An Appraisal: Extraordinary Actors Ennobling the Ordinary
Jack Klugman and Charles Durning, who both died on Monday, were shining examples of actors who made everyday characters believable.
Jack Klugman and Charles Durning, who both died on Monday, were shining examples of actors who made everyday characters believable.
Marc Kudisch and Jeffry Denman blend Hanukkah and Christmas in their musical stage show at the York Theater Company.
The musical "Elf" is back on Broadway for a two-month run after first materializing there in 2010.
In "The Understudy" a young Off Broadway actress commits an accidental sort of homicide that keeps putting her onstage in the star's place.
Terry Teachout, a drama critic, has switched hats and written a one-man show called "Satchmo at the Waldorf," now at the Long Wharf Theater in New Haven.
The three-part documentary "Broadway or Bust" follows 60 high school students competing in a show business contest.
"Mike Tyson: Undisputed Truth" has the former heavyweight boxing champion telling stories of his life in this one-man show at the Longacre Theater.
The DreamWorks stage spectacle "How to Train Your Dragon" is on tour in the United States, with some dragons weighing at least 1.6 tons.
With "Shatner's World: We Just Live in It" heading to Broadway, the star answers a reporter's questions.
"Smash," NBC's series about backstage Broadway comes with New York and Hollywood names off screen (Steven Spielberg, Therese Rebeck) and on (Debra Messing and Brian d'Arcy James).
Mr. Gazzara's long acting career included playing Brick in the original "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" on Broadway and roles in influential films by John Cassavetes.
Roslyn Hart plays a sex therapist in "Never Sleep Alone," a show at Joe's Pub, and she is getting people together.
"The Complete World of Sports (abridged)," a stage show at the New Victory Theater, is pitched directly, and proudly, at the juvenile in sports fans of all ages.
Jonathan Bank is directing the Mint Theater Company's revival of "Temporal Powers," a 1930s morality play by Teresa Deevy.
This sprawling tale of madness, based on a 1956 novel by Yukio Mishima, never really earns the crazy.
Otherworldly singing is the premise of "Voca People," at the Westside Theater.
"Henry V," which is being staged outdoors by New York Classical Theater, is part theater, part audience workout.
Neil LaBute joins six other authors in an evening of short plays on a theme of disabilities.
It's outdoor theater season in New York, and playgrounds, parks and sidewalks across the city have been transformed into makeshift stages.
It's outdoor theater season in New York, and playgrounds, parks and sidewalks across the city have been transformed into makeshift stages.
You'd think that with all the money theatrical producers lose, they'd be pretty good at crying. But the other night, Ken Davenport, who is such a producer, could not shed even one tear on de…
Daniel Beaty's musical "Tearing Down the Walls" waxes nostaligic for Harlem and a Cro-Magnon view of the female of the species.
The Actors Theater Company revives "Three Men on a Horse," the Depression-era comedy by John Cecil Holm and George Abbott.
Mike Birbiglia's latest monologue starts with a traumatic event " in this case, a car accident " and wraps it in nutty anecdotes and meandering detours but somehow never loses the audience o…
With a batch of ridiculous-sounding shows about to hit the air, we dare you to tell the real ones from a bunch we made up.