Review: Ambiguity Abounds in WAITING FOR GODOT & NO MAN'S LAND
Stewart, McKellen, Hensley and Crudup make an exemplary ensemble in contrasting plays that inspire queries of 'What does it mean'
Stewart, McKellen, Hensley and Crudup make an exemplary ensemble in contrasting plays that inspire queries of 'What does it mean'
Half British music hall and half Grand Guignol, the rollicking good musical is a smashing Broadway debut for composerlyricist Steven Lutvak, bookwriterlyricist Robert L. Freedman and directo…
Faster than a speeding Les Miserables revival, Billy Crystal's solo performance of family memories returns to Broadway a mere 386 Sundays after its Tony-winning original production gave its …
The new production of Pinter's power play follows the new millennium's trend of easily digestible, surface skimming, star vehicle commercial Broadway revivals of Twentieth Century dramas.
The new song and dance review features an all-star jazz orchestra and a dazzling company saluting the music and styles of Duke Ellington and The Harlem Renaissance.
Sharr White's drama of a family losing its wealth is enhanced by Daniel Sullivan's handsome, mostly well-acted production,
Rupert Holmes' stage adaptation of John Grisham's novel has a black man in 1980s Mississippi on trial for murdering the white men who raped and beat his 10-year-old daughter.
Roger Rees leads an excellent ensemble in Lindsay Posner's crackling production of Terence Rattigan's drama of family honor.
Mary Bridget Davies provides powerful full-throated vocals and an empathetic performance in Randy Johnson's concert-style bio-musical.
Susan Stroman and Norbert Leo Butz deliver their best Broadway work in Andrew Lippa and John August's celebration of an everyday man who fights the dragons.
The theatre magic on display in director John Tiffany's production is the result of a masterful play being interpreted with sensitive, theme-enhancing imagination and acted out to perfection…
David Leveaux's soggy production lacks tension, passion and romance.
Awkward and cliched bio-musical only reveals its heart when Eric Anderson sings the music of Shlomo Carlebach.
The funny and frisky new musical comedy sends a welcome blast of cooling hipness into Broadway's summer.
West End transfer lets audiences relive the experience of attending Broadway's two previous Beatles cover band concerts.
Necking couples in the Walter Kerr Theatre balcony are bound to be a common sight this summer as 'Forever Tango' returns to steam up Broadway.
If the sexiest part of the body is the brain, It's Just Sex is an effective argument for celibacy.
Jonathan Tolins' comical Streisand fantasy re-opens at Barrow Street Theater.
Oscar-winning actress Tilda Swinton is set to make her Broadway debut in her solo performance piece, 'The Maybe'.
A legendary flop gets a second chance, a fabled night spot closes as a new one opens and a mysterious investor supposedly dies of malaria. These were just a few of the stories and issues th…