Is It an Art Gallery? A Museum? A Theater? A Dream?
The Ministry of Awe, a new immersive experience in a former bank in Philadelphia, aims to help locate the wondrous in the everyday.
The Ministry of Awe, a new immersive experience in a former bank in Philadelphia, aims to help locate the wondrous in the everyday.
Lea Michele, Adrien Brody and other boldface names were left out, while June Squibb, André De Shields and Layton Williams as an iceberg were among the surprises.
Audiences are flocking to shows starring Patrick Ball of “The Pitt,” Jon Bernthal and Ayo Edebiri of “The Bear,” Ben Ahlers of “The Gilded Age” and more.
Before each performance, the actor sprints around the Hudson Theater enlisting audience members to take part in the interactive show.
As TV's go-to maniac, the actor has a flair for chaos that also functions as a kind of emotional armor. "I'm still very protective of the actual me," he said.
In "Marjorie Prime" and other works, Jordan Harrison delivers sweet-bitter anatomies of human connection mediated through technology destined to supersede us.
Lea Michele's star turn in "Chess." Kara Young as an 8-year-old. A 12-minute monologue delivered from a cloud. These are our favorite scenes from this year.
Copo, Diana, Suzy, Tomasa, Lana, Riso and Charlotte dance and prance inside the big tent.
Before returning to New York to lead Roundabout, Christopher Ashley is concluding his 18-year tenure at La Jolla Playhouse with the new musical "Working Girl."
Mark Strong and Lesley Manville are superb as a doomed political power couple in Robert Icke's adaptation of the Sophocles tragedy.
At a specially built theater, the hit book and movie franchise has been transformed into a theatrical experience, with real fire and flying arrows.
Lea Michele, Aaron Tveit and Nicholas Christopher took a break from navigating their onstage rivalries to engage in some (mostly) friendly competition.
The latest starry revival of Samuel Beckett's play is on Broadway, and one thing is certain: Whatever you call its elusive character, he doesn't come.
Andrew Lloyd Webber's "The Phantom of the Opera" returns to New York in an immersive spectacle, as silly as it is thrilling.
In his first Off Broadway play, the artist and comedian behind "Fantasmas" and "Problemista" is bringing audiences into his off-kilter world.
The siblings "really enjoyed make-believe" as kids. Now they are playing Shakespeare under the stars at the newly reopened Delacorte Theater in Central Park.
The play, which explores the women's movement of the 1970s and its reverberations in the present, was first staged last winter by Roundabout Theater Company.
The Eugene O'Neill Theater Center, whose alumni include August Wilson, Jeremy O. Harris and Wendy Wasserstein, has given playwrights a place to take a risk for nearly 60 years.
"Viola's Room," a transporting gothic mystery at the Shed, is the latest immersive work from Punchdrunk, the company behind "Sleep No More."
"The Outsiders" and "John Proctor Is the Villain" showcased Danya Taymor's adept staging of teen stories. Off Broadway, next: the teen satire "Trophy Boys."
George Clooney, Audra McDonald, Daniel Dae Kim, Sarah Snook and other Broadway stars talk about the challenges they've faced " and surmounted.
Natalie Venetia Belcon insists she's not as regal as the Cuban musician she plays, but she's worked hard to make you think otherwise.
To climb, leap and play dead each night, the Tony nominee's preshow workout not only tends to his body's needs but also frees up his acting.