Starring Elizabeth Marvel as Alcott and Jane Alexander as her first biographer, Ednah Dow Cheney, the program reveals the many sides of the author of "Little Women," an 1868 novel based on h…
Marshall has come a long way from his popular screen adaptation of the musical "Chicago." Unlike that film, "Nine" is better than the Broadway show from which it has been cunningly adapted b…
Two stars appear in Trevor Nunn's revival of Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music: Angela Lansbury and, in her Broadway debut, Catherine Zeta-Jones. Only Lansbury can be said to triumph.
David Mamet's Race, which opened last night on Broadway, takes place in a law office where a white man, accused of raping a black woman, seeks legal representation. Mamet, who also directs, has assembled four talented actors—James Spader, David Alan Grier, Kerry Washington, Richard Thomas—and a top-notch design team. We get a high-voltage melodrama that is unafraid to raise painful questions while dispensing prickly ideas and provocative dialogue amid steady suspense.