Theater: Hilarity and Horror

Live simulcasts of the Metropolitan Opera have become a popular way for area residents to see opera in an entirely new way: lush, intimate and very affordable. For several local theaters, including The Mahaiwe in Great Barrington and Time & Space Limited in Hudson, the simulcasts aren’t just limited to the Met. Later this month, both are showing what is currently the hottest show in the UK’s West End, “Frankenstein,” directed by Danny Boyle and starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller. The two actors are alternating the main roles of Dr. Frankenstein and the Creature, so the play will be shown twice (the first with Cumberbatch as the Creature, the second with Miller). London Theatergoers are seeing both shows and debating fiercely on Twitter and the web who is better in the very demanding role: For the first 20 minutes as the Creature is born, the actor must writhe and stumble about the stage completely naked. “Frankenstein” (not for children under 15) is playing March 17 and 27 at The Mahaiwe, Great Barrington, and on March 17 and 25 at Time & Space Limited, Hudson. – Jenny Hansell “The Drowsy Chaperone” at Rhinebeck’s Performing Arts Center spoofs actors, theater, musicals, guys who love musicals and assumptions about guys who love musicals. It also celebrates everyone who is taken in by the glitz, the silliness, the rat-a-tat of tap the bald-faced improbabilities of the scripts and, of course, the sequins. Don’t forget the sequins. Now this stuff does not always work, Man in Chair (Michael Britt) tells us at the outset. “I hate theater,” he tells us. “It’s all so disappointing. Let it be good,” he prays. “Let it be short.” Well his prayers are answered in this production of a 2006 musical that apes a 1920s show, complete with peacock feathers, trap doors, bumbling gangsters, prohibition martinis and the usual assortment of appealing lovers-singers-dancers and some excellent spitting. The cast is entirely taken in by this dandy bit of fluff. And so are we. — Marsden Epworth Through March 27; Tickets: 845-876-3080. And speaking of fluff, Shakespeare & Company’s “The Mystery of Irma Vep” is winding up its run in the new Bernstein Theater on March 27. This sendup of Hitchcock, Du Maurier, Shakespeare and the Victorians stars an adroit Josh Aaron McCabe and his equal in every way, Ryan Winkles, who juggle multiple roles. The story involves mayhem and all the stuff that attends English manors and a deliciously campy servant (usually Winkles) who lives to make sly eye contact with the audience. It’s a pity these two did not have better fluff to show off their huge talents. ­—Marsden Epworth Through March 27; Tickets: 413-637-3353.

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