December is the time for lists โ wish lists (to be strategically sent to every friend, relative and North Pole dweller just in time for the holidays), grocery lists in preparation of big family gatherings, best-of-the-year lists and lists of resolutions for New Yearโs Day (to be forgotten or ignored in short order).

In the spirit of the list-making season, Iโve compiled one of my own in the hopes that it may prove a useful resource for you, dear reader; consider it an early gift for the holidays. Compiled here (in convenient chronological order) is a short lineup of five shows set to hit the stage in the Sacramento area in 2026 that I cannot wait to see.
For those of you who know me โ and to those of you who donโt, hello, nice to meet you, Iโm Odin, I review theater in the area โ you might notice the list includes a few more musicals than Iโd normally include. Though I love music and theater, itโs a lot harder to sell me on a show when itโs a combination of both (sacrilege, to some of you in the theatre world, I know). That being said, itโs hard to say no to โLittle Shop of Horrorsโ or an opportunity to see a staging of Brecht.
Please note that this list is far from comprehensive: Some theatre troupes have yet to publicize or announce their upcoming seasons, so do make sure to keep your eyes peeled for the dozens of shows sure to be on their way next year.
1. Misery
๐ Jan. 21 through Feb. 15
B Street Theatre is poised to start the new year with horror by bringing Stephen Kingโs โMiseryโ to The Sofia. After novelist Paul Sheldon is pulled from the wreckage of a terrible car crash by his โnumber one fanโ Annie Wilkes, he soon finds the wreckage may have been the better place to rest. Wilkes reads an unpublished draft of Sheldonโs upcoming novel, but when she doesnโt like what she sees, she demands a rewrite. A story already packed with dark humor, suspense and tension, the stage adaptation is sure to have audiences nailed to the edge of their seats as the story hurtles toward its conclusion.
2. Romeo and Juliet
๐ Feb. 6 through March 8
The second production by California Volunteer Theater will bring a classically styled performance of โRomeo and Julietโ to California Stage. Though many theater troupes look to add something fresh to Shakespeare through reinterpretation or modernizing, this show is taking a different approach. Rather than add something new, California Volunteer Theater is reintroducing something very old, claiming it will be โthe first production of โRomeo and Julietโ staged with the original music from Shakespeareโs production in at least 300 years.โ This show sounds like a must-see, if only to see a musical rendition of one of the Bardโs most-loved plays not done by Baz Luhrmann.
3. Little Shop of Horrors
๐ March 6-29
When the meekest man imaginable โ floral assistant Seymour Krelborn โ crosses paths with a peckish plant with big plans and a bigger mouth, something more than Miracle-Gro is going to be spilled.
A classic musical (and, full disclosure, one of my all-time favorites) featuring rock โnโ roll, doo-wop and R&B stylings, โLittle Shop of Horrorsโ is the kind of show that will leave songs stuck in your head for a month after seeing it. Iโve more than once gone into an internet deep dive just to see the myriad of ways productions have portrayed the gargantuan man-eating plant Audrey II, and cannot wait to see how Davis Musical Theatre Company goes about it when this show comes around in March.
4. Threepenny Opera
๐ March (dates unannounced)
A dark and gritty musical that pushed the entire genre into strange new places when it was first performed after World War I, โThreepenny Operaโ is a satire that bites at both the criminal underworld and high society (while illustrating how blurry the line between the two can be). Light Opera Theatre of Sacramento will be staging a new English translation/adaptation of the show in a cabaret style this March, and I am eager to see it; at present, this is my most-anticipated show for the first half of 2026. A smattering of the showโs songs have found lives of their own in popular culture, with crooner-lovers sure to recognize โMack the Knife,โ while fans of the Doors might be surprised to hear โAlabama Song.โ
5. Fat Ham
๐ March 18 through April 19
In mid-March Capital Stage will present the Sacramento premiere of the 2022 Pulitzer Prize-winning โFat Ham.โ Juicy, a queer Southern college kid, finds a new level of difficulty in his life when his fatherโs ghost appears in his backyard and demands he avenge his murder. If you think this sounds a bit familiar, donโt worry โ Juicy does, too. But Juicy isnโt Hamlet โ heโs more interested in breaking cycles of trauma and violence than his Shakespearean counterpart. A story in conversation with its literary legacy while confronting new questions, it seems like a sure bet that โFat Hamโ will move audiences with its mix of love, loss, pain and joy.
6. Donโt Touch My Hair
๐ June 12-28
Celebration Arts will play host to the West Coast premiere of Douglas Lyonsโ bold new comedy, โDonโt Touch My Hair,โ once the summer rolls around. When Eemani turns to her best friend Jade after an upsetting job interview, the two decide to de-stress with some hits of a โuniquely potent blunt,โ according to the Los Angeles Times. The pair find the blunt so potent that they soon are launched back in time to an active plantation. Part of a trilogy of stories by Lyons that centers on Black womanhood and self-discovery, the show promises to be funny and eye-opening in equal measure.ย
This story was funded by the City of Sacramentoโs Arts and Creative Economy Journalism Grant to Solving Sacramento. Following our journalism code of ethics and protocols, the city had no editorial influence over this story and no city official reviewed this story before it was published. Our partners include California Groundbreakers, CapRadio, Hmong Daily News, Russian America Media, Sacramento Business Journal, Sacramento News & Review and Sacramento Observer. Sign up for our โSac Art Pulseโ newsletter here.
By Odin Rasco
