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182 stories by "Maya Phillips"

How 'Sophocles in Staten Island' Gains in Translation by Maya Phillips

This comic short about an actor and his kids staging Greek tragedies under lockdown slyly comments on links between the politics of the family and the state.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 3:42pm on September 21, 2020

'Static Apnea' Review: Breathing Together, Remaining Apart by Maya Phillips

In this brief but eerie installation, one viewer and one performer, separated by glass, share the feeling of being trapped underwater.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 3:03pm on September 18, 2020

Review: 'In Love and Warcraft' Serves Romance for Noobs by Maya Phillips

A naïve young woman struggles with the pitfalls of intimacy in the digital age, on and off the battlefield of a multiplayer online game.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 2:48pm on September 16, 2020

Review: Four Intimate Screen Encounters (One From Far Away) by Maya Phillips

The second grouping of these excellent "Here We Are" monologues includes a raucous report from outer space and a small gem from Lynn Nottage.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 1:54pm on September 13, 2020

Why 'Rent,' the Movie, Was My Gateway Musical by Maya Phillips

It was a flop, but the film adaptation of the Broadway smash turned me on to theater. And those starving artists made me want to make art too.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 5:06am on September 3, 2020

Review: Bringing Borges to Life in 'Footnote for the End of Time' by Maya Phillips

Theater in Quarantine's latest small-scale, digitally savvy production is an adaptation of a Borges story about a man stopping time to stare down death.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 5:06pm on August 30, 2020

Outdoors in Bushwick, Gardens of Theatrical Discovery by Maya Phillips

Replete with music, masks and vibrant costumes, "Quince" and "Beast Visit" turn urban green spaces into stages for festivity.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 3:18pm on August 24, 2020

Designing Doesn't Stop, Even When Stage Shows Do by Maya Phillips

Staying creative in lockdown means setting the scene for a cat, a baby and a garden. Plus an Instagram account that makes Mom and Dad into art stars.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:32am on August 19, 2020

In Two Renditions, 'Dutchman' Speaks to the Moment by Maya Phillips

A Seeing Place Theater production and a Play-PerView reunion reading by the 2007 Cherry Lane Theater cast bring out different aspects of Amiri Baraka's famous play.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 3:48pm on August 11, 2020

'In These Uncertain Times' Review: Love, Loss and Zoom by Maya Phillips

Source Material presents a postmodern approach to talking about grief and isolation in quarantine.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 3:48pm on July 26, 2020

'Richard II' Review: A Radio King With a Tottering Crown by Maya Phillips

Electric performances, led by André Holland, transcend didacticism in an audio rendition that replaced a Shakespeare in the Park production.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 4:32pm on July 17, 2020

A Plague on Your Houses: Reading Covid-19 Into Disease Onstage by Maya Phillips

Efforts like 'The Oedipus Project' are worthy, but in an attempt to draw contemporary parallels, they can misread drama and mislead about the present.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:03am on July 15, 2020

'Hamilton,' 'The Simpsons' and the Problem With Colorblind Casting by Maya Phillips

Animated shows are finally moving away from letting white actors play characters of color. But even well-intentioned efforts at increasing diversity create complications.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 5:36pm on July 8, 2020

Review: A Bracing Trial by Zoom in 'State vs. Natasha Banina' by Maya Phillips

Anchored by a charismatically off-kilter performance, this one-woman show asks viewers to judge a young Russian accused of a crime of passion.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 2:42pm on June 17, 2020

'About Love' Review: Turgenev With Songs and Heartbreak by Maya Phillips

Despite charming performances, a Culture Project production works too hard bringing a delicate novella to the stage.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:42am on March 11, 2020

'Incantata' Review: An Elegy in Words, Video and Potatoes by Maya Phillips

A solo stage adaptation of Paul Muldoon's poem considers whether making art can offer solace in the wake of grief.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 1:36pm on March 3, 2020

Review: Name-dropping Harlem in 'Blues for an Alabama Sky' by Maya Phillips

The neighborhood is referrred to constantly, insistently, but doesn't come to life in Pearl Cleage's play about a nightclub singer from the 1930s.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 4:03pm on February 26, 2020

'Where We Stand' Review: Gifts are Given, but at What Cost? by Maya Phillips

Donnetta Lavinia Grays is winningly uninhibited in her fable-like solo show about a community seduced by a mysterious benefactor.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 4:24pm on February 18, 2020

Review: Blood Runs Too Thick in 'Doctors Jane and Alexander' by Maya Phillips

Edward Einhorn's playful play takes on a lot: his scientist grandfather, his aging mother and his own doubts about putting their lives onstage.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 3:32pm on February 7, 2020

Review: A 'Crucible' for the Modern Mob by Maya Phillips

Eric Tucker updates the allegorical play about the Salem witch trials, directly implicating the audience in its examination of mass hysteria.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 5:03pm on November 25, 2019

'Black History Museum' Review: Learn. Laugh. Suffer. Move Along. by Maya Phillips

An immersive play crossed with an art installation offers sharp angles on race and white supremacy, but is dampened by didactism.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 7:24pm on November 14, 2019

'When It Happens to You' Review: A Daughter's Rape, a Mother's Anguish by Maya Phillips

Tawni O'Dell set herself a bracing challenge: Writing and reliving her family's trauma onstage. But it's more than the novelist can pull off.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 9:03pm on October 24, 2019

Review: Stuck in Maine in 'Nothing Gold Can Stay' by Maya Phillips

Friends and family about to be left behind when a young man goes to college reckon with a world of narrow choices in Chad Beckim's play.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 6:54pm on October 9, 2019

Review: 'Katsura Sunshine's Rakugo' Offers Stand-Up Comedy Without the Standing by Maya Phillips

Mr. Sunshine is one of the rare Westerners to become a master of the centuries-old Japanese comic storytelling form.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 3:33pm on October 1, 2019

'Mothers' Review: Mommy and Me and the Apocalypse by Maya Phillips

A barbed comedy takes a grim turn when friends find themselves tested over how far they'll go to defend their choices and protect their children.

SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:54pm on September 25, 2019
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