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Theatre Row Theatres

Misterman

June 28, 2026

Walsh has long been fascinated by characters imprisoned within the architecture of their own memories, people condemned to relive the past not because they have forgotten it, but because they remember it with unbearable precision. "Misterman" may be his most devastating examination of that obsession. Thomas Magill, a profoundly isolated young man living alone in the Irish village of Inishfree, believes himself chosen to shepherd his neighbors toward God's grace. Every morning he ventures into town with his pen and pad noting what his flock must work on to improve their paths to heaven, determined to save their souls, convinced that he alone sees their hidden sins and their capacity for redemption. Yet beneath this evangelical certainty lies a psyche splintering under the weight of grief, abuse, loneliness, and delusion. Walsh transforms what could have been a familiar portrait of mental illness into something metaphysical: an inquiry into the terrible cost of constructing a reality so complete that it ultimately devours its creator. [more]

Hans Litten: The Jew Who Cross-Examined Hitler

February 12, 2026

Despite the admirable commitment to historical accuracy, Lackey’s script is littered with flimsy side characters, muddled messages, and awkward dialogue. The result is a thematically incoherent mess that feels unaware of its own central tragedy. Hans says in Act 1 that he wants to force Hitler onto the witness stand in order to stop the Nazis from coming to power. The play seems unwilling to address that this did not work – that no amount of clever rhetoric would have been enough to stop the tide of Fascism. It would be wildly unfair to blame Hans Litten for failing to stop the Nazis, but it is a grievous omission for a play about him to explicitly frame the story that way and then refuse to grapple with the implications of him failing to do so, both for him as a character and for the ideas he is meant to represent and martyr himself for. Indeed, the play revels in the grace of Hans’ martyrdom. [more]

Merciful Delusions : 4 One Act Plays by Tennessee Williams

November 10, 2022

Director Lorraine Serabian is faithful to the spirit of when these plays were written. She delves into the spirited dreamers and chance takers that Tennessee Williams so faithfully showed us in very poetic theatre of the rawest psychological insight. The scenic design of JR Carter is economical for fast changes between plays, yet evocative of the period it is asked to enhance. Adrian Yuen’s lighting design captures the dinginess and the squalor, yet always craving that sliver of brightness. Williams wrote more one-act treasures than we see here, and this production definitely makes an audience want to experience more of his minor masterpieces. [more]

Strings Attached

September 12, 2022

From the clever double entendre title to its fantastical involvement of three famous long dead physicists, Carole Buggé’s "Strings Attached" tries very hard to rise out of the morass what is basically a sad love triangle but is ultimately overwhelmed by frippery and cliché. [more]