Mr. Phillips, a British theater director, added productions and brought in stars like Maggie Smith during his tenure as artistic director in the ’70s.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:22PMMr. Moody, a British character actor, flared to prominence in the role of Dickens’s guru of thievery, in the stage and screen adaptation of “Oliver!”.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 01:34PMMr. Bailey, who performed in the guise of pop divas like Judy Garland and Barbra Streisand, was a Las Vegas favorite, but he also played supper clubs, cabarets, Carnegie Hall and the London …
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 09:33AMThe police stopped rush-hour traffic at Eighth Avenue and West 47th Street on Wednesday so the buses could pass through and their passengers, burly men in jackets and ties, could make the cu…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMr. Lally's troupe has received international acclaim for its productions of works by Irish playwrights, especially J. M. Synge and Martin McDonagh.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMIrving Ravetch, whose playwriting career stalled on the brink of Broadway but who became half of one of Hollywood’s most successful husband-and-wife screenwriting teams, creators of th…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMr. Mantell was a character actor who, nearly 20 years apart, delivered two of movie history’s more memorable lines, one to Ernest Borgnine and one to Jack Nicholson.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMr. Bosley played the reliably kind father on TV’s “Happy Days” and won a Tony onstage for “Fiorello!”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMShannon spent seven months performing in the show before receiving a diagnosis of leukemia in April.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMEd Schmidt’s personal farewell to the theater, “My Last Play,” takes place in his Brooklyn living room.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMarcia Lewis, an actress and singer known for bringing a comic brassiness to Broadway revivals of “Grease” and “Chicago,” died on Tuesday in Nashville. She was 72.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMs. Stevenson, who appeared in a handful of movies and television shows, spent most of her career on the stage.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMr. Linney roved along many intellectual paths, refashioning classical works for modern times and adapting contemporary novels for the stage.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMr. McLure, who was best known for plays like “Lone Star” and “Pvt. Wars,” had a following in the West and in regional theaters.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMs. Stoddard, after a long career onstage and in television roles, brought the works of Noël Coward, James Thurber and Harold Pinter to Broadway.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMAn obituary writer gets a role for a night in “Play Dead,” which milks entertainment from the universal human attraction to what repels us: most of all, death.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMA man who writes about death for a living stepped into a stage coffin for a role in “Play Dead,” an Off Broadway show.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMAuthor: Doug Wright
Producers: Delphi Productions, Playwrights Horizons
His 1962 family history “The Rothschilds” became a Broadway musical.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:54PMMs. Malina, with her husband, Julian Beck, created a troupe that advanced the idea of political theater in America.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 07:19PMMr. Saks, who switched from acting to directing in midcareer, won three Tony Awards and became the leading interpreter of the plays of Neil Simon.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:31PMMr. Schambelan started the company Theater Breaking Through Barriers as a vehicle for vision-impaired actors to perform their craft.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:37PMMr. Herrmann could be formidable or friendly and was often cast in movies and on television in affluent roles as a lawyer, judge or millionaire.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 07:48PMMs. Whitelaw, an English actress, first encountered Samuel Beckett’s work at the National Theater in London in 1964.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:28PMMr. Macdonald worked with classical, contemporary and regional material, from Bach to Gilbert and Sullivan and on to Leonard Cohen.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:50PMMr. Briggs’s career bridged the history of tap from Bill (Bojangles) Robinson to Savion Glover.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:07PMMike Nichols, one of America’s most celebrated directors, whose long, protean résumé of critic- and crowd-pleasing work earned him adulation both on Broadway and in Hollywood, died on We…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 07:46AMA soloist with Ballet Theater, Mr. Saddler made his Broadway musical theater debut in 1947, and he went on to win two Tonys as a Broadway choreographer.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:19AMInspired by essays by urban children, Mr. Schapiro had the idea for what became a “dark and lovely” Broadway musical.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:35PMAs a director at Second City and Steppenwolf and a department chairman at Columbia College, Mr. Patinkin helped to develop Chicago’s robust theatrical scene.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:07PM