2023's 10 Most Popular Posts (and 10 That Deserve Another Look)
This year, crisis and closure vied with reports of milestones, breakthroughs, and plans for the future.
This year, crisis and closure vied with reports of milestones, breakthroughs, and plans for the future.
They will hold the positions while TCG's executive director and CEO Teresa Eyring begins a sabbatical and the search for her replacement begins.
Murielle Borst-Tarrant, Rhiana Yazzie, Opalanietet, and Sharon Day talk about the importance of storytelling for their communities.
A roundup of prizes, residencies, and other recognitions.
After years of community work and some COVID setbacks, Cornerstone Theater assembles a cast, a set, and a tour for Larissa FastHorse's 'Wicoun.'
How theatres in the historic NYC neighborhood are stepping up their game with artists and audiences.
The director and novelist replaces Mark Cuddy, who has navigated the theatre through controversies.
The first production to use electric lighting, a tragic theatre fire, a Broadway landmark, an Asian American icon, and a James Baldwin musical adaptation.
Presented in collaboration with the Alliance Theatre, this year's convening will focus on the theme of possibility.
A roundup of prizes, residencies, and other recognitions.
The New Zealand-based Indian Ink Theatre Company brings immersive festivities to a number of U.S. theatres starting this month.
At the Generation After Festival in September, Polish theatres gave a fresh demonstration of the vitality, relevancy, and pliability of the live arts.
For MENA-identifying theatres in the U.S., the current Israel-Hamas war makes the work of lifting Palestinian and Arab voices all the more urgent.
How a cohort of artistic directors of color, recently hired at major U.S. theatres, have confronted unforeseen upheavals.
How an American director became a translator, as well as a sort of U.S. ambassador, for the Norwegian writer who is this year's Nobel Prize winner.
How 4 theatres develop work by writers of color with communities of color at the center.
Steward, a former co-chair of the board's diversity, equity, and inclusion committee, succeeds Nikkole Salter.
The Studio Gang-designed campus for the open-air, slated to break ground in 2024, will meet LEED Platinum standards.
As we enter the holiday season, we celebrate taking risks on potentially life-changing works.
We don't just get aesthetic or intellectual benefits from the expressive and performing arts---they can also be literally healing.
A roundup of awards, residencies, and other recognitions.
This L.A.-focused roundup includes a writer-director, a patron services manager, a scenic painter, an actor who's also a marketing director, and more.
Ende Lichtenberg succeeds Chris Jennings, who left last summer for Manhattan Theatre Club.
In his latest play, published in full in our Fall print edition, the writer/performer probes implicit ableism and the assumptions we make about people we'll never really know.
With a wealth of experience in arts administration and branding, Durantt joins her neighborhood theatre ready to help its next stage of growth.