Canada’s National Arts Centre sparks outrage with black-only events

A taxpayer-funded Canadian theater organization has sparked outrage after announcing an event that will only allow “Black-identifying audiences” to attend.

The National Arts Centre in Ottawa is putting on a “Black Out” night at its Babs Asper Theatre on Feb. 17 — the middle of Black History Month — for the performance of “Is God Is,” a play written by and starring Black women.

“A Black Out is an open invitation to Black-identifying audiences to come and experience performances with their community,” the theater announced earlier this month.

“The evenings will provide a dedicated space for Black theatregoers to witness a show that reflects the vivid kaleidoscope that is the Black experience.”

The event promptly sparked backlash on social media, with critics accusing

“Cultural Apartheid. The identitarian left proudly appropriates an oldie but goody. Canada is starting to make the USA seem like Hungary,” one person fumed on Twitter.

“Racism is alive and well in Canada. I hope this event is boycotted,” another added.

“So given that the National Arts Centre now does single-race-only shows, are they planning on doing a whites only show?” a third questioned.

But the “Is God Is” performance will not be the only black-invitation-only event sponsored by the National Arts Center.


Helen Belay in “Heaven”- 2021. “Heaven” is the second “Black-out” event scheduled this year.
Janice Saxon: National Arts Centre

A second “Black Out” show is scheduled for the May 5 performance of “Heaven” at the Azrieli Studio.

The NAC — a federal cultural organization — said it was inspired to host two “Black Out” shows after Broadway held a similar event in 2019 for Jeremy O’Harris’ “Slave Play.”

“Honored that ⁦@CanadasNAC⁩ is standing by their commitment to a BLACK OUT performance of one of my favorite plays, ‘IS GOD IS,’” O’Harris tweeted.


The two events are scheduled for Feb. 17 and May 5 at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, Canada.
The two events are scheduled for Feb. 17 and May 5 at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, Canada.
National Arts Centre: Facebook

However, in spite of its own announcement, a spokesperson for the NAC told Quillette podcaster Jonathan Kay that ushers will not be race-checking attendees at the door.

“No one will be turned away at the door,” the spokesperson assured Kay.

Meanwhile, Toronto theater companies the Canadian Stage and Theatre Pass have also taken part in their own versions of “Black Out.”

“If someone self-identifies as a non-Black person and demands to enter the room, a member of our staff will be present to chat with this person,” the Theatre Pass says on its website.

“We try our best to have this labour land on a non-Black staff member and we will have non-Black front-of-house, leadership, or technical and production team members present in the lobby to help de-escalate such situations.”



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Where to buy tickets, prices, dates

Most 88-year-olds are enjoying their retirement.

Frankie Valli clearly isn’t most 88-year-olds.

The 1990 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, “Sopranos” guest star and inspiration for “Jersey Boys” has lined up 23 concerts all over North America in 2023.

That includes huge shows at Newark’s New Jersey Performing Arts Center on April 28, Red Bank’s Meridian Health Theatre on June 1 and Chautauqua’s Chautauqua Amphitheater on June 30.

While we can’t guarantee what Valli will include in his set list, we can bet that mega hits like “Oh, What A Night (December 1963),” “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You,” “Sherry,” “Big Girls Don’t Cry” and “Walk Like A Man” should sneak their way in.

Maybe even “Grease” and “My Eyes Adored You” too.

There really are too many smash singles to name.

So, if seeing Valli live has been on your bucket list forever —or if you want to hear his legendary falsetto in person for the umpteenth time — here’s how you make sure you catch him live in 2023.

Frankie Valli 2023 tour schedule

A complete calendar including all of Frankie Valli’s tour dates, venues and cheapest tickets available for each show can be found here.

Frankie Valli
tour dates
Ticket prices
start at
Jan. 13 at the Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre in Atlanta, GA $100
Jan. 14 at the Florida Theatre in Jacksonville, FL $124
Jan. 15 at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall in Sarasota, FL $95
Jan. 26 at The Plaza Theatre Performing Arts Center in El Paso, TX $74
Jan. 27 at The Buddy Holly Hall in Lubbock, TX $72
Jan. 28 at the Majestic Theatre in San Antonio, TX $165
Feb. 2 at the Orpheum Theatre in Memphis, TN $82
Feb. 3 at the Thalia Mara Hall in Jackson, MS $75
Feb. 4 at the Saenger Theatre in New Orleans, LA $66
Feb. 24 at the Ruth Eckerd Hall in Clearwater, FL $78
Feb. 25 at the Ruth Eckerd Hall in Clearwater, FL $78
Feb. 26 at the King Center for the Performing Arts in Melbourne, FL $139
March 9 at the Findlay Toyota Center in Prescott Valley, AZ $56
March 10 at the Westgate Casino and Resort in Las Vegas, NV $87
March 11 at the Westgate Casino and Resort in Las Vegas, NV $83
April 16 at the Nampa Civic Center in Nampa, ID $43
April 28 at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark, NJ $65
April 29 at the Wind Creek Event Center in Bethlehem, PA $85
April 30 at the Pittsburgh Symphony Heinz Hall in Pittsburgh, PA $83
May 5 at the Riverside Theater in Milwaukee, WI $79
May 6 at the Rosemont Theatre in Rosemont, IL $92
June 1 at the Hackensack Meridian Health Theatre in Red Bank, NJ $121
June 30 at the Chautauqua Amphitheater in Chautauqua, NY $223

(Note: The New York Post confirmed all above prices at the publication time. All prices are subject to fluctuation and include additional fees at checkout.)

Vivid Seats is a verified secondary market ticketing platform, and prices may be higher or lower than face value, depending on demand. 

They offer a 100% buyer guarantee that states your transaction will be safe and secure and your tickets will be delivered prior to the event.

“Jersey Boys”

The musical based on the story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons ran on Broadway from Nov. 2005 to Jan. 2017 making it the longest running show in the August Wilson Theatre’s history.

Although, the jukebox musical is no longer on the Great White Way, you can catch it on tour all over North America in cities like Spokane, WA and Pittsburgh, PA.

Want to know if and when “Jersey Boys” is coming to you?

Check out the show’s schedule to see where it will be when, here.

Other stars from the ’60s on tour in 2023

It’s been a whopping 53 years since the ’60s ended.

Somehow, quite a few acts that broke into the mainstream over the course of the free love decade are still playing to audiences all over the U.S.

Here are just five of our favorite singers and groups that were big back when The Beatles were around who are touring in 2023.

• The Temptations

• The Beach Boys

• Smokey Robinson

• Dead and Company

• Rod Stewart

Want even more of the biggest stars from yesterday?

Check out our list of the 22 biggest classic rockers on tour in 2023 here.

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Kansas theater director found dead after sex abuse allegations

A longtime children’s theater director in Kansas City was found dead on Christmas Eve – days after he resigned amid allegations of sexual abuse.

Jeff Church, 63, who had led The Coterie Theatre for over 30 years, was found dead at his home on Saturday afternoon, the Kansas City Star reported.

The cause of death has not been released.

On Thursday, KKFI 90.1 radio host Mark Manning accused Church on Facebook of assaulting him in 1991 when he was 27.

He came forward by sharing a since-deleted video by Deshawn Young, a Florida-based actor who previously lived in Kansas City, in which he described an assault.

“I am sharing this video testimonial from my friend Dashawn Young. Please be careful. This is very difficult to watch and hear,” Manning wrote.

Mark Manning, a Kansas City radio host, said he was sexually abused in 1991 at age 27.
Facebook/Mark Manning

“My emotional muscle memory was triggered in a way I did not fully expect. I lost it. I became so emotional that I wondered if I could even do my radio show,” he continued.

Manning went on to recount how Church allegedly assaulted him at the director’s home during a party after the production of “Dinosaurs.”

“I found myself pushed back on the bed, his mouth was on my body parts, my clothing seemed to disappear, and very quickly the director had penetrated me,” he wrote.

“It felt like my body was being used. How did this happen?” Manning said, adding that he had heard of many similar accounts of sexual abuse at the hands of the theater honcho.

Actor Deshawn Young posted a since-deleted video on Facebook alleging the abuse he suffered at the hands of The Coterie Theatre Director Jeff Church.
Instagram/@thatsit.thatsme
Young’s post prompted others to speak out about their experiences with the late director.
Instagram/@thatsit.thatsme

Manning told The Star that the sickening acts had been “going on for over 30 years.”

“Most of these people were young theater artists trying to find their way through their theatrical career and a person in a very great authority position of directing them and deciding who gets paid and who gets the job [was] interfering in people’s lives,” he told the paper.

He said that after he shared the lengthy post, three other people reached out to him to share their similar experiences.

On Friday, the Kansas City Pitch first published more shocking allegations against Church from more than a dozen people.

KC Comeaux, an actor who worked for Church in his early 20s, also spoke out on Facebook.

“I was sexually assaulted by Jeff Church. Many of you in Kansas City had no idea of this man’s behavior. Many of you had heard rumors. But I’m here to tell you that he is a predator,” he wrote.

“He has groomed, abused, and assaulted, numerous young men over the course of 30+ years. Myself included,” Comeaux wrote. “…this man, who has used his position of power as an Artistic Director of a renowned children’s theatre, for manipulation and sex exploitation.”

On Saturday afternoon, the theater announced that it had accepted Church’s resignation and planned to investigate the multiple allegations.

“We want you to know that we are taking these allegations extremely seriously and will move forward with the investigation immediately, despite the impending holidays,” it said in a statement.

Instagram/thecoterietheatre

Manning called the lurid matter a “tragedy for our community.”

“I don’t want to see a whole theater company be destroyed because of one person and the horrible things that they did over a long period of time to a lot of different people, both men and women,” he told the paper.

Church’s death comes a month after the Coterie’s executive director, Joette Pelster, died in her sleep at age 71 — a week after she announced her intentions to retire after almost 30 years.

 “Her achievements were many and her impact on the performing arts in Kansas City was immense,” theater rep David Golston told The Star last month.

It has not been confirmed whether others at the theater had known about the allegations against Church, the paper noted.

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Where to buy tickets, best prices

“Almost Famous” is almost done.

After opening on Nov. 3 at the Jacobs Theatre, the Broadway musical closes on Jan. 8 after 77 performances.

Based on Cameron Crowe’s seriocomic rock and roll 2000 film starring Kate Hudson, Frances McDormand, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Anna Paquin and Jimmy Fallon, the play tells the coming-of-age tale of a plucky teen journalist who scores a gig with Rolling Stone in the 1970s following fictional band Stillwater.

And while the stage version trades in the movie’s grounded realism for showy musical numbers, the two do share four crowd-pleasing sing-a-longs that never fail to melt any heart. They are Stillwater’s “Fever Dog,” Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Simple Man,” Cat Stevens’ “The Wind,” and Elton John’s “Tiny Dancer.”

Plus, according to The Wrap, Led Zeppelin’s “Ramble On” and “Whole Lotta Love,” Deep Purple’s “Highway Star,” and David Bowie’s “Jean Genie” and “It Ain’t Easy” all show up as well.

Best of all, some tickets are going for as low as $92 before fees on Vivid Seats.

Not bad for last-minute tickets before “Almost Famous” closes for good.

There’s even a show on Christmas Day at 8 p.m. if you’re looking for an unconventional way to spend the evening.

So, if you want to see this ode to classic rock, journalism and growing up at the height of the Watergate era, here’s everything you need to know.

“Almost Famous” 2022-23 schedule

Below, you’ll find the date, show start time and lowest

“Almost Famous”
show dates
Ticket prices
start at
Tuesday, Dec. 20 at 7 p.m. $211
Wednesday, Dec. 21 at 2 p.m. $133
Wednesday, Dec. 21 at 8 p.m. $92
Thursday, Dec. 22 at 7 p.m. $133
Friday, Dec. 23 at 2 p.m. $102
Friday, Dec. 23 at 8 p.m. $102
Sunday, Dec. 25 at 8 p.m. $102
Monday, Dec. 26 at 2 p.m. $211
Monday, Dec. 26 at 8 p.m. $154
Tuesday, Dec. 27 at 7 p.m. $101
Wednesday, Dec. 28 at 2 p.m. $152
Wednesday, Dec. 28 at 8 p.m. $101
Thursday, Dec. 29 at 7 p.m. $176
Friday, Dec. 30 at 2 p.m. $133
Friday, Dec. 30 at 8 p.m. $102
Tuesday, Jan. 3 at 7 p.m. $92
Wednesday, Jan. 4 at 2 p.m. $92
Wednesday, Jan. 4 at 8 p.m. $92
Thursday, Jan. 5 at 7 p.m. $92
Friday, Jan. 6 at 8 p.m. $102
Saturday, Jan. 7 at 2 p.m. $144
Saturday, Jan. 7 at 8 p.m. $126
Sunday, Jan. 8 at 3 p.m. $126

(Note: The New York Post confirmed all above prices at the publication time. All prices are subject to fluctuation and include additional fees at checkout.)

Vivid Seats is a verified secondary market ticketing platform, and prices may be higher or lower than face value, depending on demand. 

They offer a 100% buyer guarantee that states your transaction will be safe and secure, and your tickets will be delivered before the event.

“Almost Famous” cast

While the film is star-studded and features Oscar-winning actors and actresses, the musical doesn’t have a truly big name among its ensemble.

Here are the five leads you’ll want to take note of when you see the show though.

Chris Wood (Russell Hammond) played Mon-El in the hit CW series “Supergirl” prior to leading the “Almost Famous” ensemble. You may also recognize him for his work in “The Vampire Diaries,” “The Carrie Diaries,” and “Girls.”

Anika Larsen (Elaine Miller) is a stage veteran who has appeared in huge Broadway productions like “Beautiful: The Carole King Musical,” “Avenue Q” and “Rent.” She’s originally from Cambridge, MA.

Solea Pfeiffer (Penny Lane) might look familiar from her work on “The Good Fight” and “Scandal.” She’s also lined up a bit of work following “Almost Famous’” closing— she’s set to appear in Tyler Perry’s Netflix film “A Jazzman’s Blues” next.

Drew Gehling (Jeff Bebe) has done it all. “30 Rock,” “Succession,” “The Blacklist,” “Blue Bloods,” and “Smash” are just a few of his many credits. Onstage, he’s acted on Broadway in “Waitress,” “On A Clear Day…” and “Jersey Boys.”

Casey Likes (William Miller) makes his Broadway debut with “Almost Famous.” However, he is still an accomplished actor, having performed since he was three and appearing in the 2010 Will Ferrell dramedy “Everything Must Go.”

The complete cast list and bios can be found here.

Broadway musicals to see in 2023

Although the window to see “Almost Famous” is closing, many great Broadway musicals aren’t going anywhere anytime soon.

Here are just five shows you can catch on Broadway at any time at all (for the time being).

• “Hamilton”

• “Wicked”

• “Chicago”

• “The Lion King”

• “The Book of Mormon”

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Fun songs, but plot is Bard to love

The new Broadway musical “& Juliet” is “Six” minus five. 

Like that latter original pop-music-packed show did with the sextet of spurned wives of Henry VIII, this jukebox Pixie Stick, which opened Thursday night, has one of William Shakespeare’s ingenues, Juliet Capulet, reclaim her tragic story from her BF Romeo.


Theater review

2 hours, 30 minutes, with one intermission. Stephen Sondheim Theatre, 124 W. 43rd St.

The 21st century girl-power revisions begin at opening night of “Romeo and Juliet” in 1597 London, when Shakespeare’s irritated wife, Anne Hathaway, played by the very funny Betsy Wolfe, intervenes. Why, she asks, does Juliet have to die? 

“Maybe she doesn’t kill herself just because he killed himself,” she insists before singing “I Want It That Way” by the Backstreet Boys and making her husband, played by Stark Sands, redo his tragedy. 

Instead, as Anne demands, Juliet (Lorna Courtney) will run away with best friends May (Justin David Sullivan, the most emotionally effective performer), who’s questioning their gender; April (Wolfe), a character designed by Anne to insert herself into the silly story; and the comedy relief, nurse Angelique (Melanie La Barrie), to ooh-la-la Paris to go wild and find a hot new guy. And the Shakespeare frame story gets lamer as the show goes on. 

Stark Sands and Betsy Wolfe play William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway going through a marital spat in “& Juliet” on Broadway.
Matthew Murphy

This sporadically fun musical from — where else! — Great Britain with a loony book by David West Read suggests this idea is somehow very feminist; that taking a dagger for your poisoned man is the ultimate failure of the Bechdel test. A bit self-righteous coming from a show that includes “I Kissed a Girl and I Liked It” by Katy Perry, dontcha think?

The key to enjoying yourself at “& Juliet” — and it is, indeed, an empty-headed good time — is to ignore the plot entirely and pretend you’re at a concert. And to have the bartender fill your souvenir sippy cup right to the rim with your booze of choice.

Making projecting your mind to MSG easy is the suite of pop songs by Max Martin, the producer responsible for boffo hits sung by Britney Spears, Perry, the Backstreet Boys, Céline Dion and others. Many of those radio favorites are crammed in here. Martin had a lot of No. 1 singles, but his bounty — narratively, emotionally, musically — is not as boundless as the sea.

Romeo (Ben Jackson Walker) and Juliet (Lorna Courtney, center) have unfinished business.
Matthew Murphy

“& Juliet” is a millennial-seeking missile aimed at audience members, such as myself, who grew up on Martin’s catchy tunes. And those nostalgic memories are surely why the phenomenal young cast is visibly enjoying themselves a lot more than your usual company of “Jersey Boys” does.

But unlike the substantial story arcs of ABBA songs used in “Mamma Mia!” or the much more artful pop of “Moulin Rouge! The Musical” (Elton John, David Bowie, Lady Gaga) a few blocks away, Martin’s music is frustratingly vague and static. With 29 of his songs strung together and orchestrated to sound roughly the same, the effect can be mind-numbing.

To help the score make a lick of sense in context, much of the show, energetically directed by Luke Sheppard, is set in the nightclub-like castle of Lance DuBois (Paulo Szot), whose cute son François (Philippe Arroyo) is pursuing both Juliet and May.

A flirty Juliet continuously mispronounces his name as “Frankie DeBoy,” a stupid joke that dumbs down her character solely to enable a forced boy band megamix later on. 

Lance (Paulo Szot) and Angelique (Melanie La Barrie) rekindle an old romance.
Matthew Murphy

Fifty-three-year-old Szot, by the way, is the unexpected best part of this confetti cannon of youth. Hearing the same soaring baritone that he brought to “Some Enchanted Evening” in “South Pacific” in 2008 used on a boudoir duet of “Teenage Dream” and “Break Free” with La Barrie is wildly funny. 

The rest of the show rarely is. Sometimes a song title will get a giggle, like “Since U Been Gone” when it’s trotted out as Juliet is shocked to see Romeo again. However, writer Read leans too hard on groaner dad jokes. Sands’ Shakespeare actually says, “Where there’s a Will, there’s a way.” Out, damned line!

Juliet’s future is also complicated by the surprise return of Romeo (Ben Jackson Walker, but played by puppy dog Daniel Maldonado at my performance). He belts out Bon Jovi’s “It’s My Life,” which is a much-needed rock break from all the bubblegum.

François (Philippe Arroyo, left) and May (Justin David Sullivan) are caught in the middle of an unexpected love triangle.
Matthew Murphy

Courtney makes a kind, sometimes-geeky heroine who fabulously wails Perry’s “Roar.”

But as soon as she’s done, and we are busy wiping away the pointless confetti from our blazers and frocks, we wonder of the entire second act: “What just happened?” Doesn’t matter.

In Shakespeare’s original play, Romeo says, “O teach me how I should forget to think.”

“& Juliet” will teach you, Romeo. And all of us, too.

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Make your kids into lifelong theater lovers with these kid-centric productions

It’s the only theater on 42nd Street that offers stroller parking — and tickets that start at $20. Welcome to the New Victory Theater, where productions from across the country and around the world play out in a family-friendly space at family-friendly prices.

Not for nothing has the New Victory been called the gold standard in children’s theater, the best first stop on the way to taking your kids to see “Wicked” and everything else Broadway has to offer.

This season opens with a bang and a clang in “Cookin’,” a loud, slap-happy import from South Korea. Expect nonstop percussive action as four chefs frantically prepare for a wedding feast, using every utensil they can find, including the kitchen sink.

You’ll see martial arts, hear authentic Korean samulnori drumming and watch as some of the real food onstage goes flying into the first few rows of the orchestra. Recommended for ages 5 and older, the 75-minute show runs Oct. 14-30.

Up next: two productions presented in repertory by the Acting Company, launching pad of Patti LuPone, Kevin Kline, Jeffrey Wright and so many others.

Its “Romeo and Juliet” (Nov. 11-20) is a fresh take on Shakespeare’s star-crossed lovers, set not in the Verona of old but in the present-day American South.

Said Kent Gash, the Acting Company’s artistic director: “As long as there’s human conflict, as long as there are people who don’t like each other for whatever reasons, there will always be a need to tell this story.” The show is recommended for audiences ages 12 and older.

For slightly younger audiences (ages 9 and up), the same cast performs “The Three Musketeers” (Nov. 12-27). Alexandre Dumas’ swashbuckling tale mixes hip-hop and swords in a retelling that hews closer to Dumas’ Haitian roots.

Meanwhile, off-Broadway, the Muppets take Manhattan. Nearly 40 years after the movie of that name, the Muppets are coming to the New York stage in “Sesame Street: The Musical.”

Fully live and very lively, this off-Broadway show opened this month to rapturous reviews, even from grown-ups. Kids of all ages will learn the ABCs of theater through song and dance, with a little help from Count von Count, Cookie Monster, Abby Cadabby and Oscar the Grouch, typecast here as a critic for the New “Yuck” Times.

Scattered amid some “Sesame Street” standards are new songs by such award-winning composers as Tom Kitt, who seems as thrilled to have worked on this as he has on Broadway’s hotly anticipated “Almost Famous.”

“I grew up on ‘Sesame Street,’ with ‘C is for Cookie’ and ‘Rubber Ducky,’” the 48-year-old songwriter tells The Post. “I remember the people that would drop by and talk with the characters. So when I sat down with Elmo the other week, my little kid heart was just soaring. It’s a real testament to imagination.”

“Sesame Street: The Musical” runs through Nov. 27 at Theater Row, 410 W. 42nd St.

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