Merry Wives” with Ali for Shakespeare within the Park in 2021. April 29-June 1 on the Public Theater.
GHOSTS Nothing towards nepo infants, actually, however essentially the most unignorable factor about Lincoln Middle Theater’s casting of this Henrik Ibsen drama is the crucial mass of them. Lily Rabe (daughter of Jill Clayburgh and David Rabe) stars alongside Ella Beatty (daughter of Annette Bening and Warren Beatty), Levon Hawke (son of Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke) and her personal accomplice, Hamish Linklater (son of the famend vocal coach Kristin Linklater). Billy Crudup, who completes the solid of this Mark O’Rowe adaptation, is the odd man out. Jack O’Brien directs. Via April 13 on the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater.
BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC Returning to kind as a cultural hotspot, BAM has a blazing London import within the Almeida Theater’s Olivier-winning manufacturing of “A Streetcar Named Need” (Feb. 28-April 6). Starring Paul Mescal as Stanley Kowalski and Patsy Ferran as Blanche DuBois, it’s directed by Rebecca Frecknall, whose revival of “Cabaret” is presently on Broadway. Then comes “Macbeth in Stride” (April 15-April 27). Written by the Obie Award winner Whitney White, and carried out by her and an ensemble, it makes use of Woman Macbeth as a body for inspecting Black womanhood and ambition. A dwell band performs White’s gospel, rock, R&B and pop rating. Harvey Theater at BAM Sturdy.
AMERIKIN What if, to be accepted right into a pleasant native membership you had been keen to affix, you needed to move a DNA check? And what if you happen to had been mistaken in considering that you’d ace it? On this play by Chisa Hutchinson, the unique group is made up of white supremacists, and their would-be recruit (Daniel Abeles) is a brand new father solely now studying about his family tree. Jade King Carroll directs for Main Phases. March 1-April 13 at 59E59 Theaters.
WINE IN THE WILDERNESS In Harlem in 1964, a mannequin (Olivia Washington) sits for a painter (Grantham Coleman) who means to depict her as a damaging instance in his in any other case idealizing triptych on Black femininity. This Alice Childress play had its premiere on public tv in 1969. Now LaChanze makes her New York directing debut with it — a continuation of her championing of Childress, the creator of “Hassle in Thoughts,” the play LaChanze starred in on Broadway three years in the past. March 6-April 13, Basic Stage Firm.
VANYA Among the many current spate of stagings of Chekhov’s “Uncle Vanya,” that is the one with Andrew Scott performing each function. Tailored by Simon Stephens as an eight-character solo piece and created with Scott, that is greater than a celebration trick. It’s a cheeky, nimble, intimate interpretation that’s additionally a exercise for the creativeness. Sam Yates’s Olivier-winning manufacturing has been filmed for Nationwide Theater Dwell. However a digital camera can’t convey the sensation of experiencing it within the second, not to mention in a room as human-scale as this downtown house. March 10-Could 11 on the Lucille Lortel Theater.
THE CHERRY ORCHARD Humor is to the fore within the Donmar Warehouse’s immersive manufacturing of this Chekhov basic, which wowed London audiences final yr. Directed by Benedict Andrews, who introduced his acclaimed manufacturing of “A Streetcar Named Need” to Brooklyn in 2016, it stars Nina Hoss (“Tár”) because the entitled aristocrat Ranevskaya, an property proprietor drowning in debt, reverse Adeel Akhtar as Lopakhin, the socially ascendant service provider who proposes an answer. March 26-April 20 at St. Ann’s Warehouse.
EURYDICE Maya Hawke (sister of Levon) performs the title function on this revival of Sarah Ruhl’s piercingly stunning, comically offbeat retelling of the parable of Orpheus and Eurydice. Directed by Les Waters, who staged the play breathtakingly nearly 20 years in the past, it’s about love and connection, mortality and reminiscence. When the just-married Eurydice dies, she descends in an elevator to the underworld, the place her tender father takes care of her whereas Orpheus pines. Could 13-June 22 at Signature Theater.
LUNAR ECLIPSE Reed Birney and Lisa Emery painting a long-married Kentucky couple, watching the summer season sky and speaking by means of the evening, on this new two-hander by Donald Margulies, who received a Pulitzer in 2000 for “Dinner With Mates,” one other play about enduring coupledom starring Emery. In “Lunar Eclipse,” Birney is reprising his function from a 2023 manufacturing at Shakespeare & Firm in Western Massachusetts. Kate Whoriskey (“Clyde’s”) directs this staging, an Off Broadway premiere for Second Stage Theater. Could 14-June 22 at Pershing Sq. Signature Middle.
Pop, Jazz and Nation
FKA TWIGS The English avant-pop goddess FKA twigs remakes the membership in her personal picture on her newest album, “Eusexua,” which she has described as “a love letter to how dance music makes me really feel.” With a background in each ballet and opera, FKA twigs — whose actual identify is Tahliah Debrett Barnett — approaches her digital compositions with a intellectual experimentalist’s sense of daring, however the 11 tracks of “Eusexua” are among the many most easy and pop-oriented of her profession. Along with her nimble, flinty falsetto main the best way, the 37-year outdated places her personal spin on the techno, storage and drum and bass sounds she grew up with whereas unearthing dormant wishes and articulating her personal pleasure precept. “Eusexua” is a report meant to be skilled in a crowd filled with dancing, sweaty our bodies — a possibility twigs will supply when she takes it on tour this spring. April 3 and 4 at Knockdown Middle, Queens. (LINDSAY ZOLADZ)
DARKSIDE The form-shifting electro-psychedelia group Darkside started because the digital producer Nicolás Jaar and the multi-instrumentalist Dave Harrington, two achieved, wide-ranging musicians who began taking part in collectively in 2011 as college students at Brown. On their third LP, the immersive “Nothing,” the band consists of the drummer Tlacael Esparza, who’s likewise adept at taking part in nearly each model conceivable. That fluidity provides “Nothing” an exhilarating unpredictability — and a license to discover a sonic cosmos that encompasses liquid funk, ethereal atmosphere and sudden spurts of storage rock, amongst different sounds. Esparza’s anchor additionally permits Darkside to indulge its interior jam band, a improvement that will unlock one thing new within the group’s performances. March 21 and 22 at Brooklyn Metal, Brooklyn. (L.Z.)
MEGAN MORONEY In search of an expertise that lets you wallow within the limitless depths of your sorrow? There’s one straightforward resolution for the relentless masochism that unites the brokenhearted: the nation singer Megan Moroney, who brings her Am I Okay? Tour to New York in March. Moroney has had a banner couple of years, releasing albums and songs about heavy frustration and even heavier remorse at a Drake-like tempo. She has a soothing voice, nevertheless it’s a Malicious program for the form of angst that the majority musicians — hell, most individuals — are too scared to site visitors in. So come alongside and bathe within the distress: Possibly you’ll discover somebody who will maintain your hand whilst you cling to theirs. March 26 and 27 at Radio Metropolis Music Corridor, Manhattan. (JON CARAMANICA)
CÉCILE MCLORIN SALVANT “She falls in love. She eats the man. She dies.” That’s how the singer, composer, lyricist and visible artist Cécile McLorin Salvant sums up “Ogresse,” the music-theater work she’ll deliver to Zankel Corridor in Could in its newest iteration. “Ogresse” is a fairy tale-inspired story of a monster who’s conquered by love, with a rating that ranges throughout jazz, chamber music and extra. McLorin additionally headlines Carnegie Corridor in March with a nominally extra typical jazz live performance: a program of ballads backed by a mini-orchestra, the Knights. However the preparations are by Darcy James Argue, whose compositions for his personal 18-piece Secret Society massive band bristle with ambition; the pianist Sullivan Fortner, McLorin’s longtime collaborator and a grasp of splintered, polytonal harmonies, may even be a part of her. McLorin’s supple voice can radiate innocence, but she’s something however naïve. Her variations of jazz requirements promise to be as adventurous as her ever-changing eyewear. March 27 at Carnegie Corridor, Manhattan; and Could 21 at Zankel Corridor, Manhattan, (JON PARELES)
Classical
STILE ANTICO Palestrina, that grasp of gleaming polyphony, was born 500 years in the past. The very good vocal ensemble Stile Antico has already honored the anniversary with a recording, sung with lushness and focus, and in March, Miller Theater will current the group in a program primarily based on the album. On the heart is a large serving to of Palestrina, after all, rounded out with items by different composers energetic in Rome throughout his time, together with Orlande de Lassus and Tomás Luis de Victoria — and even a premiere, by Cheryl Frances-Hoad. March 29 at Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Manhattan. (All classical listings by ZACHARY WOOLFE)
PATRICIA KOPATCHINSKAJA The violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja, whose performances can ship jolts by means of even essentially the most well-trod items, has a much more energetic profession in Europe than in America. So her debut with the New York Philharmonic, because the soloist in Stravinsky’s elegantly bristling Violin Concerto, is to not be missed, significantly since she’s showing alongside the trendy but vigorous conductor Jakub Hrusa, who additionally leads Brahms’s First Symphony. Jessie Montgomery, who composed a little bit of the cycle “The Components” for the Philharmonic a few years in the past, opens this system with a full work of her personal, “Chemiluminescence.” April September 11 at David Geffen Corridor, Lincoln Middle.
LONG PLAY FESTIVAL For years, the Bang on a Can Marathon was an annual, open-eared immersion in up to date music. Since 2022, the marathon’s vitality and selection has sprawled over a weekend and a borough, with a burst of performances at areas round Brooklyn. Among the many choices this yr are items by the Bang on a Can founders, Michael Gordon, David Lang and Julia Wolfe; a premiere by Henry Threadgill; Anthony Braxton’s “Composition No. 19 (For 100 Tubas)”; Nico Muhly’s harp cycle “The Avenue”; the pianist Adam Tendler taking part in John Cage; the elite guitar duo of Mary Halvorson and Invoice Frisell; and a celebration of Terry Riley’s ninetieth birthday. Could 2-4, varied efficiency areas in Brooklyn.
PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD His specialty is modernism, however there are few cooler, extra technically flawless guides to a variety of repertory than the pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard. At Zankel Corridor, he’ll play a formidable program of fantasias — spanning some 400 years — by Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck, C.P.E. Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin and Elliott Carter (the brooding, unsettled “Night time Fantasies”). He’ll cap the recital with a real rarity: Ives’s “The Celestial Railroad,” primarily based on a Nathaniel Hawthorne story and that includes materials from the better-known Second Piano Sonata and Fourth Symphony. (Concertgoers may have a tricky alternative that afternoon, because the English Live performance will likely be performing Handel’s “Giulio Cesare” in Stern Auditorium on the identical time.) Could 4, Zankel Corridor at Carnegie Corridor.
‘THE QUEEN OF SPADES’ It was once that many years would possibly move on the Metropolitan Opera between runs of Tchaikovsky’s “Queen of Spades,” a seething story of obsession, insanity and playing. Fortunately, the work is more and more being handled as core repertory, returning this season after an look simply earlier than the pandemic. Keri-Lynn Wilson, who in 2022 made a robust impression main Shostakovich’s “Woman Macbeth of Mtsensk,” conducts a solid that features the tenor Brian Jagde, the soprano Sonya Yoncheva, the baritones Igor Golovatenko and Alexey Markov and, as an getting old countess who is aware of a darkish secret about taking part in playing cards, the veteran mezzo Violeta Urmana. Could 23-June 7 on the Metropolitan Opera, Lincoln Middle.
TWYLA THARP DANCE Tharp is celebrating her sixtieth yr of constructing dances. (And what dances they’ve been!) Her season at New York Metropolis Middle pairs “Slacktide,” her first work to Philip Glass since her masterpiece “Within the Higher Room” (1986), with “Diabelli” (1998), a vivid exploration of American classicism that may be a masterpiece, too — albeit one hardly ever seen. The dance set to Beethoven’s “Diabelli Variations” opens with swinging arms, skips and gallops; it blossoms in complexity and temper as humor and bodily intelligence construct and layer, making a splendidly witty trip. March 12-16 at New York Metropolis Middle. (GIA KOURLAS)
PAGEANT SPRING 2025 This artist-run house has introduced its spring season — “The Ceremony of Spring, My Proper to Spring” — which has all of the makings of a breath of contemporary air, fittingly filled with pageantry. Massive theaters have their allure, however smaller areas are the place imaginations are born, the place you see what artists are fabricated from. Pageant’s annual gala, set for April 19, is one of the best present on the town; the common season opens on March 6. The runs come and go in two-day bursts, together with evenings by promising younger dance artists like Neva Guido and Ella Daybreak, so catch what you’ll be able to. These explorations might run the gamut — as its founders say, Pageant applications artists, not works — however a questing spirit is all the time intact. That’s the Pageant means. March 6-Could 23 at Pageant, Brooklyn. (G.Okay.)
AYODELE CASEL The exuberance of this joyful, musically subtle faucet dancer can’t be overstated. Nor can her enthusiasm for ’90s hip-hop, the music that she and different dancers of her technology practiced to and took class to whereas discovering their place within the faucet world. Casel was a fan of the Fugees, Nas, Craig Mack. “It was formative,” she stated, and “it was straightforward to faucet dance to as a result of it swung. It swung in a means that we dance to jazz — simply.” In her upcoming work, directed by Torya Beard, Casel plans, partly, to discover the parallel between hip-hop and faucet. “There was one thing about these two issues colliding on the identical time that spoke to one another,” she stated, “in a deeper means than the way it was talked about.” Could 28-June 8 on the Joyce Theater. (G.Okay.)
BATSHEVA DANCE COMPANY The choreographer Ohad Naharin and Batsheva, the corporate he reshaped into international prominence, have usually attracted controversy — much less for his or her sensuality, directness or inhibition-flouting eccentricity than by affiliation with their residence nation, Israel. A U.S. tour of Naharin’s newest work, “Momo,” was postponed after the Oct. 7 assaults and ensuing conflict in Gaza; now it arrives on the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Set largely to music by Laurie Anderson and the Kronos Quartet, “Momo” is in a way two overlapping works: a sluggish, masculine quartet that comes with mountaineering; and a faster ensemble piece that includes some parody of ballet. The doubling forces you to simply accept which you can’t course of all the data without delay: a milder, managed model of the lesson that occasions outdoors the work are all the time making. March 6-8 on the Brooklyn Academy of Music. (BRIAN SEIBERT)
BILL T. JONES/ARNIE ZANE DANCE COMPANY Like many Individuals, Invoice T. Jones is attempting to know what world we live in. His means of processing is to make a piece of dance theater. “Individuals, Locations & Issues,” one among two applications in his firm’s spring season, appears on the plight of stateless individuals, political upheaval and ideas of freedom. The soundtrack is drawn from Jones’s youth within the turbulent Sixties. Now 73, he has additionally been interested by his personal place on the earth. The opposite program is a solo made in response to “Edges of Ailey,” the current Whitney Museum exhibition about Alvin Ailey. In “Reminiscence Piece: Mr. Ailey, Alvin … the un-Ailey?,” Jones ruminates with attribute frankness on his relationship to his choreographer forebear, Black dance, and the largely white milieu of postmodernism. Could 15-24 at New York Dwell Arts, Manhattan (B.S.)
