Madelyn Geyer - Page 2

Madelyn Geyer

Originally hailing from Reading, Pennsylvania, Madelyn Geyer now calls Austin home. She holds a BA in Film and Media Studies as well as a certificate in Public and Professional writing from the University of Pittsburgh. A deep love of writing, live theater, and creative arts in general drive her to seek out all that the arts scene in Austin has to offer. She loves using reviews as a vehicle to spread the word about inspiring stories being told and inimitable performances waiting to be experienced.






BWW Review: The City Theatre's PARALLEL LIVES Overstays Its Welcome
BWW Review: The City Theatre's PARALLEL LIVES Overstays Its Welcome
June 10, 2019

The City Theatre's production of PARALLEL LIVES eschews elaborate sets, costumes, and production design in favor of highlighting its varied characters and the stories they bring to life. Sadly, the show suffers from a lack of dynamic entertainment value and holds a run time that will have you checking your watch surprised that it's not over yet.

BWW Review: Trinity Street Players' Radiant GODSPELL
BWW Review: Trinity Street Players' Radiant GODSPELL
April 20, 2019

What do clownish costumes and biblical parables have in common? Subversive Broadway staple, GODSPELL of course! Austin's Trinity Street Players take on the classic Stephen Schwartz and John-Michael Tebelak rock musical with an effervescent production fitting for Easter weekend.

BWW Review: All Shall Know the Wonder of SPRING AWAKENING at St. Edward's University
BWW Review: All Shall Know the Wonder of SPRING AWAKENING at St. Edward's University
April 11, 2019

St. Edward's University's choice for their spring musical is aptly named. While the words 'spring awakening' invoke images of beautiful flowers or a warm spring day, this musical contains everything but, with central themes of sexuality, religion, abuse, suicide, guilt and repression. I'll be blunt: go see this production. The cast of St. Edwards University blesses the audience with their talent, capturing the heartbreak, hope, and surprising humor that's integral to SPRING AWAKENING, based on the 1891 German play of the same name by Frank Wedekind.

BWW Review: Back in the USSR: Street Corner Arts' THE LETTERS Succeeds
BWW Review: Back in the USSR: Street Corner Arts' THE LETTERS Succeeds
April 11, 2019

John Lowell's THE LETTERS, in its regional premiere courtesy of Street Corner Arts, is a two person, one act play. It begins in one place, takes us on a journey, and ends up in a place unrecognizable from where it started, all without leaving one governmental archives office in 1930s Stalinist Russia. Through one seventy-five minute long interaction, Lowell's dialogue and Michael Stuart's direction captures the utter paranoia and perpetual fear felt by citizens and leaders alike living in the Soviet Regime.

BWW Review: Style Against Substance in Salvage Vanguard Theatre's ANTIGONICK
BWW Review: Style Against Substance in Salvage Vanguard Theatre's ANTIGONICK
March 28, 2019

Like Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, ANTIGONICK reveals the fate of the characters immediately. ANTIGONICK is award winning poet and Classics professor Anne Carson's reinterpretation of Sophocles' Antigone, part three in his famous Theban plays. Antigone continues the story of eye-gouging tragedy Oedipus Rex, perhaps the most well-known in the Theben plays. Carson's deep knowledge of ancient Greek literature, culture, and history makes her the ideal person to translate and reimagine Sophocles' revered work. She gives the story modernity but holds fast to its universal and still relevant themes of tragedy, grief, and fate. Director Diana Small of Salvage Vanguard Theater puts an experimental spin on Carson's play to make for a truly unique theatrical experience in ANTIGONICK.

BWW Review: Filling Pockets…At Any Cost. A Review of Street Corner Arts' JUNK
BWW Review: Filling Pockets…At Any Cost. A Review of Street Corner Arts' JUNK
February 21, 2019

'This is a story of kings.' The opening line of playwright Ayad Akhtar's JUNK gives the audience an epic summary of what they're about to experience. Kings not determined by the biggest crown or most expansive army, but by the fullest pockets. Robert Merkin, played by Carlo Lorenzo Garcia, is one such king, though unconventional in that the lead character of Akhtar's longest work sees debt as an asset. Robert sits proudly on the cover Time Magazine, and he's ready to capitalize on his role as 'America's Alchemist'. Performer Garcia revels in all the teeth sucking, furtive gesticulating, and slick talking of a classic 1980's Wall Street yuppie.

BWW Review: JANE EYRE, THE MUSICAL Strains to Hit Emotional Beats
BWW Review: JANE EYRE, THE MUSICAL Strains to Hit Emotional Beats
February 7, 2019

JANE EYRE, THE MUSICAL began workshops in 1995 before moving to the La Jolla Playhouse in 1999 for pre-Broadway try-out performances. The musical premiered on Broadway in December of 2000 and closed in June of 2001, scoring 5 Tony Award nominations along the way. And deservedly so. Paul Gordon's elegant music and moving lyrics reveal the simmering passions and inner struggles the main characters face. 

BWW Review: Come and Meet Those Dancing Feet of MacTheatre's Joyous 42ND STREET
BWW Review: Come and Meet Those Dancing Feet of MacTheatre's Joyous 42ND STREET
February 7, 2019

MacTheatre's production of 42ND STREET exudes pure Broadway bliss from the moment a massive line of energetic tap dancers greets the audience from behind a rising curtain. Come along and listen to the lullaby of Broadway…only it won't lull you to sleep.



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