This Month In Theatre History (March 2014)
We take a look back at the major historical moments in theatre in March
Stories with a national scope.
We take a look back at the major historical moments in theatre in March
Sarah Bellamy, Michael Price and Michael Counts, among others, step in and out of positions.
Co-authors Steven Rosen and David Rossmer discuss their latest work.
Commercial and not-for-profit theatres can’t do without each other, but hooking up can be as profitable as it is problematic.
Sprinting steadily from Steppenwolf to Broadway and back again, the Tony-winning director isn’t even out of breath.
The kind of tension his plays provide may be just what contemporary audiences are looking for.
You don’t have to speak the language to relish the rich legacy of the Yiddish theatre.
Adrian Lester, Charles Dutton and Ted Lange expound on the joys and difficulties of portraying the trailblazing acting icon.
At a solitary Gulf Coast retreat, veteran playwright Craig Lucas reconnects with the sublime.
No file left behind: Project calls for theatres, theatre companies to archive and preserve their past documents for the future.