'Shucked' review: Broadway's best and funniest new musical
The Southern comfort show is filled with winning jokes and puns.
The Southern comfort show is filled with winning jokes and puns.
After a relatively boring beginning, expect moment after moment of theatrical magic.
While some of his scenes lack intensity, Groban's as well-sung a Sweeney as you'll find.
The musical is a mess with multiple personality disorder.
Welcome to Broadway! Please enjoy the bare minimum!
The play's greatest asset is youth.
Despite an absorbing performance from the "Eyes of Tammy Faye" actress, British director Jamie Lloyd's staging is sterile as an operating room. Â
It's high time we stop making convenient excuses for disrespectful idiots.
It's an obnoxious dinner guest of a play.
Appalled audience members witnessed the death of decorum Tuesday night.
Star Stephen McKinley Henderson gives the performance of the Broadway season.
A stunner of a trio makes this revival lovable.
Yet another man-in-a-dress musical.
The revival is an absorbing, observant and admirably peculiar character study with stinging parallels to today.
What's so striking about this streamlined version is the grandeur it manages to summon with simplicity.
This sporadically fun musical is an empty-headed good time.
The brilliant and risky drama is set in a group home for sex offenders and pedophiles.
The mounting insanity of the cute new show almost becomes too much. Almost.
Cameron Crowe's stage version of his classic coming-of-age film is B-side the point.
The Stratford Festival in Canada was a much needed palate cleanser to wipe away the foul taste left by Daniel Craig's rank Broadway "Macbeth," in which the entire cast spoke in monotone, wor…
Fresh off the atrocious "The Devil Wears Prada" musical in Chicago, Elton John is back with The Televangelist Wears Mascara in London.Â
A wondrous stage adaptation of Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli's classic 1988 animated film has arrived in London.
This sharp, focused revival has a pair of cracking performances that never let up. Â
The revival of the August Wilson play is mostly in tune.Â
The show will go on and oooooon!