Where’s Our Share?
A healthy economy may be one pretext for renewed fundraising appeals—but then again, so could an unpredictable new tax regime.
A healthy economy may be one pretext for renewed fundraising appeals—but then again, so could an unpredictable new tax regime.
We know too well the laments about shrinking critical jobs and authority. But are we looking for the future in all the wrong places?
The challenge for artists: to keep our attention on human stories and larger questions, not on our distractor-in-chief.
For this year’s preview of U.S. theatre’s offerings, we look at the how and why as much as the what.
For all its heightened relevance and accountability, documentary theatre can’t be constrained by its subject.
You can tell where theatre happens from its name.
The conference in Stumptown kicks off with a look back and a bracing glimpse at Oregon stories.
If you can gauge a nation’s health by its theatre, China looks vital, youthful—and ambivalent.
Where would Broadway be without the nation’s nonprofit theatres? It’s impossible to say, so intertwined are their fortunes.
War may feel like an abstraction to many of us, but the theatre can give its realities flesh and blood.