date published:
January 17, 2005

Visions
of Sugar Plums...
Boston
Ballet’s rendition of The Nutcracker has long been
one of the area’s biggest holiday events—in fact, it
annually attracts more people than any other staging of The
Nutcracker in the country. This year, however, the 41st
edition of the beloved classic moves from the Ballet’s
traditional home at the enormous Wang Theatre to the more
intimate confines of the historic Colonial Theatre, where it
takes up residence through December 31. To mark the
occasion, the company has re-tooled the production, creating
all-new sets, costumes and choreography to best utilize the
new venue. Based on E.T.A. Hoffmann’s fairytale and set to
the memorable compositions of Tchaikovsky, The Nutcracker is
still sure to capture the magic of the holiday season like
no other event. For those on a budget, another local
tradition takes up residence at the Sanctuary Theatre in
Cambridge’s Harvard Square when Jose Mateo’s Ballet
Theatre’s version of The Nutcracker hits the stage for its
17th year through December 19. |
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Pops Stars
Boston’s
holiday season hits full swing when the beloved Boston Pops
take the stage at Symphony Hall for its annual Holiday Pops
concerts beginning December 13. Maestro Keith Lockhart and
principal guest conductor Bruce Hangen are joined by an
array of special musical visitors—including country music
star Collin Raye and teenage singing sensation Hayley Westenra
(who appear on December 16
in a show to be taped for
television)—and
even Santa himself as the Pops highlight
selections from its new holiday CD through December 31. |
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Poetry in
Motion
A powerful marriage of
the Gospel of St. Luke and the poetry of Langston Hughes,
Black Nativity unites
scripture, verse, music and dance to create a holiday event
brought to life by 160 singers,
actors, dancers and musicians. Boston boasts the
oldest
production in the nation, featuring such memorable songs as
“Go Tell It On the Mountain” and “O’ Jer-usalem,” and is
produced by the National Center for Afro-American Artists.
Through December 19 at the Tremont Temple Baptist Church.
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All Aboard!
Nearly everything in the Bay State tends to be aglow with
twinkling lights this time of year, but for a truly spectacular
holiday display that can be enjoyed while on board a heated
passenger train, head to South Carver and Edaville USA—a
railroad-themed amusement park built around a cranberry bog.
Edaville offers visitors a chance to
step back to a time when rail travel was the only way to get where
you wanted to go. The park also boasts several childrens’ rides and
a museum dedicated to the history of cranberry farming, the state’s
biggest agricultural industry. But it’s around the holidays that
things get truly magical. Board one of several antique trains and
take a five-and-a-half mile journey through the park, which glitters
with thousands of lights. When your trip concludes, grab a hot
chocolate at the Freight House Cafe and then pay a visit to Santa
Claus, who is on hand at Cran Central Junction.
Now Playing
The Brattle Theatre in Cambridge screens the Jimmy
Stewart holiday classic It’s a Wonderful Life, December 17–21. For a
more modern look at the season, check out Steve Odederk’s Santa vs.
The Snowman or The Polar Express featuring Tom Hanks, two animated
3-D films playing at the Simons IMAX Theatre at the New England
Aquarium.
They’ve Got
Legs
They
may have given a high-heeled kick to Boston Ballet’s beloved
version of The Nutcracker (which has been booted over to the
Colonial Theatre), but New York’s world- famous Rockettes are
still faring better in the Hub than their Yankee counterparts
could ever hope to. Boston audiences are lining up to catch a
glimpse of said Rockettes, Santa Claus and a cast of 50 for the
first-ever local appearance of the venerable Radio City
Christmas Spectacular, at the Wang Theatre through December 31.
The show, which has been packing ’em into Radio City Music Hall
since 1933, features everything from the moving “Living
Nativity” scene to a mini version of “The Nutcracker” with 31
dancing bears and a 35-foot-tall Christmas tree. But the real
stars of the show are the high-kicking Rockettes—whether
emerging from Fifth Avenue store windows, hitching themselves
and their 72 legs to Santa’s sleigh, or wowing the audience as
toy soldiers in the classic “Parade of the Wooden Soldiers.” |
Misery Loves
Company
If
the holidays have you gagging at the thought of endless lines at
the mall, visits with annoying relatives and candy-induced
toothaches, Boston’s got just the cure for the holiday blues:
Ryan Landry, the Hub’s reigning king of the pop culture parody.
This year, the playwright and drag performer, along with his
Gold Dust Orphans troupe, is reviving his popular holiday spoof,
Who’s Afraid of the Virgin Mary?, on weekends in December at
Theatre Machine. Cross-stitching the story of the Nativity with
Edward Albee’s searing classic Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,
Landry’s lampoon details
the
feuding couple, Mary and
Joseph—lost in time, still living in Bethlehem and in a
perpetual state of drunken oblivion. Enter the young Kringles,
Santa and “the Mrs.,” for an alcohol-fueled fight to the death
that would make even Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor proud. |
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