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192 stories by "Helen Shaw"

A Russian Theatre Director in Exile by Helen Shaw

Dmitry Krymov starts from scratch in New York.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 11:30am on September 29, 2023

"Swing State" and "Dig" Put Down Roots Off Broadway by Helen Shaw

Rebecca Gilman and Theresa Rebeck use plants as metaphors for human flourishing in their latest works.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 12:15pm on September 21, 2023

Annie Baker Turns a Philosophical Eye on Pain by Helen Shaw

The playwright's exquisite new comic drama, "Infinite Life," nails the absurdity of having a body.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 10:00am on September 13, 2023

"The Shark Is Broken" Circles the Guts of "Jaws" by Helen Shaw

The new Broadway play, by Ian Shaw and Joseph Nixon, imagines frequently irritable chats among the movie's three main actors, including Shaw's father, Robert Shaw.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on August 11, 2023

"Here Lies Love" Tackles Broadway; "Uncle Vanya" Tiptoes Downtown by Helen Shaw

David Byrne's electro-pop Imelda Marcos is a series of hard, mirrored surfaces.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on July 21, 2023

The Witch Hunt in "The Doctor" by Helen Shaw

Helen Shaw reviews Robert Icke's adaptation of an Arthur Schnitzler play, starring Juliet Stevenson as a doctor who is a target of anti-Semitism and language policing.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on June 26, 2023

London Theatre at a Breakneck Pace by Helen Shaw

"Operation Mincemeat," "Guys and Dolls," and "The Motive and the Cue" gallop into the past.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on June 19, 2023

The Writer Who Insists He Knew Tennessee Williams by Helen Shaw

James Grissom says that he met the playwright and his famous muses, and quoted them extensively in his work. Not everyone believes him.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on June 5, 2023

Summer Theatre Preview by Helen Shaw

David Byrne and Fatboy Slim's "Here Lies Love" on Broadway, Ato Blankson-Wood's "Hamlet" in the Park, Robert Icke's "The Doctor," and more.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on May 12, 2023

"Camelot," Reviewed: A More Congenial Spot by Helen Shaw

In a new production of "Camelot," reimagined by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Bartlett Sher, Arthur is more perfect than ever. But this iteration of the hero's kingdom isn't worthy of him.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on April 16, 2023

Soap Operas as Guiding Light by Helen Shaw

Experimental theatre and soap tropes commune in Julia Izumi's "Regretfully, So the Birds Are" and Michael R. Jackson's "White Girl in Danger."

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on April 13, 2023

A Sonically Thrilling Revival of "Sweeney Todd" on Broadway by Helen Shaw

Sondheim's music and lyrics gleam as bright as ever, even when the production loses its edge.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on March 30, 2023

History Repeats Itself in the Broadway Revival of "Parade" by Helen Shaw

Ben Platt stars as the doomed Leo Frank in Alfred Uhry and Jason Robert Brown's all too relevant musical tragedy.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 9:00pm on March 16, 2023

Jessica Chastain's Close Listening in "A Doll's House" by Helen Shaw

Jamie Lloyd's ascetic production of Ibsen's 1879 drama eliminates nearly every conventional marker of character, location, or gesture.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 8:30pm on March 9, 2023

"Pictures from Home" Loses Focus on Broadway by Helen Shaw

Nathan Lane and Danny Burstein rely on shtick in Sharr White's adaptation of Larry Sultan's book, while Norbert Leo Butz can't save the musical "Cornelia Street."

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on February 17, 2023

Mikéah Ernest Jennings, Prince of a Lost World by Helen Shaw

The actor, a fixture of New York's experimental-theatre scene, did not "become" his characters; he stood, somehow, next to them, amused and delighted.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 2:21pm on February 10, 2023

The One-Person Show, Served Three Ways by Helen Shaw

In "Small Talk," "Without You," and "cryptochrome," Colin Quinn, Anthony Rapp, and Evan Silver take the mike.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on January 27, 2023

New York's Theatre Festivals Imagine a World After Mankind by Helen Shaw

Recent shows' visions of the future haven't exactly been post-apocalyptic, with the violence and darkness that term implies. Instead, they have delighted in our disappearance, savored it.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on January 17, 2023

Three London Productions Stretch the Boundaries of Reality by Helen Shaw

Getting lost with "Orlando," "My Neighbour Totoro," and "The Burnt City."

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on January 6, 2023

A Witching Hour with Sarah Ruhl by Helen Shaw

The playwright and author discusses preshow rituals, throbbing anger, tenderness, and her new play, "Becky Nurse of Salem."

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on December 18, 2022

"Merrily We Roll Along" and "Some Like It Hot" Bring Blockbuster Energy to the Stage by Helen Shaw

Brilliant casting and a palpable sense of joy make old stories feel new.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on December 16, 2022

"KPOP" Makes an Uneasy Transition to Broadway by Helen Shaw

Even when the scenes drag, the songs soar.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 10:00am on December 2, 2022

"Evanston Salt Costs Climbing," a Pitch-Dark Comedy About Municipal Workers on the Brink by Helen Shaw

Will Arbery tackles the climate crisis with a funny nightmare about human and environmental fragility.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00am on November 21, 2022

Haunted Houses in "Catch as Catch Can" and "A Delicate Balance" by Helen Shaw

Mia Chung's drama, by turns comedic, bitter, and ineffable, shows how racism soaks through an American family.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 6:00pm on November 12, 2022

A "Hamlet" That Isn't a Bummer by Helen Shaw

In a full-tilt production at BAM, Lars Eidinger gives the sad prince a punk, chaotic edge and turns familiar tragedy into Dionysian revel.

SOURCE: The New Yorker Subscription at 1:09pm on October 31, 2022
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