Jahi Kearse Steps Into Real-Life Roles At B Street And On Broadway
January 15, 2019 | Cody Drabble
Sacramento-based actor Jahi Kearse starts off 2019 performing the roles of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Berry Gordy.
January 15, 2019 | Cody Drabble
Sacramento-based actor Jahi Kearse starts off 2019 performing the roles of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Berry Gordy.
December 18, 2018 | Cody Drabble
Actor Rich Hebert and Associate Artistic Director Lyndsay Burch join Insight to preview the new play “Halftime With Don” at B Street Theatre this month.
August 9, 2018
The B Street Theatre presents “We’re Gonna Be Okay,” a play set during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
June 14, 2018 | Cody Drabble
The B Street Intern Program is debuting a new, one-woman play called "A Yippie's Day at Disneyland" based on real-life events in 1970.
May 17, 2018 | Jeff Hudson
B Street Theatre likes to begin summer with a comedy on the lighter side. Its new show, “Airness,” is a pop culture confection featuring a mix of eccentric characters dressed as superheroes, pretending to play rock guitar anthems from decades past.
May 11, 2018 | Cody Drabble
Upstairs at the B opens up with new programs to feature works by the B Street Theatre artists in residence.
March 2, 2018 | Jeff Hudson
The theater company is producing its first production on its larger stage: a musical that introduces the nonviolent ideals of Gandhi to kids. It’s a show that grown-ups will enjoy as well, even if they come on their own.
November 14, 2017 | Cody Drabble
The B Street Theatre presents "A Moving Day," the final play that will run on its mainstage through December 24. Actor Kurt Johnson and Artistic Producer and playwright Dave Pierini talk about the last show at the original B Street Theatre location.
September 21, 2017 | Jeff Hudson
Critic Jeff Hudson says Sacramento’s B Street Theatre is staging of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” is a darkly humorous portrait of a failing marriage, brimming with booze and bickering.
August 15, 2017 | Jeff Hudson
Sacramento’s B Street Theatre is presenting a one-man show that is simultaneously a whodunit involving a missing boy, and an affirmation of the human spirit. It’s the nicest surprise of the summer theater season.