This Month in Theatre History (October 2013)
What happened in theatre history this month? We’ll tell you.
What happened in theatre history this month? We’ll tell you.
The Atlanta–based company joins the YA-dystopia craze with an audience-interactive adaptation of Eoin McNamee’s “The Navigator.”
Seattle’s A Contemporary Theatre debuts the “Norman Conquests” playwright’s latest.
Southern Theater’s latest premiere includes zombies, cannibals, and live hip-hop accompaniment.
Enthusiasm for the ‘miraculous language’ of the Bard shows no signs of abating—nor do arguments about his legacy and contemporary relevance.
The composer talks about his early theatrical experiences and his inspirations for writing ‘The Black Suits.’
Theatrical offerings in Spain, Colombia, Zimbabwe, and England for Oct. 2013.
The author of “Jesus in India” and “American Hwangup” discusses the premiere of his new work at the Children’s Theater Company in Minneapolis.
The musical adaptation of George A. Romero’s “Night of the Living Dead” shambles its way to a regional premiere at St. Louis’s New Line Theatre.
The two artists discuss nearly three decades of working together.