A Slow and Steady Commotion: response to Sister Sylvester's Maps for a War Tourist
But the tortoises bring a different element. They seem trustworthy. You can really count on them to play their part.
But the tortoises bring a different element. They seem trustworthy. You can really count on them to play their part.
Director Alexis Confer is in a groove. After three straight successful productions of Shakespeare's most well loved comedies, she's taking on the notoriously ambitious, fantastical and wildl…
Not more than 10 minutes into Naomi Wallace's War Boys we see a frustrated young man jerking off to the Pledge of Allegiance. He's part of a three-man brigade that hangs out for kicks every …
harunalee, the wildly imaginative performance ensemble helmed by Kristine Haruna Lee, is transforming The Club at La Mama into a memory palace. The piece is said to be "a little bit cosmos a…
Photo by John Ulman Frank Boyd is the sort of supremely talented performer whose craft is so refined it's nearly invisible. For all I know, he might very well be a sweaty, smalltime jazz DJ …
Sister Sylvester's new piece, They Are Gone But Here Must I Remain, opens with the company's founder and director, Kathryn Hamilton, cheerfully and pragmatically laying out a few basic facts…
A response to Ion Theatre's Sea of Souls
Exploring Mary John Frank's Debutaunt
Buran Theatre's MAMMOTH: A DE-EXTINCTION LOVE STORY