The Gender & Period Count: The More Things Change…
Once again, new plays far outnumber revivals and classics—and they’re the only sector in which the playwriting gender gap is narrowing.
Once again, new plays far outnumber revivals and classics—and they’re the only sector in which the playwriting gender gap is narrowing.
For all its heightened relevance and accountability, documentary theatre can’t be constrained by its subject.
New York magazine’s new critic is also New York’s newest critic, and she says she’s as ready to listen as to talk.
You can tell where theatre happens from its name.
Speeches by Susan Medak and Jeff Chang challenged the field to face its divisions, and our culture’s.
The conference in Stumptown kicks off with a look back and a bracing glimpse at Oregon stories.
Setting Shakespeare’s tragedy in Persia isn’t just an aesthetic choice for the Iranian-American actor; it’s an existential one.
In six plays at Open Fist Theatre, a middle-aged actor with a murdered son goes to hell (literally) and back, and many points between.
Time Out New York’s longtime theatre editor leaves a legacy of incision and advocacy, and has no plans to go silent.
If you can gauge a nation’s health by its theatre, China looks vital, youthful—and ambivalent.