Review: The Pigeon in the Taj Mahal at curtainup.com
- Laoisa Sexton's play is an inventively staged, well-acted comic romp underpinned by a serious theme
- Laoisa Sexton's play is an inventively staged, well-acted comic romp underpinned by a serious theme
The General as a hip-hop mogul...and it works
Nicky Silver's new play is a case of The Lyons/Redux. .
smartly streamlined - Sutton Foster is a delightful Charity Hope Valentine in this smartly streamlined reviva
your appreciation of this screen-to-stage adaptation will depend a lot on how you felt about the movie . .
Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet - The little musical engine that could makes a triumphant landing on Broadway -- with review of Groban's substitute
It turns out the Gabriels of Richard Nelson's Rhinebeck trilogy voted for the losing candidate
Pulitzer Prize winner Suzann-Lori Parks takes us on a fantastical ride to reclaim the lives of black people in the history books .
William Finn's chamber musical still sings its way right into your heart.
Anna Deveare Smith's provocative new 17-character solo
the Irish Rep celebrates its renovated home's completion with this hit-after-hit musical from another era
Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage takes theater goers into the world of blue collar Americans faced with downsized and disappearing manufacturing jobs
Janet McTeer and Liev Schreiber bring the bored, sexual predators of pre-revolutionary France back to Broadway
Adam Bock's cautionary tale about committing ourselves to life while we can still change
Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's comedy with Nathan Lane heading a cast as much past history as city newsstands with six or seven newspapers
David Hare's play gets a stylish revival at the same theater where it premiered in 1982.
A starry cast in a sporadically satisfying new version of Chekhov's last play
Brtish playwright Mike Bartlett's latest play gets a well cast, smoothly directed American production
Sarah Jones is back on stage with her usual array of characters, this time reflecting on the sex industry
Bio-drama film features a cast of stellar stage actors
A slimmed down all too timely one-act version of Ibsen's play at the Pearl Theater
Nick Kroll & John Mulaney make their Broadway debut as their crotchety alter egos
Simon McBurney takes audiences on a unique high and low tech journey to the Amazon
Gordon Greenberg and Chad Hodge's update of the 1942 music as a technicolor family geared Broadway tune
Patricia Highsmith's noir fiction redux. . .via Lesley Headland