Signs of Shakespeare in ‘R+J: The Vineyard’
Chicago’s Red Theater is translating Shakespeare for its new show: They’re putting his verse into American Sign Language.
Chicago’s Red Theater is translating Shakespeare for its new show: They’re putting his verse into American Sign Language.
British and American artists working at the outer boundaries of gender, race, and live art will gather for a weekend of performances, talks, and an intergenerational, intersectional feminist check-in.
The Irish playwright’s international success began after an inspiring experience at the Guthrie Theater.
California Shakespeare Theatre’s new artistic director has a passion for engaging audiences around new work. What will he do with an outdoor summer theatre?
Though our ‘Play on!’ commissioning project has met with some vocal disapproval, the work is grounded in the Oregon Shakespeare Festival’s core values—and our love for the Bard.
Boston University is selling the Huntington Theatre’s home stage, while Emerson College weighs options for its legendary Colonial Theatre.
The indie Americana musical spans time and space, but its story hits close to home for its author.
The fight over minority representation onstage is about broadening, not narrowing, opportunity and artistry.
Rendered in Yiddish, Arthur Miller’s American icon and his conflicted family may have a more specific cultural identity than usual, but the play’s universality still rings out.
This week’s guest is Brian Clowdus, the artistic director of Serenbe Playhouse, on hand to talk about site-specific theatre and reinventing classics. Plus, the editors dish on what they’re looking forward to this season.