Mariah Carey, State Theatre, March 13
She has scored 18 No. 1 pop singles, collected five Grammys and sold more than 200 million records worldwide since 1990. And Mariah Carey has performed exactly 0 — zero! — concerts in the Twin Cities. There was a lip-sync cameo at KDWB's all-star Last Chance Summer Dance in 1999 and a brief performance at Mall of America for NBC's "Today" cameras in 2002. Carey has announced Twin Cities shows twice but canceled, including in 2018. Now, finally, on her 11th headline tour, the New Yorker with the grandiose voice will give a proper concert in the Twin Cities.
Jon Bream, music critic
'Black Leopard, Red Wolf' by Marlon James, Feb. 5
Fantasy? Not really my thing. Trilogies? Meh. But — but — I am not the only one excited for the February release of this book from Riverhead. James, who lives in Minnesota, won the 2015 Man Booker Prize for "A Brief History of Seven Killings," but his latest is something entirely different. Rich with African legends and history, it's a fantasy with shape-shifters and wizards and giants and a quest to find a missing child. And yes, it's the first in the Dark Star Trilogy. All reviews say it's stunning. I can't wait.
Laurie Hertzel, senior books editor
'Autonomy,' Mixed Blood Theatre, May
I don't love hanging out in my Honda Civic any more than I have to, but I'm willing to do it to see what Mixed Blood is cooking up. Director Jack Reuler believes the future of theater will happen outside of theaters and he is demonstrating that with a production of Ken LaZebnik's play "Autonomy," which will require audiences to drive from scene to scene (possibly in a parking garage, although that and the exact May dates of the play are still being worked out). The show has to do with car culture and Netflix-style binge-watching. Mixed Blood already is promising an explosive finish — for the play, let's hope, rather than our cars.
Chris Hewitt, theater critic
FX's 'Fosse/Verdon,' sometime this spring
I've never thought of Sam Rockwell as a hoofer, but that may all change with the eight-part TV series "Fosse/Verdon." The recent Oscar winner plays the legendarily fast-footed, volatile choreographer Bob Fosse, keeping pace with Michelle Williams as Gwen Verdon, the stage sensation who was also Fosse's wife. University of Minnesota grad Aya Cash and Chanhassen Dinner Theatres veteran Laura Osnes are also on board for what promises to be a celebration of Broadway, and bedlam.
Neal Justin, TV critic