The Bay Area is a hub of artistic expression, attracting artists, writers and musicians from around the globe to live, work and create. We highlight some of the offerings here.

Somethingโs coming, something good: Opera San Jose is closing out its season with a classic from the Great White Way, launching its seven-performance run of Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheimโs โWest Side Storyโ Saturday night at the California Theatre in downtown San Jose. Soprano Teresa Castillo and tenor Noah Stewart are cast as the lovestruck, star-crossed pair Maria and Tony, and mezzo-soprano Natalie Rose Havens sings the role of the feisty Anita (OK by her in Amer-I-ca!). This will be Opera San Joseโs first-ever production of a Broadway musical, and the company has pulled out all the stops to make it happen, including bringing on a full complement of Jets and Sharks to back up Riff (baritone Trevor Martin) and Bernardo (Antony Sanchez). Christopher James Ray conducts the production staged by Crystal Manich. Performance times are 7:30 p.m. Saturday as well as April 21 and 29 and 2 p.m. Sunday as well as April 23, 24 and May 1. Find tickets, $55-$195, at https://www.operasj.org/ or (408) 437-4450.

Look, up on the building! Those loopy, gravity-defying performers in Bandaloop, the Oakland-based vertical dance troupe, will be launching themselves into the air from the side of the Art Deco style Breuner Building at Grand Avenue and Broadway in Oakland three times this weekend for a project the troupe has dubbed โLOOM:FIELD.โ In celebration of its 30th anniversary, the dance is the centerpiece of a three-part work that is designed to deepen our understanding of the interweaving of arts and industry in the field of textiles (hence the โLOOM,โ you see), and the impacts that industry inflicts on our environment. The area below the Uptown Oakland site will be closed off for picnicking, with food trucks present and some seating provided. The performances, which are free to view, are at 8 p.m. Friday and 5 and 8 p.m. Saturday, and the hip-hop group Alphabet Rockers will be on hand to spell out a few numbers to open the earlier Saturday performance. For more info, check out https://www.bandaloop.org/loom.

A kingโs comeuppance: It can be tricky business, tinkering with the words of William Shakespeare. On one hand, letโs face it, his plays can be a real slog for those of us who are iambic pentameter-averse. On the other hand, cโmon: The dude was the Bard. They donโt give you a title like that if you are a hack. His writing has power and beauty and meaning. Presenting a Shakespeare play with someone elseโs words is kind of like listening to Leonard Cohen songs with Kevin Federline lyrics dubbed in. So we can appreciate the challenging middle ground staked out by the African-American Shakespeare Company in its new production of Shakespeareโs โRichard II.โ A somewhat modernized verse for the play was devised by Naomi Iizuka, and the historical drama has been altered here to a memory play, which means it starts at the end โ after Richard has been deposed โ and looks back at what happened. If all that makes Shakespeare fans a bit nervous, however, consider that African-American Shakes artistic director L. Peter Callender โ one of the Bay Areaโs more talented and knowledgeable theater artists โ is helming this production. He has been involved with countless Shakespeare productions over the years, and frankly, if this new take on โRichard IIโ is good enough for him, itโs good enough for us. Plus, itโs about a vain, selfish and incompetent ruler getting his just deserts, and couldnโt we all use a little of that right now? โRichard IIโ runs Saturday through April 24 at Marinesโ Memorial Theatre in San Francisco. Tickets are $35; go to https://www.african-americanshakes.org/.

Sumptuous Sosa: Pianist and composer Omar Sosa is hard to classify because he is steeped in so many genres and musical cultures. He was a renowned musician and teacher in his native Cuba until the โ90s, when he began a series of moves, to Ecuador, Spain, the Bay Area and then Spain again. Along the way, he has absorbed elements of Latin, African, American jazz, world music, classical and more musical genres and created an extensive catalog of music that is distinctively his own. There is a spiritual, almost weightless nature to much of his music, although his years of studying rhythm and percussion in his native Cuba ensure that his compositions have plenty of movement to them. Among the many friends and collaborators Sosa has worked with over the years is the renowned Senegalese kora player Seckou Keita. They teamed on the 2017 album โTransparent Waterโ and again on last yearโs โSUBA.โ Now the two musicians, along with acclaimed Venezuelan percussionist Gustavo Ovalles, are touring behind โSUBAโ and land at the Kuumbwa Jazz Center in Santa Cruz for shows at 7 and 9 p.m. Thursday ($18.50-$47.25; https://www.kuumbwajazz.org/) and at Berkeleyโs Freight & Salvage for performances 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday ($18-$36; https://thefreight.org/). At both venues, proof of vaccination is required, and masks must be worn inside.

Worst family ever? Actor, playwright and screenwriter Tracy Letts has written some pretty dark stuff over his enviable career โ from โBugโ to โKiller Joeโ and โThe Woman in the Windowโ โ but weโre not sure anything comes close to his Tony Award- and Pulitzer Prize-winning play โAugust: Osage County,โ which came out in 2007 and unleashed the Weston family on a defenseless America. Itโs not entirely that they are bad people โ OK, the matriarch is a drug addict and the patriarch is an alcoholic; thatโs not a good start โ itโs that no one, from the parents to the various kids and spouses and lovers, etc., can seem to keep from harming themselves or each other. The dark comedy begins after the patriarch, a washed-up poet, goes missing and the family gathers to deal with the crisis. And things go downhill from there. If this is the kind of train wreck you canโt help but get absorbed in, know that San Jose Stage Company has opened a new production of Lettsโ play, directed by Kenneth Kelleher and featuring an ensemble cast full of some terrific Bay Area actors: Judith Miller, Allison F. Rich, Randall King, Michael Ray Wisely, Tim Kniffin, Marie Shell and more. So much talent. So much pathos. How can you resist? The show runs through April 24 at San Jose Stage. Proof of vaccination is required, and masks must be worn in the theater. Tickets are $32-$72; go to https://www.thestage.org/.
