They’ve Got
Legs
They
may have given a high-heeled kick to Boston Ballet’s beloved
version of The Nutcracker (which has been booted over to the
Colonial Theatre), but New York’s world- famous Rockettes are
still faring better in the Hub than their Yankee counterparts
could ever hope to. Boston audiences are lining up to catch a
glimpse of said Rockettes, Santa Claus and a cast of 50 for the
first-ever local appearance of the venerable Radio City
Christmas Spectacular, at the Wang Theatre through December 31.
The show, which has been packing ’em into Radio City Music Hall
since 1933, features everything from the moving “Living
Nativity” scene to a mini version of “The Nutcracker” with 31
dancing bears and a 35-foot-tall Christmas tree. But the real
stars of the show are the high-kicking Rockettes—whether
emerging from Fifth Avenue store windows, hitching themselves
and their 72 legs to Santa’s sleigh, or wowing the audience as
toy soldiers in the classic “Parade of the Wooden Soldiers.” |
Misery Loves
Company
If
the holidays have you gagging at the thought of endless lines at
the mall, visits with annoying relatives and candy-induced
toothaches, Boston’s got just the cure for the holiday blues:
Ryan Landry, the Hub’s reigning king of the pop culture parody.
This year, the playwright and drag performer, along with his
Gold Dust Orphans troupe, is reviving his popular holiday spoof,
Who’s Afraid of the Virgin Mary?, on weekends in December at
Theatre Machine. Cross-stitching the story of the Nativity with
Edward Albee’s searing classic Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,
Landry’s lampoon details
the
feuding couple, Mary and
Joseph—lost in time, still living in Bethlehem and in a
perpetual state of drunken oblivion. Enter the young Kringles,
Santa and “the Mrs.,” for an alcohol-fueled fight to the death
that would make even Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor proud. |