Theatre Thursday: 2025 RoundUp

I saw 11 theatrical productions in 2025. Eight musicals and three dramas. The fall got quite busy with work travel combined with a planned surgery and then a hospital stay to conspire against seeing any live theater anywhere. Then I got sick at Christmas and had to cancel a planned 2-show day. Ah well! The goal of an average of 1 show per month is a goal, not a requirement.

Here are the shows I saw, with links to full reviews if I posted one, and short thoughts for the shows I didn’t.

 

January

Kowalksi, at the Duke at 42nd Street, NYC FULL REVIEW HERE. I saw it off-Broadway. In June 2025 plans were announced to bring it to Broadway in 2026, but no official announcement naming dates or a theatre has been made.

February

Titanique, at the DR Theatre in Union Square, NYC: This absolutely hysterical take on James Cameron’s Titanic, narrated by Celine Dion and featuring a ton of her songs worked into the plot, had us laughing from start to finish. The show is mostly scripted, but there are a few scenes of total improvisation that were just fantastic. We saw it off-Broadway. A short Broadway run at the St. James Theatre has been announced for spring 2026. I plan to see it if it does.

Hadestown, at the Walter Kerr Theatre, NYC. Why did I wait 5+ years to see this? Especially given my love of Graeco-Roman mythology. The music is stunning, the story eternal and yet still topical. The cast I saw included Lillias White as Hermes, Tom Hewitt as Hades, Allison Russell as Persephone, Carlos Valdez as Orpheus, and Hailey Kilgore as Eurydice. What they say is true: even knowing how the story will end, you still hope this time the ending will be different, and you still gasp when it isn’t.

March

Moulin Rouge!, at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, NYC. Despite enjoying the movie 20-something years ago, this really wasn’t on my list of “must see.” But my goddaughter wanted to see it for her birthday, so I joined her. I quite enjoyed it. If I have one complaint, it’s that there were just too many rushed medleys. The actual full-song numbers tend to be more powerful and memorable (Satine’s version of “Firework,” the “Your Song” duet, Zidler’s “Chandelier” and “El Tango de Roxanne” were all showstoppers, or close to showstoppers, at our performance.). See it while you Can Can Can (see what I did there?).

Here There Are Blueberries, at the Bram Goldsmith Theatre at The Wallis, Beverly Hills CA. Written by Moises Kaufman (The Laramie Project), this ensemble piece is  a true story, about the discovery of a book of photographs taken at the Auschwitz concentration camp which show the lives of the German military and civilians who worked there and whether such images should be made public. I lucked into seeing it during its run at The Wallis during a work trip. I have no idea if it’s still touring but it if it is … see it.

April

Old Friends, at the Manhattan Theatre Club, NYC FULL REVIEW HERE

Guys and Dolls, at Beacon High School, Beacon NY. One of my favorite musicals. Beacon High School has a really great musical theatre department.

June

Passengers, at Perelman Performing Arts Center, NYC FULL REVIEW HERE

July

Pirates! The Penzance Musical, at the Todd Haimes Theatre, NYC FULL REVIEW HERE

August

Cabaret Live at the Kit Kat Club, at the August Wilson Theatre, NYC. Finally got to see this near the end of the run. Billy Porter as the Emcee. Marisha Wallace brought down the house as Sally Bowles. The rest of the cast were also excellent, in particular Fraulein Schneider.

Stranger Things: The First Shadow, at the Marquis Theatre, NYC. The stagecraft on this show is amazing. I am still unsure how they did some of the practical effects. Fans of the television show will not be disappointed (although I’m not sure why you’d see it if you were not a fan of the show). The prequel plot fills in gaps between the flashbacks we saw in seasons four and five, and so we see the high school age versions of Joyce and Lonnie Byers, Hopper, Bob Enby, the Wheelers, Dr. Brenner, and other adults from the tv show as well as Henry Creel and his family. I thought the actors playing the younger Joyce and Hopper, and Louis McCartney as Henry Creel, were particularly good.

 

I’ve always loved live theater, and in the past couple of years I’ve been making a stronger effort to see more of it. Theater Thursday is an occasional series where I talk about live theater, both shows I’ve seen recently and shows I’ve loved in the past.

SERIES SATURDAY: 2025 Television and Movie RoundUp

As noted in the past few days’ round-up posts, I did not do a whole lot of television or movie watching in 2025. Despite the huge number of DVDs I own and streaming services I subscribe to. But here’s what I did watch:

 

MOVIES

I had a goal of one movie per week (regardless of whether on DVD, streaming, or in an actual movie theater), so 52 total. I managed: three. Yes. I watched three whole movies in an entire calendar year. If you know me at all, this is definitely not my normal modus operandi.

Those movies were:

Superman (2025), directed by James Gunn; starring David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan, and Nicholas Hoult. (theatre)

Fantastic Four: First Steps, directed by Matt Shakman; starring Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Jospeh Quinn. (theatre)

The Life of Chuck, directed by Mike Flanagan; starring Tom Hiddleston, Karen Gillen, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Benjamin Pajak, Mark Hamill, and Mia Sara.

I greatly enjoyed all three. I keep meaning to do a “page to screen” post about The Life of Chuck. Maybe sometime this month.

 

TELEVISION

I had a goal of watching an average of one episode of television per day in 2025. I managed 63. Again, quite unusual for me. There are several shows I love that I’m now at least a full season or more behind on (like Slow Horses and The Wheel of Time), or that returned late in 2025 and I haven’t started yet (season 2 of Percy Jackson and the Olympians) and a bunch of shows I have yet to start but keep meaning to (I keep hearing great things about The Expanse and Down Cemetery Road) and shows that are soon to show up on American TV from overseas (Mark Gatiss’ new bookshop-set mystery series sounds right up my alley), not to mention all the “one season wonders” I have DVD that I want to do a series of posts about after I re-watch them. So hopefully 2026 will be a better television viewing year as well.

Here's what I did manage to watch:

·       The 78th Annual Tony Awards

·       The 97th Annual Oscar Awards

·       Doctor Who Classic (7 episodes, all while dining at The Pandorica restaurant in Beacon NY)

·       Doctor Who 2005 (4 episodes, 1 at the Pandorica, the others at a friend’s house)

·       Doctor Who 2023 Season 2 (all 8 episodes, streaming, Disney+)

·       Only Murders in the Building Season 5, (all 10 episodes, streaming, Hulu)

·       Poker Face (1 episode from S2, at a friend’s house)

·       Shoresy Season 4 (all 6 episodes, streaming, Hulu)

·       Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3 (all 9 episodes, streaming, Paramount+)

·       Stranger Things Season 5 (all 8 episodes, streaming, Netflix)

·       What If…? Season 3 (all 8 episodes, streaming, Disney+)