The Red Planet is Museum of Science’s guest of honor this summer, with an enormous globe of Earth’s closest cousin in the Solar System, an interactive planetarium show, a life-sized model of NASA’s Perseverance Rover, a simulation of the planet’s surface, and more. $50-$165, through July 30, Loeb Drama Center, 64 Brattle St., Cambridge KID-FRIENDLY It also has an increased focus on what it was like for a young Eva Perón to rise through the unforgiving world of Buenos Aires society to become the glamorous but doomed first lady of Argentina. Long considered a glitzy Broadway production anchored by showstopping song “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina,” the performance here promises a more intimate production on a smaller stage. But at the American Repertory Theater, director Sammi Cannold reprises an updated version that premiered just four years ago in New York. The Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice musical Evita has been a cornerstone of musical theater for generations. $25-$190, extended through July 23, The Huntington Theater, 264 Huntington Ave., Boston This 2013 generational drama, a hit on Broadway presented here in an original production from Huntington Theater, tells the story of the three Lehman brothers, who started off as humble German immigrants in the 1840s, unaware that the fledging company they’d pass to their progeny would contribute to financial disaster a century and a half later. The Lehman Trilogy, running though Jat The Huntington Theatre.
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