Of course, the Cincinnati Fringe Festival is under way, with more than 30 of its 41 primary productions opening this week. As in the past, CityBeat has assembled a team of critics who are catching the first performance of each show and writing reviews for the website’s Fringe hub. It’s your chance to choose a few shows that sound interesting and head to Over-the-Rhine for an evening of creativity. Need some recommendations? I can second Bart Bishop’s Critic’s Pick for God of Obsidian; I saw it and found myself squirming uncomfortably as a domineering man turns a love affair into a nightmare of manipulation. Writer Sue Cohen assigned a pick to Bil Lepp’s Totally Untrue Stories, tall tales by a five-time winner of the West Virginia Liars’ Contest. At least two more Critic’s Picks resulted from Thursday evening’s shows: Paul Strickland’s Balls of Yarns and the performance piece Place/Setting by Cincinnati-based Pones, Inc.; look for reviews online later today. Check out all the info about the Fringe at http://www.cincyfringe.com.

If you prefer more traditional fare, I recommend heading to the Warsaw Federal Incline Theater for Damn Yankees, a 1955 musical about a guy who risks his soul to help his favorite baseball team have a winning season. With lots of great tunes — including “You Gotta Have Heart” — and some fine choreography, this production is the kind of audience-pleasing show that’s Cincinnati Landmark Productions’ bread and butter. I gave this production a Critic’s Pick in the current issue. Tickets: 513-241-6550.

Audiences are certainly being pleased and entertained by the Cincinnati Playhouse’s production of Erma Bombeck: At Wit’s End, the entertaining one-woman show about the legendary newspaper columnist from Dayton. It’s been extended for another week, so you have until June 24 to see it. Tickets: 513-421-3888.

Opening this weekend is something new from the Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati: A long run of a show for kids at its new facility at 4015 Red Bank Road in Hyde Park. Dr. Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat opens today and offers a total of 36 performances on Fridays (10 a.m. and 7 p.m.), Saturdays (noon and 5 p.m.) and Sundays (2 and 5 p.m.) through July 9. It’s being presented in the company’s 152-seat performance space. Tickets: 800-745-3000.


Rick Pender’s STAGE DOOR blog appears here every Friday. Find more theater reviews and feature stories here.

RICK PENDER has written about theater for CityBeat since its first issues in 1994. Before that he wrote for EveryBody’s News. From 1998 to 2006 he was CityBeat’s arts & entertainment editor. Retired...

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