Death Becomes Her

This wildly entertaining musical comedy with a serious serving of pizzazz counts Beyoncé as a fan. It’s not hard to understand why! Fabulous costumes, catchy music, a witty script: Death Becomes Her is good old-fashioned fun. Prepare for some big camp jazzy numbers!!! Costumed by Broadway legend Paul Tazewell, it’s almost worth it for his divine creations alone.

It’s based off of the 1992 film which starred Meryl Streep and Goldie Hawn as two exceptionally vain women in their desperate quest for eternal youth and beauty — with a supernatural twist.

Run Time Icon
Run Time

2 hours, 30 minutes

Dates Icon
Dates

From: May 1st, 2024
Until: October 4th, 2026

Category
  • Musical
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Death of a Salesman
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“Having gone to theatre school, I’m embarrassed to admit I never saw Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman live. Lucky me, a friend braved the early morning queue and secured tickets. This play continues to be all the rage, and in New York that means something. As a Euro in the US, the ‘American Dream’ has lived rent free in my mind for years. Miller’s play is as relevant today as ever, and I find comfort in knowing he cast doubt on the concept seventy years ago. Hope may be the strongest antidote to suffering. Steadfast belief is admired when the upside materializes, but one risks looking foolish when it never does. Miller masterfully bends hope into disillusionment, perpetual optimism into naiveté. Nathan Lane, as Willy Loman, is gut-wrenchingly believable. His wife, played by Laurie Metcalf, supports him unwaveringly as the world around them crumbles, both romantic and tragic. Biff inherits the weight of the dream and crumbles under it. Willy, caught up in his own web of delirium, fails to see his son was never the diamond in the rough he imagined. His continual attempt to polish something that simply isn’t there cuts deep. Do we keep rooting for the Willy Lomans of this world? With all their flaws, I think yes. To be clear, he really ain’t a hero. Hope is not a strategy. But I’d rather live in a world of dreamers than one dictated by realists.”