1,869 stories by "Jeremy Gerard"
Not that there's anything wrong with that. Well, a few things, maybe.
It's not at all hard to understand why Harvey Weinstein turned to Diane Paulus to overhaul Finding Neverland, the mus…
Putting a new spin on crowdsourcing and the very risky business of producing Broadway shows, investors Howard and Janet Kagan have launched a new online investment platform invest.maxolev.co…
EXCLUSIVE Updates with more information:Â Harvey Weinstein's well-tended production of Finding Neverland has booked a Nederlander theater and will open on Broadway in the spring, I've lear…
Two fall shows " the new musical Honeymoon In Vegas and a revival of A.R. Gurney's  two-hander Love Letters " are switching theaters. Love Letters will begin performances at the 1.036-…
Fondly remembered for those Elvis impersonators parachuting to the Strip and saving the day for a Brooklyn schnook, "Honeymoon in Vegas" is the latest film-to-musical transfer looking for a …
 NEW YORK -- By the end of "Lucky Guy," you're going to like Tom Hanks a lot more than Mike McAlary, the tabloid byline he plays with magnetic appeal in his Broadway debut.
The producers of "Glengarry Glen Ross" invited critics to see the revival this weekend, following a preview period of nearly two months in which the star, Al Pacino, fine-tuned his performan…
David Mamet and the "Glengarry Glen Ross" team had an opening-night party on Sunday without going through the bother of an opening night with those possibly mood- ruining reviews. Mamet's 19…
There's perfect symmetry in the fact that "Show Stopper: The Theatrical Life of Garth Drabinsky" had its premiere in the city where Drabinsky made and lost two fortunes.
An unscrupulous, sanctimonious snake vying for his party's presidential nomination, Senator Joseph Cantwell seems like an uncanny imitation of Rick Santorum, especially as played by Eric McC…
A new musical based on an ancient sex comedy, "Lysistrata Jones" has transferred creakily to Broadway, losing its innocence along the way.
It's a bummer when Jesus dies. He and his friends were having so much fun.
First the American Repertory Theater at Harvard told critics we couldn't review "Porgy and Bess."
Then we were welcomed after all.
In a Broadway season robust with bravura performances, comes another that makes demands of our souls along with our ears.
When Rooster Byron exhales whatever he's toking, the smoke comes out in two long streams that might make you think of a fighter jet taking off.
A recovering alcoholic nun in mufti, Sister Jamison talks tough, swears a lot and can out- wrestle anyone foolish enough to take her on.
His name is Joey, and he makes two of the most sensational stage entrances Broadway has ever seen.
**1/2
The original Cameron Mackintosh / Royal Shakespeare Company production...