This cabaret wants you to take Elvis Presley's music seriously
"Entirely Elvis," at Signature Theatre, showcases his rawness and original sound.
"Entirely Elvis," at Signature Theatre, showcases his rawness and original sound.
Singer-songwriter's alt-rock album "Girlfriend" is now the score to Signature's "Girlfriend."
The Rock-Ola from the original staging of "Two Trains Running" lights up the stage again.
Alexander Strain found his day job, in social work, reflected in this play about depression, "Every Brilliant Thing."
In 'Nothing to Lose (but Our Chains),' standup comic Felonious Munk gives voice to some of his victims.
Christina Ham's fantasy, opening at Arena Stage, depicts the activist "trying to tell a truth."
The living-installation "Hello, My Name Is . . ." is staged in a house in the D.C. neighborhood of Takoma Park.
Robert Richmond, the director, went to Rome to brainstorm and prepare for staging the complex play.
At Rorschach Theatre, the audience shares the space and the experience.
"The Devil's Music," taking nearly a decade to make, opens Aug. 24 at Atlas Performing Arts Center.
The composer loved the film and teamed up with the writer for a show premiering at Keegan.
The story set in the colonial era was mostly only updated in its cast and design for the run at Kennedy Center.
"A one-person play allowed me to be more romantic and physical," says writer Terry Baum.
Eugene Lee stars in the one-man show about the revered playwright coming of age in Pittsburgh.
A 1666 classic by Molière gets a freshening up but keeps the delightful rhyming verse.
Director Luis Salgado sees parallels in Lin-Manuel Miranda's immigrant-centered musicals.
The play, at Atlas, explores an interview for South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
The world premiere at Signature explores dark corners of life in isolated Middle America.
In 'The How and the Why," two female evolutionary biologists grapple with life choices.
How an unlikely manners class evolved into "Charm" at Mosaic Theatre.
Tom Story describes directing multiple characters, and playing multiple characters himself.
Production will use a scaled-back orchestra and multiethnic cast for the innovative musical.
A young black man dies, yes, but the playwright has a deeper truth in mind.
"You dial up the bizarreness, you magnify the emotions," says playwright Kate Hamill.
Show's costume designer had to come up with sturdy " but sexy! " stilettos.