43 Stages of Grieving
43 Stages of Grieving is thoughtful and inspiring.
43 Stages of Grieving is thoughtful and inspiring.
All of this turmoil has the makings of a great story to be told in theatrical form and Orson's Shadow delivers.
Thankfully Flight Risk is playing for only one week at the Gene Frankel Theater.
Director Jake Beckhard had his work cut out for him as playwright Andy Boyd gave him basically three debates to stage in the play Three Scenes in the Life of a Trotskyist. He did a bang-u…
The Cookers are a Jazz Supergroup, who teach the Master's Master Class, who are so finely in tune with themselves and each other that they don't play the music, but instead they are playing …
Join a cult, make new friends, solve puzzles, participate in a rebellion, all while having high tea at The Order of the Golden Scribe.
By David Walters Romance of the Three Kingdoms, from which Warrior Sisters of Wu was distilled, is an epic historical novel of the hundred years between 184AD and 280AD with hundreds of char…
Cole Escola is effulgence (a state of being bright and radiant; splendor, brilliance) in their writing, acting, singing, and dancing. If you know any of their other work, it's possible to se…
Taking audio bits from over 40 film and television DID references that have been spliced together for a storyline, in Split Lip Ginava meticulously lip-syncs the words, going in and out of t…
It's a delightfully fascinating evening of peeking behind the curtain at art, at a life, at what performance can be.
Wounded touches on many themes, but the strongest, that just because your gay doesn't mean it's okay that you're raped, is the linchpin that leads them both to their impasse with each other …
Writer Max Wolf Friedlich has written a tense and tightly-strung piece that will keep you riveted. Director Michael Herwitz keeps winding the strings taught until you are sure they're going …
It's a Motherf**king Pleasure to see this show.
Simultaneously a heartbreaking and joyful show showing both sides of the tragedy/comedy mask.
What I feel Pan Pan has accomplished in their work, is a haunting. Like the book club characters and their reaction to the book, this production will stay with you as your mind works out the…
This is not a review. At least any kind of review that you're used to seeing. And "As You Like It, A Radical Retelling by Cliff Cardinal" now playing at NYU's Skirball Theater for two nights…
A prime example of theater as a collaborative art form.
I went to the Kraine Theater last night to experience something that I didn't know existed; I thought was pretty cool, and something that is unlike anything else you'll probably come across.…
By David Walters Spain is a technically precise, tightly constructed, and a sharply designed vision for the eyes. The scenes pop along, spinning in and fading out as if you were looking thro…
Two parallel stories, one placed in a fictional bronze-age era and the other modern-day, both focus on the roles that society fosters upon women.
"Sometimes life is what life costs" is a heartwrenching theme of these two stories
I wouldn't call Ryan McCartan's characterization in the role of Cletis a scene-stealer. I would call it a play-stealer extraordinare.
Suzanne's storytelling is uniquely her which makes it enthralling, educational, a personally revealing window into herself, and rather fun.
What it so succinctly sets up is a clash between a country's comfortable projected self-image and its greedier self-serving actions.
This is historical, musical storytelling that will leave you informed, more knowledgable, and completely entertained.