Weekly screenings of strange and obscure short films. The amazing must-see darkly comic blues-gospel-hip hop musical tells of Big Joe, a tough-talking soldier cursed with giant hands, who must face his dead friends and battle a plague in the Underworld. The wacky sitcom about '70s roommates gets the local drag parody treatment, with Heklina, D'Arcy Drollinger, Matthew Martin, Adam Roy, Sara Moore and Laurie Bushman. Performances of classical music by students and faculty. Student & Faculty Concerts SF Conservatory of Music Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, 701 Mission St. Also, Won Ju Lim: Raycraft is Dead, thru Feb. Also, Kevin Cooley's Golden Prospects, a visual survey of water and waste in California. The Sprawl YBCAĪmsterdam-based design team Metahaven's immersive video installation about the mutation of propaganda. The acclaimed jazz vocalist returns for another extended residency at the upscale intimate cabaret. Tâ€"ib'n will be at the Feb 25 performance for a post-show chat, and sign books. Word for Word, the company that performs great short fiction, takes on Emma Donaghue and Colm Tâ€"ib'n stories. 28: America, America (4pm) and Heaven's Gate (7:15). 27: Peaches Christ presents Mister Act/Sister Act, with LaTrice Royale in a drag parody show, followe by a screening of the Whoopi Goldberg nun comedy. The popular Sylvester musical, starring Anthony Wayne, returns, with new sets, songs and costumes special benefit nights for various local nonprofits. Irene Tu and Ash Fisher cohost a night of women's queer comedy (with guys welcome, too), with Marga Gomez, Allison Micj, Morgan, Samantha Gilweit and Sampson. World premiere of Mark Jackson's drama (an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's Little Eyolf) about a tech guru, her writer brother, and a family tragedy that turns their world upside down. The Grammy-winning Country singer performs new and favorite songs. The 18th annual SF Independent Film Festival screens dozens of innovative new films at the Roxie, Brava and Alamo Drafthouse theatres. New exhibit of photos and video of dancer-aerialist India Davis, who, with photographer Lauren Hind, visualizes a queer Black femme perspective on the mystical power of New Orleans culture. From a Place With No Space Qulture Collective, Oakland Fort Mason Center, 2 Marina Boulevard, Building D, 3rd Floor. Dogeaters Magic Theatreīay Area premiere of Jessica Hagedorn's 1998 play set in Manila's mythical Studio 54 â€" with drag queens, beauty queens and movie stars alongside statesmen, activists and rebels, in early 1980s Philippines as the country unravels at the end of the Marcos regime. The glam rock musical, based on Dante's Inferno, with songs by Peter Fogel and book by Kelly Kittell, returns, with the original 2015 cast. Black Virgins are Not for Hipsters The MarshĮcho Brown's hit solo show about desire and doubt returns. students perform Dan LeFranc's comedy about family and food. The Big Meal The Rueff/Strand TheatreĪmerican Conservatory Theatre M.F.A. 678 Beach Blanket Babylon Blvd (Green St.). Beer/wine served cash only 21+, except where noted. The musical comedy revue celebrates its 40th year with an ever-changing lineup of political and pop culture icons, all in gigantic wigs now with new characters like Sia and Bernie Sanders. Tony Kushner's Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winning epic AIDS drama (Part II) gets an East Bay staging in repertory with staged readings of Part I. 3, 2016Īngels in America: Perestroika Town Hall Theatre, Lafayette For more events, plus nightlife fun, your classy invitation awaits in the BARtab section at O&A Feb. Classic plays about the crazy upper class (the "Scottish play"), the revolutionary underclass ( Hair), and the frazzled middle class ( The Call ) reflect a diversity of lives.
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