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    Theater Critic Picks

    These are the 10 can't-miss shows in Dallas-Fort Worth theater for April

    Lindsey Wilson
    Apr 3, 2017 | 3:45 pm

    April onstage seems to be all about what's new, with several world and regional premieres joining fresh interpretations of dramatic classics. Like a Greek tragedy staged outside with the audience wearing headphones, or a new musical about an Old West legend that's written by a country superstar. That kind of new.

    Here are the 10 shows to see, in order by start date:

    Electra
    Dallas Theater Center, April 4-May 21
    Artistic director Kevin Moriarty said he encountered a lot of pushback and skepticism when he first presented his ideas about staging Electra: outdoors, with the audience following the action around rather than sitting and watching. Oh, and they'd be outfitted with headphones through which the Greek chorus would voice their lines. Regardless of the resistance, Moriarty's vision is happening in Annette Strauss Square, with a later-than-normal curtain time of 8:30 pm to account for later sunsets.

    Straight White Men
    Second Thought Theatre, April 12-May 6
    "[This play] is asking me to have compassion for a group of people who have not always shown me such compassion.” That's a quote from director Christie Vela, a Mexican-American woman, about this play by a Korean-American woman who confronts straight, white male privilege in the 21st century. “If we want to affect change, if we want those who have marginalized us to see us for who we are and what we really have to offer, should we help them see themselves first?”

    Really
    Undermain Theatre, April 12-May 6
    Photography is the framework for this play by Jackie Sibblies Drury, which is making its Dallas premiere with Carson McCain at the helm. In it, three people's lives intertwine as they search out their common history and explore what artists leave behind as their legacy.

    Medea Myth: Love's Beginning
    PrismCo, April 13-23
    The first of this season's Elevator Project shows is, presumably, a movement-based retelling of Medea. "Presumably" because there isn't a whole lot of info available yet, but PrismCo's entire ethos is built around physical interpretations of myths, fables, and other tales, so expect the company to use full advantage of the Wyly Theatre's versatile 6th-floor performance space.

    The Gospel According to Thomas Jefferson, Charles Dickens, and Count Leo Tolstoy: Discord
    WaterTower Theatre, April 14-May 7
    The play's description jokes, "A Founding Father, a Victorian novelist, and a Russian revolutionary walk into a … stop if you’ve heard this one." For 90 minutes, three historical figures hash out their thoughts on scripture and the true meaning of existence, all through the voice of playwright Scott Carter, executive producer of HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher.

    Susan and God
    Theatre Three, April 20-May 14
    If you've been watching Feud and upping your Joan Crawford intake, perhaps you came across her performance in the 1940 film version of Rachel Crothers' 1937 play. In it, she portrays a self-centered socialite who discovers a new religious cult and begins forcing the new fad on all her friends. Crothers was "the Neil Simon" of her day, with more than 30 shows on Broadway and a Pulitzer Prize nomination, yet hardly anyone remembers the playwright today.

    Rasheeda Speaking
    Circle Theatre, April 27-May 20

    Denise Lee and Lisa Fairchild head the cast of this psychological thriller, which also has the added layer of racial contention. One coworker receives a promotion that means she now monitors the other — and things obviously don't go well.

    Quanah
    Lyric Stage, April 28-May 7
    Grammy Award-winner Larry Gatlin has a new musical up his sleeve, about the last Comanche chief, Quanah Parker, and his mostly white family's settlement of 19th-century Texas. There has been some controversy surrounding the casting of David Phelps as Quanah, but Gatlin and Lyric Stage are adamant that the Grammy winner's voice is the only one that could do justice to Parker's story.

    The Trap
    Amphibian Stage Productions, April 28-May 21
    Amphibian staged Kieran Lynn's Crossing the Line last summer, and now it's presenting the world premiere of Lynn's newest work, which sounds to have all the hallmarks of an absurd dark comedy. A pair facing deep financial struggles decides their only option is to clean out the safe at their work, a payday loan company, only to find their gambling-addicted boss has the same idea.

    De Troya
    Cara Mía Theatre Co., April 29-May 14
    Part ghost story, part urban fable, part cracked fairy-tale — Caridad Svich's world premiere follows two young people who are yearning to escape yet unsure of their direction. The Obie-winning playwright's newest work is directed by Cara Mía artistic director David Lozano.

    Lyric Stage will mount Larry Gatlin's world-premiere musical Quanah.

    Larry Gatlin
    Photo courtesy of Larry Gatlin
    Lyric Stage will mount Larry Gatlin's world-premiere musical Quanah.
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    RIP Albert

    Colorful and iconoclastic Dallas artist Albert Scherbarth dies at 70

    Teresa Gubbins
    Feb 19, 2026 | 11:44 am
    Albert Scherbarth
    Courtesy
    Dallas artist Albert Scherbarth

    Dallas artist Albert Scherbarth, known for his jubilant creativity which he displayed in a wide range of media, died on February 18; he was 70 years old. According to friends, he suffered a heart attack.

    Scherbarth's myriad "canvases" ranged from printmaking to furniture to steel and metal working. He was a colorful presence in the Dallas art scene with a shock of thick hair that stood tall, definitive horn-rimmed glasses, and an unfiltered, no-nonsense personal style.

    He was also a key figure in the Cedars District: an urban pioneer who settled in the area directly south of downtown Dallas in the early '80s when the neighborhood was a mostly-deserted collection of abandoned warehouses, before it became a major art nexus.

    A post by Lee Harvey's, the Cedars District bar, said that "Some people don’t just live in a neighborhood — they leave their mark on it. Albert did exactly that. Through his art, his presence, and his time at our bar, he became part of the story here. We’ll miss him more than we can say. Rest easy Bert."

    He was a real character, as well — a stocky physical presence (he played football in high school) who'd fix his stare upon you as if you were a critter to be studied.

    One friend said, "I always feel that Albert is going to spring some meta shit on me every time i see him and he rarely disappoints. What a cool cat."

    A native of Nebraska, Scherbarth moved to Dallas in 1979 to earn a master's in fine arts at the University of Dallas, Irving. After graduating in 1981, he began teaching in the community college district, including Brookhaven College, Northlake College, University of Texas at Dallas, and the Creative Art Center, as well as at Dallas' Arts Magnet.

    Albert Scherbarth Sculpture by Albert Scherbarth which appeared at the State Fair of Texas in 2018.Laura Walters/Facebook

    After graduating from art school, he felt the need to do "real" work like his father, and took jobs in construction and woodwork, which helped shape the very physical nature of his art.

    He was one of the early and many artists who resided in the Continental Gin Building, where he worked on his designs and commissions, fabricated other artists’ ideas, and helped galleries with installations, crating, and shipping.

    Through the years he made furniture, got into fused and cast glass, poured concrete countertops, and painted, including a successful era of doing giant flower paintings. In his latter years, he acquired a welding machine and worked with builders, designers, and architects constructing screens, fences, furniture, and sculptures.

    His works around town include a giant wine tree for Fleming Steakhouse in Frisco, and a sculpture named, "Cecil, age 12" up on Henderson Avenue at Capital Street which was was a finalists for the Henderson Art Prize. He also worked on the famed Bowler Hat sculpture in the Cedars.

    In an interview with Voyage Dallas, he said, "I’m constantly looking for more meaning and more permanence in the work that I’m doing," and acknowledged that "I’ve been very, very fortunate to get a lot of really great commissions over the years. I’ve sold a lot of work and fallen into great studio situations – large spaces, cheap rent and wonderful landlords. Today, I think my ignorance of all the pitfalls ahead allowed me to storm through life and I have a certain stubbornness, a dogged determination to succeed."

    "My grandfathers died before I came of age, my father died, my favorite uncle died so there was not much in the way of male guidance or perspective on how to be a man, so I’ve just kind of made it up on my own, stumbling through, winging it and I’m still alive, amazingly enough."

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