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A Play of the Times

Kitchen Dog Theater's near-perfect Detroit avoids cheap laughs

Lauren Smart
Oct 3, 2013 | 2:22 pm

Kitchen Dog Theater scores big with its season opener, Detroit. Tim Johnson's sharp direction adds rich meaning to a poignant comedy about American financial collapse.

When Sharon (Jenny Ledel) and Kenny (Jeremy Schwartz) move next door to Mary (Tina Parker) and Ben (Ira Steck), they strike up a neighborly friendship. They host barbecues in the backyards of their quiet suburban neighborhood.

As the stable couple, Mary and Ben take on a mentorship role in the friendship, offering advice on Sharon and Kenny's financial woes. Early on in the play, Sharon and Kenny confess they met in rehab and are trying to establish a sober, secure life.

Tied up in a play about economic stability is a story of human fragility.

Throughout her play, Lisa D'Amour builds perceptions only to shatter them. On the surface, Detroit juxtaposes two couples on the topics of financial stability, social norms and morality. Although the cast delivers riotously funny performances, the first few scenes seem unconvincingly feeble.

As the play unravels, the characters and the brilliant design work reveal the metaphors steeped in the narrative. Mary hovers over Ben, who recently lost his job. She believes he spends his days working on a start-up company, and Kenny trusts him as a financial adviser.

Just across the flat, green lawn, Sharon and Kenny struggle to fill anything besides their fridge. One of the most incisive pieces of Clare Floyd DeVrie's set is the representation of a level playing field.

All four people onstage have lost or are losing the agency they believed they possessed. In one of the most revealing scenes, Mary rushes to seek friendship from Sharon late at night. This unsettling moment increases when Sharon admits her unending desire to escape in the drugs from which she is recovering. Tied up in a play about economic stability is a story of human fragility.

Johnson directs this intricate story with a rigid tenderness. He doesn't stoop to easy comedy, instead keeping the characters in an uncomfortable reality. Sharon and Mary develop a very real friendship, while Ben and Kenny struggle with male power dynamics. Leading this stellar cast, Parker allows Mary to melt from a skeptical opinion of Ledel's wide-eyed Sharon to an empathy that feels a lot like self-pity.

In many ways, Detroit is the perfect play. It offers considerations about a highly relevant topic — without pandering — all the while entertaining audiences with a warm sense of humor. The people onstage are people you know, the situations realistic.

---

Detroit runs through October 26 at McKinney Avenue Contemporary.

Detroit runs through October 26 at McKinney Avenue Contemporary.

Kitchen Dog Theater presents Detroit
Photo by Matt Mrozek
Detroit runs through October 26 at McKinney Avenue Contemporary.
unspecified
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Theater News

Dallas Children’s Theater stages 5-show lineup for 2026-27 season

Alex Bentley
Mar 10, 2026 | 10:58 am
Dallas Children's Theater at Rosewood Center for Family Arts
Photo courtesy of Dallas Children's Theater
Dallas Children's Theater

Dallas Children's Theater will ramp their schedule back up to five productions for the 2026-2027 season, with each of them being first-time shows for the company.

It's a hopeful return to form for the only professional live theater in North Texas dedicated exclusively to young audiences and their families.

After initially announcing five productions for 2025-2026, they trimmed that season down to three due to budget cuts.

The company's 43rd season since debuting in 1984 will kick off with the the Texas premiere of Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed: The Rock Experience, an musical version of Mo Willems’ book.

Running in September and October 2026, the production features Wilbur and all his fellow naked mole rats in the Tunnel, who have always been, well ... naked. Wondering what other possibilities are out there, Wilbur discovers a love for clothing and style.

A special lesson and rock show all in one, Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed has energetic songs, quirky characters, and a story unlike any other. It is recommended for ages 4 and up.

That will be followed by the holiday show Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, running in November and December. The holiday classic soars off the screen in this musical adaptation of the beloved television special.

When a storm threatens to keep Santa's sleigh from taking flight, what makes Rudolph different turns out to be what helps him save Christmas.

Recommended for ages 4 and up, the musical is filled with holiday hits and favorite characters like Santa and Mrs. Claus, Hermey the Elf, and, of course, Rudolph.

Kicking off the 2027 portion of the season will be Corduroy, a visually imaginative, highly physical stage adaptation of Don Freeman’s beloved children’s book.

Running in January and February and making its professional Texas premiere, it features a story in which Corduroy’s button has gone missing, and he can’t go home with kindhearted Lisa without it.

The beloved teddy bear takes a rollicking ride up the escalator and begins a delightfully destructive romp through every section of the department store to find it. The production is recommended for ages 3 and up.

Dallas Children's Theater will leave Earth for their fourth production, Marooned! A Space Comedy, running in March 2027.

An astronaut traveling 87,000 light years into space crash-lands on an uncharted planet where she must resort to emergency measures to seek rescue.

From the award-winning team Alex and Olmsted, the show features elegant puppetry design and joyful, meaningful storytelling, incorporating live performance, shadow puppetry, and marionettes. It is recommended for ages 5 and up.

The final show of the season will be The Secret Garden: Spring Version, in which the classic of children's literature is reimagined in musical style by composer Lucy Simon and Marsha Norman, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright of 'Night Mother.

Orphaned 11-year-old Mary Lennox returns to Yorkshire to live with her uncle Archibald and his son Colin. The estate's many wonders include a magic garden which beckons the children with haunting melodies and the spirits from Mary's past who guide her through her new life, dramatizing The Secret Garden's compelling tale of forgiveness and renewal.

The production is recommended for ages 7 and up.

“This is a meaningful moment for Dallas Children’s Theater,” said DCT Executive Director Michael Meadows in a statement. “We’re strengthening our financial foundation, supporting the artists who make this work possible, and ensuring that every child who walks through our doors experiences the transformative power of live theatre."

Tickets for the 2026-2027 season go on sale Friday, May 1 at dct.org or by phone at 214.740.0051.

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