Come to the Cabaret, Old Chum. Or at Least Stream It.
New concerts from Sutton Foster, Jeremy Jordan and Marilyn Maye offer examples of what the most intimate art form can and can't do.
New concerts from Sutton Foster, Jeremy Jordan and Marilyn Maye offer examples of what the most intimate art form can and can't do.
Ethan Hawke and John Leguizamo star as Beckett's tragicomic tramps " minus the comic part.
The much-loved Broadway soprano, who died in December, had one more miracle up her sleeve.
Set at a Southern barbecue, James Ijames's hilarious update on Shakespeare sees a recipe for liberation in the story of family disaster.
Josh O'Connor and Jessie Buckley star as the star-crossed lovers in a compelling stage-film hybrid adaptation.
Erika Dickerson-Despenza's play about Black women struggling to survive Hurricane Katrina gets an ear-tingling podcast production.
The monologuist appeared onstage, indoors, in front of a real audience, on the first day possible. Maybe he shouldn't have rushed.
Fifty years ago, Stephen Sondheim and James Goldman exploded the Broadway "concept" musical by conjuring the bittersweet reunion of aging showgirls.
Liza Birkenmeier's new play about a shape-shifting teenager makes a fitting contribution to Theater in Quarantine's revamp of the avant-garde.
Arts workers are protesting closings and occupying playhouses all over France. On Broadway, that drama has yet to open.
An uncanny new play imagines Meghan (and Kate, too) trapped in a nightmare palace where racism reigns.
Because of pandemic restrictions, a performance piece about refugees requires you to draw on yourself, in both senses
The tragedy of racism is only part of the story in two very different plays from London that carry a dimension of meaning not usually seen in this country.
A sparkling new recording of the 1964 musical makes half the case for Stephen Sondheim's endlessly inventive score.
Four not-very-believable characters in a chain of monologues are rescued by a cast of exceptionally believable actors.
Samuel Bailey's knockout professional debut isn't so much about the pipeline to incarceration than about the toxic masculinity that keeps it flowing.
At home in the footlights, he knew the power of charm and every trick of the stage trade. But even after a celebrated "King Lear," there was more to play.
Three new revues offer war horses, showstoppers and standards " but, even better, rarities.
All Ryan J. Haddad wants is a boyfriend. But his pride " or is it his prospects' prejudice? " keeps getting in the way.
Pandemics and ordinary tragedies clash in Lauren Gunderson's overwrought portrait of her husband, the virologist Nathan A. Wolfe.
With minimal rehearsal and production values, online events are becoming a distinct (and worthy) new genre of theater.
With minimal rehearsal and production values, online events are becoming a distinct (and worthy) new genre of theater.
Pundits have likened the president to Lear, to Hamlet, to Macbeth, to Coriolanus. That may have been four years of wishful thinking.
Forget tragic lovers. At the Public Theater's Under the Radar Festival, fast cars and other luxuries fuel tragedies about the love of things.
What started as a TikTok meme and became a crowdsourced musical could have online lessons to offer for Broadway.