The Week Ahead: 'Titus Andronicus,' From New York Shakespeare Exchange
Now is a good time to catch some lower-budget theater, and the New York Shakespeare Exchange's coming production of "Titus Andronicus" ought to be a good place to start.
Now is a good time to catch some lower-budget theater, and the New York Shakespeare Exchange's coming production of "Titus Andronicus" ought to be a good place to start.
"The Woodsman" returns to 59E59 Theaters for a six-week run.
Chris Pine and Billy Magnussen play agonized princes in "Into the Woods," a highly anticipated adaptation of the 1986 Stephen Sondheim-James Lapine fairy-tale mash-up.
"Into the Woods," directed by Rob Marshall, hits movie theaters on Christmas Day.
No more starring roles, thank you, but there may be some haiku left in him.
Stephen Rea stars in "A Particle of Dread (Oedipus Variations)," the latest play by Sam Shepard.
Ms. Finley, whose "Written in Sand" pays tribute to those who died of AIDS, is taking a more solemn approach.
Maggie Gyllenhaal and Ewan McGregor are both making Broadway debuts in the revival of Tom Stoppard's "The Real Thing."
The Dublin company Dead Centre brings its unusual play "Lippy," based on the true story of four Irish women who committed suicide by starvation, to the Abrons Arts Center.
"You Can't Take It With You," which won a Pulitzer Prize in 1937, comes to Broadway.
The annual Origin's 1st Irish Festival will include a number of world premiere productions as well as at least one return engagement.
The Scots are voting for independence from Britain next month, and the referendum was a frequent theme at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
The show, created and performed by Geoff Sobelle, won the 2014 Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh award.
An Israeli theater company is seeking a new venue at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe after protests disrupted other shows.
In Laura Eason's "Sex With Strangers," a young blogger engages in a lot of the title activity, boasts online of his conquests and turns them into a racy book.
The artistic directors of the San Jose Repertory Theater, which just folded, are investing great hopes in the brief New York run of "The Snow Queen," a musical they jointly created.
Heisei Nakamura-za, a Kabuki company from Tokyo, makes a return visit to the Lincoln Center Festival.
The Tony award-winning actress Karen Olivo has traded the Broadway lights for a more quiet life in Madison, Wis.
David Greig's play about the aftermath of a mass shooting, "The Events," will use local choirs in its American debut this month in New Haven.
The annual event, which runs Aug. 1 to 25, is scheduled to include almost 3,200 shows.
Penelope Skinner's play "The Village Bike," with Greta Gerwig, is making its American debut in an MCC Theater production.
A selected look at summer theater offerings across the country.
"The Events," a drama by the Scottish playwright David Greig, will have its New York premiere at New York Theater Workshop next winter.
It is safe to say that we are rarely, in a single week, introduced to not one but two Off Broadway productions with sandwich makers as central characters.
Many of us read John Steinbeck's 1937 novella "Of Mice and Men" in high school, but it has been a lot harder to see it on Broadway, until now.