

įRIDAY (Photo: Russ Rowland, via One Year Lease Theater Company / Facebook) Diane is played by actor Becca Blackwell, who describes themself as “someone living both genders,” and according to mythology, it’s likely that the actual Dionysus did too. Rather than a bearded being clutching the traditional grapes and a drinking horn, George’s Dionysus takes the form of Diane, a butch lesbian gardener with a penchant for seducing housewives. Currently, you can find the wine-soaked deity in Madeleine George’s play Hurricane Diane, directed by Leigh Silverman. The hedonistic, hard-partying Greek god Dionysus has shown up in countless pieces of culture over the years, from the old classics to the name of a record label.

Now through March 24 at New York Theater Workshop, various times: $69 ($25 same-day rush tickets available for young people, artists, and East Village and Lower East Side residents) SUNDAY Leigh Silverman and Madeleine George (image via NYTW / Facebook) Expect tales of pasta, funerals, cannoli, and of course, plenty of sauciness. Fittingly, Modica will be presenting absurd anecdotes of all sorts inspired by the Italian side of her family, with help from fellow performers Brian Fiddyment, Eliza Kimberley, Francesca d’Uva, Rachel Kaly, Chase Montavon, and opener Steve Girard. Those three descriptors could very well also characterize comedian Edy Modica’s play of the same name, coming to Ridgewood’s The Windjammer this Saturday. What is there to say about cream sauce? It is indulgent and sometimes too filling, but it is also good. Saturday, March 16 at The Windjammer, 8 pm:
FOOTLIGHT RIDGEWOOD FREE
That’s not the only liquid present, however, there will also be free beer from Braven, and of course, comedy by Dylan Adler, Rachel McCartney, Ben Katzner, David Drake, and host Noah Rocklin. However, you might end your night with some-the team behind the show will be giving out drippy dollars (which could be a good band name) to a lucky(?) audience member. Yes, this comedy show to benefit Make the Road NY is named Wet Cash, but it’s probably not the greatest idea to stroll up to the venue (a Bushwick thrift store) and attempt to pay your suggested donation using a bunch of dollars that were once floating in a bucket of water. Amongst pints and whiskeys, two Scottish men and an American woman cross paths and begin a journey that takes them throughout Scotland, America, and the inner workings of the mind, all set to a Scottish-influenced folk-punk score.įRIDAY (image via Wet Cash NYC / Facebook)įriday, March 15 at GG’s Social Trade and Treasure Club, 7:30 pm: $10 suggested donation Of course, that’s purposeful, considering the show is partially set in a London pub. The latest endeavor from theater collective The TEAM-working in collaboration with the National Theater of Scotland and music duo The Bengsons-is staged not in a traditional theater space but the cabaret coziness of Joe’s Pub, inside the Public Theater. Now through March 30 at Joe’s Pub, 7 pm (some dates at 9:30 pm): $35

Thus, we’re transported from this place that resembles a suburban rec room with its parquet floor and worn-in couch to some abstract yet magical place.THURSDAY (photo: Eoin Carey, via the TEAM / Facebook) Rather, Snyder’s warm spirit encourages us to lean in like she’s beckoning us to move from the proverbial backseat to shotgun. The artist drapes her arms over a person’s lap and dances inches away from another.

Perhaps it’s the intimate space that affords these moments, but I get the sense that’s just who she is. Locking eyes with audience members and even, at times, laughing to herself, she is giving and self-possessed. Her arms arcing into sumptuous, invisible cursive, the fair-haired Snyder moves like she’s suspended in water. Judkins, wispy and long-limbed, exhibits a compelling steely reserve as she responds to her counterpart’s playful buoyancy. Judkins is the yin to Snyder’s yang, yet the two function in careful harmony. Laurel Snyder's Loop with Adam Schatz and Emma Judkins Photo by Maria Baranova.
