A new musical drama looks back to the segregated ’30s.
Twain’s resurrected art-world satire.
An all-woman cast wrings pathos from Shakespeare’s notorious gore-fest.
Once-popular but tough-to-stage plays live again.
Wishing the silences would sing.
Desperately seeking work and romance.
Wartime Brits keep calm and go Western.
Dario Fo’s political farce is eternally updatable.
It’s a success–and perhaps a harbinger of its slimmed-down future.
Teatro Zinzanni’s new show amuses. Now about that food…
Village Theatre keeps a show everyone knows crispy.
Inmates talk theology, and our reviewer’s still trembling.
Enchanting elements on a morbid canvas.
Marya Sea Kaminski wants to say something about violence. Or daddy issues. Or abuse. Or something.
Extrapolating on a 1959 classic.
An androgynous romp through Restoration theater.
In which C.S. Lewis helps Siggy settle the God issue.
Just go see this bleak Beckett two-hander.
A tale of two painters.
Two actors play two couples: one with spawn, one without.