Onstage, Georgetown: September


By Mark Edelman

September marks the beginning of Theatre Week — an even better reason to get out there and save on more than 30 productions scattered in and around Washington, D.C. Visit theatreweek.org, beginning Sept. 9 to find companies offering tickets for as low as $20. It runs Sept. 26 to Oct. 13—plenty of time to enjoy the great theater our area has to offer, including some of the following.

SOFT POWER

Signature Theatre   Now through Sept. 15

Signature kicks off its 2024-25 season with a daring piece by Tony Award winners David Henry Hwang (“M Butterfly”) and Jeanine Tesori (“Fun Home,” “Kimberly Akimbo”). After a true-life street mugging that nearly killed him, Hwang returned to the dilemma that informed his life—what does it mean to be an “other” (in his case, Chinese-American) in contemporary America? He was inspired to come to grips with that question in this quirky new musical which features the playwright himself as a character—a new one on me.

Ably directed by Ethan Heard, Daniel May as a Chinese producer trying to mount a show on Broadway and Grace Yoo as a hard-nosed Hillary Clinton tackle a sometimes madcap, other times touching tale about, of all things,  governance. It’s 2016 and the run-up to our presidential contest (and you know how that turned out). Though a tough year to defend majority rule, May and Yoo still manage to sashay Fred-and-Ginger style through a show tune-filled polemic that pits our democracy against Chinese totalitarianism. If that sounds too complicated, go see it for Broadway vet Danny Troob’s gorgeous orchestrations. Tickets at www.sigtheatre.org.

THE EXPLORERS CLUB

Alexandria Little Theatre Now through Sept. 21

Deadly cobras, bad bartenders and the occasional airship populate this wacky comedy about a brilliant, beautiful woman’s quest to lead a heretofore males-only institution out of its musty old past. Sound familiar? Grab your safety goggles for the merriment. Tickets at www.thelittletheatre.com.

THE 22+ WEDDINGS OF HUGO

Gala Hispanica Theatre  Sept. 5 to 29

Why in the world does Hugo, a simple postal clerk, get married so many times? In Gala Hispanica’s season opener—in Spanish with English supertitles—we find out in this hilarious tale of love in times of hatred penned by Gala Hispanica’s artistic director Gustavo Ott. Tickets at www.galatheatre.org

Roz White as Billie Holiday at Atlas Theatre. Photo by Chris Banks.

LADY DAY AT EMERSON’S BAR AND GRILL

Atlas Theatre  Sept. 5 to Oct. 6

It’s 1959, and Billie Holiday is on a bender. Still, as embodied by D.C. actress and chanteuse Roz White, “Lady Day”—purveyor of wonderful songs like “God Bless the Child,” “What a Little Moonlight Can Do” and the tragic “Strange Fruit”— remains an incandescent talent to behold as portrayed in this Mosaic Theatre production. To add to the atmosphere, the Atlas will be transformed into Emerson’s for the run. Tickets at  www.mosaictheater.org.

JA JA’S AFRICAN HAIR BRAIDING

Arena Stage   Sept 6 to Oct. 13   

This Tony Award nominated Best Play takes us inside a bustling West African salon in Harlem where, every day, a lively and eclectic group of hair braiders create masterpieces on the heads of the neighborhood women. During one sweltering summer day, love will blossom, dreams will flourish and secrets will be revealed. Tickets at www.arenastage.org.

THE ADDAMS FAMILY 

Toby’s Dinner Theatre  Sept. 6 to Nov. 10

Charles Addams’s dark but delightful New Yorker cartoons get the Broadway treatment following in the footsteps of the film. When Uncle Fester explains to Gomez, Morticia and the rest of their ghoulish clan that daughter Wednesday has invited her new (normal) boyfriend and his folks to dinner, all hell (and fun) break loose. Tickets at www.tobysdinnertheatre.com

THE COMEUPPANCE

Woolly Mammoth   Sept. 8 to Oct. 6

Hot playwright and Tony Award nominee Branden Jacobs-Jenkins (“Appropriate”) penned this piece about a “multi-ethnic reject group” celebrating their 20th high school reunion in Prince George’s County. Amid the chatty reminiscing, an otherworldly presence appears, forcing these former classmates to face the past head-on and reckon with an unknowable future. Tickets at www.woollymammoth.net.

PRIMARY TRUST

Signature Theatre Sept. 10 to Oct 20

Winner of the 2024 Pulitzer Prize, this touching story takes us to Wally’s Tiki Bar, which serves the sweetest mai tais in town. Kenneth never misses a happy hour with his best friend until a job loss upends his static existence. Now he must discover the courage to open a new door and change his life — even if it means facing the past and letting go. Tickets at www.sigtheatre.org.

COMEDY OF ERRORS

Shakespeare Theatre Company  Sept. 10 to Oct. 13

STC Artistic Director Simon Godwin returns to the Folio for this silly comedy about two sets of twins, topsy turvy love and the all-too human desire to belong. With Alex Brightman and David Fynn, who kind of look alike and starred in the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, “School of Rock”—Brightman on Broadway, Fynn in the West End. Expect some rock and roll in this adaptation, too. Tickets at www.shakespearetheatre.org.

HOW TO BE A KOREAN WOMAN

Theatre J      Sept 12 to 22

Back by popular demand from its January Washington premier, Sun Mee Chomet’s genesis tale incorporates text, music and movement to tell the poignant story of her search for her birth family in South Korea after growing up in her adopted Jewish home. Tickets at www.edcjcc.org/theater-j.org.

SOJOURNERS

Roundhouse Theatre      Sept. 11 to Oct. 6

A Nigerian couple living in Texas in the 1970s welcomes the promise of America but remains homesick for the Old Country. Pregnancy, the demands of work and school, isolation and frequent separation challenge Abaisma and her husband Ukpong until the inspiration of an unexpected community teaches her to forge her own path. Tickets at www.roundhousetheatre.org.

“Ovo” at Capital Arena. Courtesy Cirque du Soleil Arena.

OVO

Capital One Arena     Sept. 11 to 15

Those amazing Cirque du Soleil folks lend their story-telling talents and mind-boggling acrobatics to the world of insects as a gang of athletic arthropods tumble, fly, flip and soar through the cavernous confines of Capital One. Tickets at www.cirquedusoleil.com/ovo

EXCEPTION TO THE RULE

Studio Theatre    Sept. 18 to Oct. 27

Six Black high school students get stuck in after-school detention, waiting for a teacher to sign them out. Flirting, fighting and forming plans for their long weekend, they anxiously await their release. But something’s wrong here; where are all the teachers and how do they get out of this place? Tickets at www.studiotheatre.org.

CLUE

The Kennedy Center   Sept. 17 to Oct. 6

The ultimate whodunit started life as a board game, then a Paramount film and now a live-theater experience. Will Colonel Mustard and Professor Plum vie for Miss Scarlet’s attention. Find out at www.kennedy-center.org.

MISTER LINCOLN

Ford’s Theatre     Sept. 20 to Oct. 13

TV heartthrob Scott Bakula takes one more quantum leap into the shoes and hat of our beloved 16th president, “Mister Lincoln” as he preferred to call himself. From prairie lawyer and anti-slavery advocate to wartime leader, the Great Emancipator’s own words are employed by Bakula and company to reveal surprising aspects of the life of one of our nation’s greatest presidents. Nice to have him back at Ford’s. Tickets at www.fords.org

YOU’RE A GOOD MAN CHARLIE BROWN

Adventure MTC  Sept. 21 to Oct. 29

With charm, wit, and heart, “You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown” explores life’s big questions through the eyes of the Peanuts gang as they play baseball, fly kites, struggle with homework, swoon over crushes, and celebrate the joys of friendship. Growing up is serious business! Tickets to the theater in Glen Echo Park at www.adventureintheatre-mtc.org.

Mark Edelman is a playwright who loves writing about theater. He is a lifetime member of the Broadway League and a Tony voter. 

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