Robert Redford and Zero Mostel are among the cast members in this 1972 caper comedy screening at Film Forum.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:15AMChristopher Stetson Boal’s drama, at the 59E59 Theaters, toggles between an F.B.I. interrogation and flashbacks of a friendship.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 07:48PMReview of "Swearing Jar" at Fringe festival
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMIn Dybbuk at Theater for the New City, the English playwright Julia Pascal turns a folk tale—about a dislocated soul that inhabits a living person—into an existential meditation.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMRich Orloff’s “Skin Deep,” at Theater 54, is a would-be sex comedy of manners.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PM“Reservoir” by Eric Henry Sanders, brings “Woyzeck,” that classic of a soldier gone mad, up to date.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PM“Starry Messenger,” a one-act play by Ira Hauptman, revolves around Galileo’s trial in 1633 and the clash between science and religion.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PM“The Great Divide,” an obscure 1906 melodrama written by William Vaughn Moody, provides clichéd characters who, at their best, are intriguing reflections of a changing nat…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMNew York Times writers review five shows that made their debuts in the early days of this year’s New York International Fringe Festival.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PM“Olympics Über Alles” hopscotches among decades as it recounts how Marty Glickman and another Jewish runner were pulled from an American relay team in the Berlin Games.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:16PMIn “Clinton: The Musical,” a former president is so conflicted that he is portrayed by two actors and the humor is so low that Kenneth Starr wears leather and fishnet.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:34PMFriends prompt a Jewish husband and a Roman Catholic wife to debate in “The Religion Thing,” at the Cell Theater.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:34PMA working-class woman unjustly sent to prison plots revenge against well-heeled members of society in “Within the Law,” a Progressive Era melodrama revived at the Metropolitan Playhouse.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:01PMIn this solo show at Urban Stages, Jim Brochu portrays Zero Mostel and other Broadway actors who were recognizable if not household names.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:16PMBrian Watkins’s play, “My Daughter Keeps Our Hammer,” tells the story of two sisters in their 20s, living with their ailing mother on the high plains, and desperate for a way out. …
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:00PMIn “Philosophy for Gangsters,” a college graduate being groomed to lead the family business puts the concept of determinism squarely in her cross hairs.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:59PMIn “The Preacher and the Shrink,” at the Beckett Theater, a young woman moves back home and soon accuses a young minister in her father’s church of molesting her. &nbs…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:52PM“Bronx Bombers” centers largely on the volatile relationships of the Yankees team of 1977, while summoning ghosts of other eras of the team’s history.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:53PMIn Alexander Harrington’s new drama, “The Great Society,” the complex and conflicted Lyndon B. Johnson comes across as the biggest Vietnam-era pacifist in the White House. &…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:45PMMetatheatrical techniques pepper the comedy “rogerandtom” and add to its mystical feeling.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:31PMThe seats are cardboard boxes in a truck for playgoers making the journey with the immigrants of “La Ruta.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:43PMThe play “Bodega Bay,” about a mousy Staten Islander’s search for her mother, is intended to pay theatrical homage to Hitchcock, but its true horror is not intentional.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:10PMAllan Sherman’s 1969 musical “The Fig Leaves Are Falling” is given a new treatment by UnsungMusicalsCo. at the Connelly Theater in the East Village.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 03:48PM“The Last Seder,” a comic drama by Jennifer Maisel, depicts a family assembling at a holiday and wrestling with a range of troubles across two generations.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 02:19PMIn “Wild Man in Rome,” Matthew Maguire riffs on a range of places and characters in a 65-minute monologue at the Wild Project.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:52PM“Hard Times: An American Musical” at the Cell Theater, part of the 1st Irish Theater Festival, looks at the life and works of the songwriter Stephen Foster.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 08:54PMThe romance between a Hollywood actress and a Washington politician, born in the 2008 campaign, is put to the test in “Us.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:44PMA musical by Sam Davis and Sean Hartley is mixed in with one-acts by Paul Rudnick, Neil LaBute and James McLure in a six-script festival at 59E59 Theaters.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:00PMCaryl Churchill’s 1987 satire, “Serious Money,” gets a timely revival from the Potomac Theater Project.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 07:22PM“Potted Potter,” at the Little Shubert Theater, takes a humorous look at the seven Harry Potter books in 70 minutes.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:17PMThe comedy “Miracle on South Division Street” at St. Luke’s Theater finds a family holding on tight to its secrets.
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