Something for Everyone, Even Cannibals, at the Philadelphia Fringe
The festival presents a violent Shakespearean interaction with fruit, dance for neurodiverse and neurotypical audiences and showers of (play) money.
The festival presents a violent Shakespearean interaction with fruit, dance for neurodiverse and neurotypical audiences and showers of (play) money.
"What the theater gives me is the feeling that I'm using everything," the actress said of returning to the stage after a decade away.
The writer and actress visits Coney Island as the New York leg of "Death, Let Me Do My Show" arrives Off Broadway.
Twelve years after opening "The Book of Mormon," the two actors " and good friends " return with "Gutenberg! The Musical!"
Our critics debate how well shows like "Six," "& Juliet" and "Once Upon a One More Time" engage with the inner worlds of women onstage.
In his Broadway debut, the illusionist Antonio DÃaz does levitation and teleportation. But it's simple tricks, with cards and balls, that really wow.
How a theater collective transformed the too-weird-to-be-true story of a World War II counterintelligence scheme into a West End musical with heart.
In honor of "Theater Camp," a new movie about a fictional sleepaway site, we asked Broadway veterans and movie stars for their favorite camp memories.
In a show staged in Federal Hall, five prominent playwrights tell the story of the site of significant events in the country's founding, without glossing over the uglier parts.
The magician worked with the playwright Lucas Hnath to create "a more vulnerable version of magic performance," Hnath said.
The theatrical performance of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel, opening this month at the Park Central Hotel, is the latest in a very long, heavily sequined line of "Gatsby" adaptations.
The longtime New York actor explains why his character in Eboni Booth's play about a lonely bookstore worker is closer to him than any other he's taken on.
"It wasn't a choice I would have made," said Mark Russell, whose festival of experimental work will no longer be produced by the Public Theater.
Directed by Hansol Jung and Dustin Wills, this sportive, vividly acted production fails to make a convincing case for its new gags and directorial flights.
The 17th-century play, staged by the theater company Molière in the Park, skewers those who preach morality yet practice anything but.
The musical comedy savant is a Tony nominee for playing Mrs. Lovett, a pie maker with an unusually gruesome recipe hack. "I can't judge her. I just have to love her," she said.
Tornadoes whoosh dinner from the table and a shark swims through a flooded living room in a clown show that brings the environmental crisis home.
The actress said she hopes that the play continues to generate discussions around sexual assault and said the response so far has been "beautiful."
With a 17th-century grocer as its hero, Red Bull Theater and Fiasco stage a 400-year-old comedy that's both a satire of the theater and a valentine to it.
In David Auburn's new play, "Summer, 1976," the actresses play unlikely friends whose relationship has the intensity of a love affair.
The one-woman show, coming to Broadway, is the "Killing Eve" star's first stage role. She dared herself to do it.
Zadie Smith brings her first play, an adaptation of Chaucer's the Wife of Bath tale, to the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
Human ingenuity and animal grace course through this rich, inventive play about difficult choices and the stories we tell to make sense of them.
Broadway's slapstick comedy "Peter Pan Goes Wrong" is full of daring sequences. What does it take? Countless rehearsals (and bruises).
Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, New York Josh Groban and Annaleigh Ashford play Stephen Sondheim's murderous Victorian couple in a bold and barnstorming take Despite having worn a beard for much of h…