Cooling Down: How Actors Unwind After Taxing Performances
Most actors methodically warm up for emotionally draining performances. But what do they do to recoup reality?
Most actors methodically warm up for emotionally draining performances. But what do they do to recoup reality?
A history of the 60-year-old initiative that brings theatre directly to the people.
For the company in Lee, Mass., theatre is a philanthropic vehicle.
The set and projection design for Aditi Brennan Kapil’s play is meant to evoke the inner life of a girl on the autism spectrum.
From the arrest of San Francisco Mime Troupe members to the beginnings of the Northwest Asian American Theater, March was a noteworthy month for theatre.
The late playwrights’ advocate James Houghton left behind an embarrassment of riches for his successor, but she seems quite suited to the task.
From a New York City stage manager to a Washington, D.C.-based marketing director, here are some theatre workers to have on your radar.
One helped curate our special issue on theatre and veterans; the other wrote about her experience making theatre with Syrian refugees.
War may feel like an abstraction to many of us, but the theatre can give its realities flesh and blood.
Psychological trauma is the subject of most plays about service members. Does this represent most veterans’ reality, or does it further complicate their reentry?