This Month in Theatre History
From the death of pioneering dramatist Martha Morton to Virginia Stage’s blizzard-ridden opening, February has been a significant month.
From the death of pioneering dramatist Martha Morton to Virginia Stage’s blizzard-ridden opening, February has been a significant month.
A British concert musical about Henry VIII’s wives comes to Broadway on a wave of ‘Hamilton’-worthy buzz.
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s pared-down choreography may depart from Jerome Robbins’s original steps, but is it telling the same story?
New Orleans’s Goat in the Road Productions immersively restages an overlooked post-Civil War conflict.
When Shakespeare Youth Festival LA taught drama to young people in Nairobi, the learning went in all directions.
New models don’t ‘grow on trees.’ As 2010s in theatre demonstrate, they begin in ambition and risk.
How the agency and American Theatre Wing’s national musical theatre songwriting competition is supporting tomorrow’s creators today.
The assistive devices, now being tested at People’s Light in Pennsylvania, offer a new way for hard-of-hearing patrons to fully enjoy the theatre.
From a scenic artist in California to a casting director in Washington, D.C., here are some theatre workers to have on your radar.
The new show ‘Maybe Happy Ending’ at the Alliance in Atlanta puts a fresh East-West spin on the American musical.