Last week Jeb Bush sounded completely flummoxed when he tried to answer a simple question regarding his brother’s 2003 decision to invade Iraq. His stumbling efforts first to evade the question and ultimately to answer it did little to suggest that he is qualified to be the country’s next president. Pretending the Iraq invasion is […]
E. Haig’s Review of STC’s “Pirates of Penzance”
If you’re a confirmed Savoyard, meaning you are a fan of any of the 14 operettas by W.S. Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan, you don’t need much coaxing to see yet another production of one of the pair’s biggest and most enduring hits. “The Pirates of Penzance” is one such hit, and, being confirmed Savoyards […]
The Wonders of Berlin: Its History and Its Culture
Berlin is a wondrous city, as I discovered in my recent visit and extended tour. Actually, it is two cities in one. The first city is historical Berlin, which is marked by the very visible remnants of the Cold War and, to a lesser extent, the World War that preceded it. The Berlin Wall was […]
Capital Stage’s “The Homecoming” – E. Haig’s Review
Written in 1965, Harold Pinter’s “The Homecoming” is an enigmatic play that can be interpreted in any number of ways. As performed by a stellar cast in the current Capital Stage production, under the very fine direction of Janis Stevens, the story seems almost absurd, and yet it has so many compelling scenes that is […]
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