Review: 'Paul Taylor: Creative Domain' Shows a Choreographer at Work
Kate Geis's absorbing new documentary follows a Taylor dance, "Three Dubious Memories," as it takes shape in a matter of weeks.
Kate Geis's absorbing new documentary follows a Taylor dance, "Three Dubious Memories," as it takes shape in a matter of weeks.
The stage version of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” gets a fresh look from the Metropolitan Playhouse in a production that values the text.
In Theodora Skipitares’s production of “Lysistrata” at La MaMa, her puppets and masks provide distance between audience and play, a veil that offers both discretion and …
In “Heaven on Earth” Charles L. Mee and some collaborators adapt the techniques of collage for the stage.
One Little Goat Theater Company’s fascinating yet irritating production of Thomas Bernhard’s “Ritter, Dene, Voss” is making its New York debut at La MaMa.
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New York Classical Theater turns a Lower Manhattan commercial space into a makeshift theater to stage Aphra Behn’s 17th-century comedy about sexual politics.
Review of "Running" in 2010 NYC Fringe Festival.
One Little Goat Theater Company’s fascinating yet irritating production of Thomas Bernhard’s “Ritter, Dene, Voss” is making its New York debut at La MaMa.
Jeff Cohen’s new play uses Michael Rockefeller’s death to consider cultural misunderstandings.
In George Hunka’s “What She Knew” at Manhattan Theater Source, Jocasta holds forth about blood, pestilence and sex.
In Luigi Creatore’s “Error of the Moon,” the jealous Edwin Booth is partly responsible for John Wilkes Booth’s assassination of Lincoln.
Jeff Cohen’s new play uses Michael Rockefeller’s death to consider cultural misunderstandings.
In his play “The Wife,” Tommy Smith pulls strange fellows from the urban melting pot.
Vaclav Havel’s “Memorandum” pits humanist values against a crushing, paranoia-producing bureaucracy.
In "Chinese Coffee," two men talk through a middle-aged pas de deux.
Krista Knight's "Primal Play," part of the Jam on Toast festival for young playwrights and directors, focuses on a primatologist in Tanzania and her mother.
"The Lovesong of Alfred J. Hitchcock" looks into Hitchcock's psyche and its influence on his films.
It takes three singers to fill the shoes of the title character in "Inventing Mary Martin," at the Theater at St. Peter's, a biographical revue with Emily Skinner, Lynne Halliday and Cameron…
Christopher Durang's "Beyond Therapy," revived by the Actors Company Theater at the Beckett, centers on two people questing for romance while undergoing seriously wacky therapy. &…
"Pains of Youth," from 1926, revived by the Cake Shop Theater, paints of portrait of disillusionment in Vienna.
In her solo show, "Bronx Gothic," Okwui Okpokwasili shares a story of innocence and experience about two 11-year-old girls.
"She Is King" is a portrait of the tennis star Billie Jean King as a hero in an era of entrenched sexism and other inequalities in sports and life.
Senel Paz's play "Strawberry & Chocolate" mines the subjects of sexual orientation and revolutionary politics in Cuba during the early 1980s.
In "Sarah Flood in Salem Mass," two friends travel back through time to try to right some wrongs in the era of the witchcraft trials.
J. M. Barrie's "Peter Pan" is given a modern suburban, and Australian, twist.