A Second Act for Theatre Criticism?
Reviewers and reporters are an endangered species. Here’s how some of them are surviving—and even thriving.
Reviewers and reporters are an endangered species. Here’s how some of them are surviving—and even thriving.
Three theatre critics of color who are used to being the only one who looks like them on the aisle seat.
There may be as many kinds of writers about theatre as there are kinds of theatre. Here’s a handy guide.
Sure, theatres can find ways to spread the word without critics, but patrons still want—and deserve—disinterested reviews.
The crushing homogeneity of theatre criticism means it’s missing crucial perspectives—and its relevance to readers.
The legendary critic and impresario is still writing every day, though he’s largely left the battlefield to other warriors.
Choice notes from an extraordinary theatregoing career, documenting trends and artists of the late 20th-century stage.
The challenge for artists: to keep our attention on human stories and larger questions, not on our distractor-in-chief.
Plays on some pet presidential subjects—immigration, U.S. history, the presidency itself—stir uneasy new resonances.
Why Suzan-Lori Parks decided to write a play every day during Trump’s first 100 days