Your resource for New York City theater Off- and Off-Off-Broadway.
Theater Reviews
EDITOR’S NOTE
Gotham Storytelling fest sets schedule of performers
Barlume, a restaurant in the Flatiron District, is hosting Pop Up Dinner Theater every Sunday in November prior to Thanksgiving. Four one-act plays will be performed while audience members enjoy a four-course dinner. The show, described as semi-immersive, is produced by Suite 524, a company “devoted to preserving the power of live performance in the age of AI.” Pop Up Dinner Theater features the plays Fine Dining by Eduardo Machado (cofounder and artistic director of Suite 524), Peekos at Barlume by Sandi Farkas, The Cowboy by Michael Sharp, and See the Forest by Michael Domitrovich. Showtimes are 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Nov. 9, 16 and 23. Tickets and more information are available here. —Edward Karam
Two one-act solo performances will be part of a double bill at Winterfest, presented from Nov. 20 to Dec. 7 at TheaterLab (357 West 36th St.). The one-acts are Full Contact, written and performed by Ariel Estrada, and X#*! You very Much, Mom, written and performed by Đavid Lee Huynh. Also part of the Winterfest event is a one-night-only free staged reading of Blood/Sucker by Anamaria Guerzon on Nov. 24. For tickets and more information, visit leviathanlab.org. —Edward Karam

Many an actor has played Shakespeare’s problematic Shylock, the centerpiece of Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice, since Elizabethan times. Even in “officially” Jew-free England (nominally from 1290–1656, though Sephardic Jews fleeing the Spanish Inquisition did live there), stereotypes of Shylock the Jew prevailed. Yet relatively rarely has a Jewish actor been cast as Shylock, especially in today’s “cancel culture.” In Playing Shylock, dramatist Mark Leiren-Young’s solo play, actor Saul Rubinek channels this issue.