A Heart Broken, Also Full: What Sondheim Gave Us
He was like a father to many of us, so it shouldn’t be surprising that he did what a good father does: He kept showing up, and showing his love.
He was like a father to many of us, so it shouldn’t be surprising that he did what a good father does: He kept showing up, and showing his love.
His path-breaking musicals have handily outlasted their detractors, in part because they remain so singularly alive.
Though he ran a magazine based in New York City, he tirelessly—and uniquely—spread the love around the entire national theatre scene.
The founding editor of American Theatre did everything with gusto, including mentoring two generations of theatre journalists.
At the national theatre magazine he founded in 1984, he spent decades covering and celebrating artists and companies in the U.S. and around the world.
Among the doors the playwright and teacher opened: to the power of words, to the world of theatre, to the possibilities of meditation.
She was a producer with a fan’s love for stage magic, a taste for the big gamble, and the best dish in town.
The composer/lyricist/librettist/actor broke ground in theatre, music, and TV, and still had more to say.
The beloved Chicago-based music director and teacher influenced generations of talent with her acumen and care.
The path-breaking Assiniboine playwright showed us how we could channel our suffering into transcendent theatre.