Nonprofit Theater Plans to Build New Stage in Hell's Kitchen
Ensemble Studio Theater's new street-level main stage on West 52nd Street will be financed primarily by the City of New York.
Ensemble Studio Theater's new street-level main stage on West 52nd Street will be financed primarily by the City of New York.
The senator's address to the Republican National Committee reminded some of Marc Antony's funeral speech in "Julius Caesar."
Three directors talk about returning with revivals of plays that they directed earlier in their careers.
The Broadway show will close on Dec. 31, a little over a year after the production opened on Broadway, the producers said Tuesday.
Mr. Gyllenhaal will star in the Lanford Wilson play "Burn This" at a refurbished Hudson Theater next year.
"Out of the Mouth of Babes," at the Cherry Lane Theater, had been scheduled through July 31, but the actress dropped out at the advice of her doctor.
In addition to a Oct. 24 performance at City Center, sold out, shows have been scheduled for Oct. 25 and 26. And Annaleigh Ashford will play the love interest.
On Monday, Mr. Muñoz replaces Lin-Manuel Miranda, and steps into the title role of "Hamilton."
The musical, about Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia, will run Off Broadway from Sept. 2 through Oct. 6.
Mr. Dixon, currently portraying Eubie Blake in "Shuffle Along," has been nominated for a Tony Award twice. He joins the cast in mid-August.
The actress, who won a Tony Award at 26, returns to Broadway at 41 with a new fierceness and maturity in "The Color Purple."
Beginning this weekend, Mr. Snowden will appear in performances of the play at the Public Theater with Mr. Radcliffe, who plays a writer in the show.
The two will perform in "Privacy" at the Public Theater.
"Significant Other," a comedic drama by Joshua Harmon about a young gay man yearning for love, is coming to Broadway next winter.
Last week the show grossed $799,021, up 42 percent over the previous week. It was the musical's best showing since Jennifer Hudson left the cast.
Announced on Thursday, the July 24 closing startled Broadway, since the musical had drawn 10 Tony nominations and involved several high-profile artists.
"Shuffle Along," one of the most ambitious and anticipated musicals of the theater season just ended, will close next month, abruptly and unexpectedly, the show's producers said Thursday.
This Tony-winning musical, which for a time performed strongly at the box office, is planning a national tour and a London production.
The Tony-winning play will have its final performance at the Helen Hayes Theater on July 24, then start again at the Gerald Schoenfeld on Aug. 9.
Exploring the box-office struggles of "American Psycho," "Bright Star," "Disaster!" and "Tuck Everlasting."
This family drama, which won five Tony Awards last year, including one for best new musical, will have played 26 preview and 582 regular performances.
The box office revenues for the play, which won four Tony awards, exceeded the receipts of the other plays on Broadway, and even beat several musicals.
Lin-Manuel Miranda and Phillipa Soo are also scheduled to leave the show that night.
Ms. Soo's performance as Eliza Hamilton is her Broadway debut. She was nominated for a Tony award for the role.
The creator and star of the Broadway hit will work on other projects, some of them "Hamilton"-related, but expects to return at times to the show.