Monday, December 15, 2025

Ten Amazing Productions in 2025

"John Proctor is the Villain"
by Kimberly Belflower
stage door with Sadie Sink
at the Booth Theatre
The American theater is dying. Long live the American theater! So far, so good, we have made it through another calendar year without a single Cleveland theater going under, due not only to the great work we produce, but the strength of our audiences. It is glorious to see.

I had the opportunity to catch many great shows this year, not as many as I hoped, but I was immensely satisfied. Here's a list of shows I really enjoyed, presented in chronological order.

Experts in a Dying Field (Test Flight)

Every single time I see a production in the James Levin Theatre at CPT, I recall that it must be the physical space in which I have ever seen the most live performances. Since 1992, and that was some time ago, when I attended The Chapel of Perpetual Desire presents a Liturgical Circus of Religious Fervour and Live Sex on Stage! I have either witnessed, participated in or produced something in that room several times every single year.

"King James" by Ravij Joseph
Cleveland Play House
Photo: Roger Mastroianni
And many times it has been something like this, a new work with an experimental edge, in this case a series of interpersonal vignettes written and performed by Jonathon Morgan, executed by an ensemble of cheery performers. I like spending time in the same room with people like that.

King James (Cleveland Play House)

Speaking as someone who has written his share of plays that take place in Cleveland, I was very excited to see this two-hander by Heights High graduate Rajiv Joseph. Every story has to take place somewhere, why not here? Why not at the same bar on Coventry where my wife and I spent so many of our twenty-something nights? That it succeeds on its own merits as a tale of friendship and basketball is why it’s justifiably being produced everywhere, but I’m very glad to have seen it with a Cleveland audience.

"The Wolves" by Sarah DeLappe
Dobama Theatre
Photo: Steve Wagner
The Wolves (Dobama Theatre)


My wife and I have raised two high-functioning people into young adulthood, folks whose adolescence was marked by the trauma of encroaching authoritarianism and global pandemic. DeLappe’s play about a girls high school soccer team so carefully tracks what I have seen in my own kids and their contemporaries, what they have been pressed to accomplish and what they have to put up with, should be necessary viewing for anyone who underestimates this generation.

John Proctor is the Villain (Booth Theatre)

I’ve already said many things about this play. This stage direction from the play script says it better:
they scream so loud and for so long
it’s a lifetime of screams
it’s awesome
"Twelfth Night"
Cleveland Shakespeare Festival
Twelfth Night (Cleveland Shakespeare Festival)

Twelfth Night is my wife’s favorite Shakespeare, and it’s certainly one of my top five. It’s a remarkably flexible text, and in production a skilled director can emphasize many different characters, and choose a variety of justifiable moods. The final image of the production at Great Lakes Theater this spring was of the twins, Viola and Sebastian, giddily engaging in cryptophasia. We saw a production in Montreal ten years ago that closed on three characters who were left without a partner – Feste, Sir Andrew and Antonio. Lisa Ortenzi’s production for Cleve Shakes was ideal for free, outdoor theater. It was funny, silly, bright, and very fast.

The Right Room (BorderLight Theater Festival)

We did it, thanks to the folks at BorderLight we produced a play that takes place in a hotel room in an actual hotel room. I got to watch the final dress rehearsal in the Presidential Suite of the Crowne Plaza Hotel – which was also the only rehearsal in the actual performance space – but I did not have the opportunity to experience it with the audience, there was no room. But I could hear it, and that was a lot.

"Sincerely, (the diary play)"
by Bryanna Lee
The Vagrancy
Sincerely, (the diary play) (The Vagrancy)
The day after The Right Room, I managed to see six shows at BorderLight, including this memoir play by Bryanna Lee. And when I say memoir play, I meant that literally -- the entire script is masterfully shaped from found documents (journals, video recordings, medical records, text messages) into a self-elegiac narrative about adolescent hope and betrayal.

Sunday in the Park with George (Great Lakes Theater)

Sondheim doesn’t make it easy. There is a reason this one isn’t done often. It’s challenging in so many ways. I was so excited to have the opportunity not only to see it performed live (for the first time) but also to share it with my entire family. The wall of beautiful voices at the conclusion of each act brought me to tears.

Cat on script.
November 9, 2025
Ten November (reading)

I was introduced to this script by Steven Dietz over twenty years ago, and kept ruminating on a possible production. Living on the Great Lakes, the Edmund Fitzgerald has a kind of personal significance and I have wanted to tap into that. The fiftieth anniversary of the disaster seemed like the last opportunity to acknowledge this. We have a charming little house, full of clutter and love, and don’t have people over often enough, and so created a haunting evening with a cross-section of friends to tell the story.

I Wear My Dead Sister's Clothes (Cleveland Public Theatre)

We end where we begin, in the Levin Theatre. Amy Schwabauer (with director Ray Caspio) has brought this monodrama about grief and things through an extensive development process and I finally took the opportunity to see it at a Monday night showing. I love Monday night theater. We're thinking of developing a new theatrical memoir and just as I was questioning the importance of death narratives, I saw this and feel entirely justified (again). So you all have that to look forward to.

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