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    15 Shows to See on Stages Around the U.S. This Fall

    Matthew Broderick stars in “Babbitt” in Washington, D.C., and five companies nationwide will stage Eboni Booth’s Pulitzer-winning play “Primary Trust.”For theater companies across the United States, the start of the new season finds them still in a time of uncertainty, with audiences not yet returned to prepandemic levels. It makes sense, then, that a lot of fall programming favors the cozily familiar: revivals of known quantities and fresh takes on classic tales. This list skews more toward the adventure of wholly new work — but it’s peppered with tempting adaptations, too.‘COLD CASE’ An Inupiaq woman from a Native village in Alaska battles to retrieve her aunt’s body from an Anchorage morgue in this new play by Cathy Tagnak Rexford (HBO’s “True Detective: Night Country”). The script won the Barrie and Bernice Stavis Playwright Award, whose previous winners include Sanaz Toossi’s “Wish You Were Here.” DeLanna Studi directs. (Sept. 6-22 in Juneau, Alaska, and Oct. 11-20 in Anchorage; Perseverance Theater)‘PRELUDE TO A KISS A MUSICAL’ Rita and Peter are young, beautiful and headlong in love when an old stranger supernaturally swaps bodies with her: his soul in Rita’s, hers in his. Craig Lucas’s 1988 fable of a play, which became a 1992 rom-com movie, now morphs into a musical, with a score by Daniel Messé (Lucas’s collaborator on “Amélie,” the musical) and Sean Hartley. Kenneth Ferrone directs. (Sept. 10-Oct. 19; Milwaukee Repertory Theater)Jonathan Gillard Daly, left, and Chris McCarrell in “Prelude to a Kiss a Musical,” which premieres in September at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.Don Rebar‘PRIMARY TRUST’ Eboni Booth’s graceful, aching, gently funny play about a lonely man quietly slipping through the cracks of a small American town won the 2024 Pulitzer Prize for drama. This fall, productions are cropping up across the country, including at Signature Theater in Arlington, Va. (Sept. 10-Oct. 20); Barrington Stage Company in Pittsfield, Mass. (Sept. 18-Oct. 13); La Jolla Playhouse in La Jolla, Calif., where Knud Adams, who staged the premiere Off Broadway, directs (Sept. 24-Oct. 20); the Goodman Theater in Chicago (Oct. 5-Nov. 3); and Seattle Repertory Theater (Oct. 24-Nov. 24).‘OH HAPPY DAY!’ The playwright Jordan E. Cooper joins forces again with the director Stevie Walker-Webb, who staged Cooper’s wild sketch satire “Ain’t No Mo’” on Broadway. This new comedy, a reimagining of the story of Noah’s Ark, has original music by the gospel songwriter Donald Lawrence and stars Cooper as an estranged son arriving unexpectedly at a family barbecue in Mississippi. (Sept. 19-Oct. 13; Baltimore Center Stage)We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber? Log in.Want all of The Times? Subscribe. More