Idea Awards and the Stavis Playwright Award
Our regular roundup of prizes and other recognitions.
Our regular roundup of prizes and other recognitions.
Currently managing director of Lincoln Center Theater, Siegel will join his former LCT colleague Evan Cabnet at the helm of Second Stage next April.
Kallan Dana's intimate, unsettling play, a production of The Hearth redirected from the shuttered Connelly Theatre, reemerges at A.R.T./New York.
This month, Woodzick chats with multi-hyphenate filmmaker Vera Drew about cultivating joyful spaces for trans audiences through her DIY film 'The People's Joker.'
After a tenure that include a name change and several acclaimed productions, he'll leave the theatre in the interim hands of managing director Nicole Samsel.
A check-in with stage managers, and ensemble creation in the New Mexico desert.
Who better to take the pulse of a changing industry than with the folks at the hub of the wheel: stage managers.
Short plays from the 2024 cohort will be featured at the LGBT Center in New York City on Dec. 2.
This Detroit-focused edition includes both theatremakers focused on cultivating the next generation and early-career artists showing the promise of that next wave.
This month, Gabriela explores multilingual and nonverbal storytelling, Jerald remembers Kris Vire and celebrates Sondheim, and two care consultants share ways to recharge this winter.
The Latino Theater Company's border-defying Encuentro, the fourth of its kind, gathered hundreds of Latine artists for productions, partnerships, and dialogues in multiple languages.
Born in Covid lockdown, The Exodus Ensemble is shaking the New Mexico desert with immersive work, including their new 'HAMLET.'
This month, Allison chats with Pig Iron co-founder Quinn Bauriedel and checks in with teachers helping students navigate the post-election period.
Next summer, a multi-day celebration will kick off a new international dance venue for the longtime company in the Berkshires.
Succeeding co-founding leader Stephen Sachs, the D.C.-based director will assume full leadership of the L.A. theatre next April.
In a recent conversation with publications director Kelundra Smith, the 'Yellow Face' playwright talked about progress in representation and the unfairness of criticism.
Five folks who help the show go on recall memorable points on their path.
In staging a revolution and its confusing aftermath, the musical 'We Live in Cairo' also seeks to dramatize the everyday life of Arabs.
Sondheim and Weidman's masterpiece about Japan's 'opening' to the West returns to an L.A. company whose history with the show is as tightly intertwined as its subjects are.
In an excerpt from the new book 'Women Writing Musicals,' we learn about the songwriter who became the first woman to write music and lyrics for a full Broadway score, in 1942.
Two new books lift the voices of designers and production workers on their art and their labor.
A roundup of prizes, fellowships, and other recognitions.
Beyond sensory "friendly," these theatremakers are pushing the frontier of theatre that is truly for all audiences.
The Massachusetts collective, known for its site-roving parade spectacles, also convenes artists and activists and community around its rural roots.
This celebration of community stretched over weeks and connected Latine and Latin American performance.