
Center Theatre Group's 2025-26 season: David Byrne's 'Here Lies Love,' 'Paranormal Activity' and more
The Imelda Marcos bio-musical 'Here Lies Love' injects some disco shimmer to the Center Theatre Group 2025-26 season announced Tuesday.
The company behind the Ahmanson Theatre and Mark Taper Forum in downtown L.A. and the Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City released a lineup that also includes the Jocelyn Bioh play 'Jaja's African Hair Braiding'; Eboni Booth's new play 'Primary Trust'; a stage riff on the 'Paranormal Activity' movies; the musical '& Juliet' and a 25th anniversary revival of 'Mamma Mia!'
'Here Lies Love,' featuring music by David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, and lyrics by Byrne, made history as Broadway's first musical with an all-Filipino cast. The production earned 2024 Tony nominations for score, sound design, scene design and choreography as well as praise from critics including the New York Times' Jesse Green, who applauded the 'infernally catchy songs.'
The musical also faced criticism for historical distortion and what some saw as the underplaying of corruption, censorship and violent political oppression in the Philippines during the Marcos regime. The musical has been updated since its 2013 Off-Broadway premiere at the Public Theater to emphasize the People Power Revolution that spurred the end of the Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos era.
In New York, producers transformed the Broadway Theater to evoke Studio 54. Center Theatre Group will present 'Here Lies Love' in the Taper in a run scheduled to open Feb. 11. Snehal Desai, CTG's artistic director, will helm the production.
The comedy 'Jaja's African Hair Braiding' earned Tony nominations last year for best play, direction, scenic design and sound design, and Dede Ayite won the award for her costumes. Set in Harlem, Bioh's play centers on a community of West African immigrants who 'confront the challenges of being outsiders in their own neighborhood.'
Whitney White will direct a co-production with La Jolla Playhouse, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Chicago Shakespeare Theater and Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. It opens at the Taper on Oct. 1.
Booth's 'Primary Trust' was the 2024 Pulitzer Prize winner for drama. The Pulitzer citation called it 'a simple and elegantly crafted story of an emotionally damaged man who finds a new job, new friends and a new sense of worth, illustrating how small acts of kindness can change a person's life and enrich an entire community.' Caleb Eberhardt in La Jolla Playhouse's West Coast-premiere production of 'Primary Trust' last year.
After seeing the play's West Coast premiere at La Jolla Playhouse last year, Times theater critic Charles McNulty wrote: 'This is a quirky, small-scale, quietly reflective work that's as tenderhearted as it is spryly comic and as poignant as it is ultimately uplifting.
'It's refreshing to see such a prodigious honor bestowed on a piece of writing that's content to go about its human business without the need to inflate its own importance.'
Knud Adams will direct the Taper production, which opens in May 2026.
Here are the six major productions in the 2025-26 CTG schedule (in chronological order) announced by Desai, managing director and chief executive Meghan Pressman and producing director Douglas C. Baker. A seventh production will be announced at a later date.
'& Juliet'Book by David West ReadMusic by Max Martin & FriendsDirected By Luke SheppardAhmanson Theatre
Aug. 13-Sept. 7
'Jaja's African Hair Braiding'Mark Taper Forum
Oct. 1-Nov. 9
'Paranormal Activity'Based on the 'Paranormal Activity' films from Blumhouse and Solana Films, adapted here by arrangement with Paramount Pictures and Melting PotWritten by Levi HollowayDirected by Felix BarrettCo-production with American Conservatory Theater of San Francisco, Chicago Shakespeare Theater and Shakespeare Theatre Company of Washington, D.C. Ahmanson Theatre
Nov. 13-Dec. 7
'Here Lies Love'Mark Taper Forum
Feb. 11-March 22
'Primary Trust'Mark Taper Forum
May 20-June 28, 2026
'Mamma Mia!'Music and lyrics by Benny Andersson & Björn UlvaeusBook by Catherine JohnsonDirected by Phyllida LloydAhmanson Theatre
June 23-July 19, 2026
The company's 'CTG:FWD' programming includes three shows at the Kirk Douglas: 'Puppet Up! — Uncensored,' an audience-driven affair featuring creations from the Jim Henson Co., running July 16-27; 'Guac,' writer and star Manuel Oliver's one-man show, from the father of a son who was killed in the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., running Oct. 14-Nov. 2; and 'The Enormous Crocodile,' a musical based on the work of Roald Dahl, Dec. 5-Jan. 4. 'Like It Like Harlem,' a production in partnership with Muse/ique, is scheduled for Aug. 8-10 at the Taper.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Incredibly sad and shocking to us': ‘Andor' creator Tony Gilroy on real-world politics mirroring the prescient ‘Star Wars' series
Andor creator Tony Gilroy is a firm believer that rules can be liberating, at least when it comes to framing a packed two-season series that serves as a prequel for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. 'One of the reasons that the show is as precise and resonant and whole and thematic as it is, is that we know exactly where we're going. We knew exactly where we were gonna end up from the very beginning,' Gilroy said during a panel at the Television Academy's inaugural Televerse Festival in Los Angeles on Saturday. 'I find that liberating.' More from Gold Derby Bryan Cranston reveals the surprising inspiration behind his outlandish character on 'The Studio' Steve Martin reflects on a magical, full-circle 80th birthday: 'It's like going to work when you're 15 and coming home from work and you're 80' Gilroy was joined onstage by his brothers, Dan Gilroy and John Gilroy, who served as writer and editor on the series, respectively. As the Disney+ series has come to a close, landing 14 Emmy nominations this season — despite controversial snubs for stars Diego Luna and Genevieve O'Reilly — the Gilroy brothers dove deeply into pivotal moments from Season 2, including the tragic Ghorman Massacre, the backstory of Luthen Rael (Stellan Skarsgård), and the sacrifice Bix Caleen (Adria Arjona) makes for the resistance while hiding a secret from Cassian Andor (Luna), the father of her unborn child. Tony said that it was a "legit impulse" to have the final moments of the show reveal that Bix is pregnant, because he didn't want the series 'just going off into the bummer of [Andor] dying' in Rogue One. 'Let's be really honest, it doesn't hurt me when I can tell [Walt Disney CEO] Bob Iger there's a baby,' Gilroy explained. 'And he can name it, and he can sex it, and they can do whatever they want with it.' However, Gilroy admitted that convincing the Andor team that Bix's choice to leave Cassian was necessary proved especially difficult. 'Her willingness to leave him for the greater good was an issue that a lot of people had questions about all the way through,' Tony said. ''Would it work?' and 'will it be delivered?' and 'are you going to be able to get us there?' All this stuff. It really helps for anybody who has any doubts. You get to the end, you go, 'Oh my God, she was pregnant.'' That moment of hope is preceded by several tragedies throughout the season, which was narratively divided into three-episode arcs, allowing the show to jump ahead in time. Perhaps the most notable was the Ghorman Massacre, in which the Empire unleashes extreme violence on peaceful protestors who live on the planet Ghorman — an incident that catalyzes the Rebellion. Giving editing credit to his brother John, Dan added that earlier episodes were leading up to the Ghorman Massacre. 'There's so many swirling plot lines,' Dan said. 'This is just a constant building of suspense and tension and energy.' While the Ghorman sequence was 'always on the calendar,' according to Tony, he and his team ultimately had to condense five seasons of storytelling into two. 'We were deep in shooting the first season, and I was trying to come up with a second season, and Diego and I, literally, we're sitting in the backyard of a little hotel in Scotland having a drink and we're like, 'What are we f--king going to do? We can't do five years of this show. I mean, it's just impossible,' Tony explained. '[Diego would] be ancient.' Not only did it take 22 months to produce a single season, but Tony was also concerned about the potential cost and how Disney would respond. So when they landed on the timeskips, he said they felt 'lucky.' 'We were like, 'Wow,' and Disney was like, 'OK, yeah, because we don't want to pay for like 90 seasons of this,'' Tony added. However, working on the story as a series versus a film gave the team more breathing room, with both storytelling and edits. 'Editing is kind of like finding the truth,' John said, 'and it just gave you that couple extra seconds per scene that you're allowed to find the truth.' That truth extended to the audience eventually finding out Luthen's backstory and his connection to Rebellion partner Kleya Marki (Elizabeth Dulao). 'My original reason for wanting a standalone was because I didn't want anybody, after the show was over, to be defining that relationship,' Tony said, also noting his intention to hold out on the explanation for as long as possible. What the Andor team didn't intend was for the show to end up eerily similar to real-world events. 'Mon [Mothma]'s speech was so inordinately, powerfully important to the show. And to me personally,' Dan said about writing her speech, which followed the Ghorman massacre. 'Throughout Andor, the first two seasons covering the five years, what you're really watching is the Senate's descent into total Emperor control,' Dan said. 'So to sit down and go, that's the assignment. I'm going to write an assignment where I'm talking to these two audiences while events in the world are mirroring what this is.' 'I was getting choked up writing it because these are massively important elements in our lives, particularly right now,' he added. As the series continued, the resemblance to reality, Tony said, became uncanny. 'Things were fomenting as we're going, but the detail with which the world has just grafted onto our show and started replicating what we were doing is incredibly sad and shocking to us,' he said, recalling how U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla from California was forcibly removed from a Department of Homeland Security press conference the week Andor was showing the Ghorman senator being arrested in the Galactic Senate. 'Our internal chat group is like, 'What the f--k?'' he said. While Tony was well prepared to write a series about authoritarianism and rebellion, what he said he's especially proud of was the ability for the show to resonate even beyond the screen. 'I don't think I've ever convinced anybody in my family or at a dinner table to change their opinion about anything, ever,' he said. 'I feel happy or I feel affirmed that there are people out there that the show seems to have affected in some way that makes them think about courage.' Best of Gold Derby 'Australian Survivor vs. The World' premiere date and cast photos: 'King' George Mladenov, Cirie Fields, Parvati Shallow … 'Five new life forms from distant planets': Everything to know about 'Alien: Earth' as new trailer drops Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2, including the departure of Tracy Ifeachor's Dr. Collins Click here to read the full article. Solve the daily Crossword

a day ago
Jinkx Monsoon talks Broadway show 'Oh, Mary!'
The two-time RuPaul's Drag Race winner is dazzling audiences as Mary Todd Lincoln in the Tony award-winning outrageous reimagining that is "Oh, Mary!" on Broadway.


Axios
3 days ago
- Axios
Indianapolis weekend events: SausageFest, Colts preseason, Goo Goo Dolls and more
It's time for Indy's biggest sausage fest of the summer. Driving the news: The 21st annual St. Thomas Aquinas SausageFest is back for two days of food, fun and fundraising. Zoom in: Along with plenty of sausages from L.E. Kincaid and Sons meat market, plan for a menu that includes pizza, gourmet sliders and other snacks. Nickel pitch, a dunk tank, a bouncy house, face painting, hair color spraying and other games will entertain the kids. A teen zone featuring music from DJ Jesse West will be open 7-10pm each night. A beer and wine garden will wrangle the adults. Plus: Listen to live music. Friday's local band lineup is The Fabulous Sausagekings, Doghouse Grove, Starlite Lounge, The Downstairs Dads and Hazzardous Meat. Saturday will feature Nuclear Hitchhikers, Whiskey Ninjas, Half the Neighborhood and Streaker. If you go: 5:30pm-midnight Friday and Saturday at St. Thomas Aquinas Church, 4600 Illinois St. Free. Here are the rest of our picks for the weekend: 📽️ Spend the weekend watching documentaries that inspire socially conscious cultural discourse during the 6th Indianapolis Black Documentary Film Festival, Friday-Sunday at Indy Art Center and Kan-Kan Cinema. 🤘 Party with the Brotherhood of Rock when Styx, Kevin Cronin and Don Felder play Ruoff Music Center, 6:45pm Friday. Tickets start at $49. 🎷 Experience the sounds of Tony nominee Ann Hampton Callaway at The Jazz Kitchen, 7pm and 9:30pm Friday. Tickets start at $24. 🎵 Go ga-ga for the Goo Goo Dolls and Dashboard Confessional in concert at Everwise Amphitheater, 7:30pm Friday. Tickets start at $130. 🏀 Catch the Fever at Gainbridge when they host the Washington Mystics, 7:30pm Friday. Tickets start at $13. 🏈 See the Colts' quarterback battle continue when the Green Bay Packers come to Lucas Oil for a preseason game, 1pm Saturday. Tickets start at $51. 🎤 Hang with country music superstars Little Big Town at Ruoff, 7pm Saturday. Tickets start at $27. 🎸 Celebrate the legacy of one of the world's most influential bands during two Beatles tributes. Emmy Award-winning tribute band Fab Four will perform 8pm Saturday at Conner Prairie. Tickets start at $12. Liverpool Legends, a tribute act curated by the sister of the late George Harrison, will perform at The Tobias Theatre at Newfields at 8pm Sunday. Tickets start at $55. 😂 Blend laughter with activism and support transgender comedians during the " Here to Pee" tour, 7:30pm Sunday at White Rabbit Cabaret.