Review: Cooking Their Way Out of the '50s, Singing
In "A Taste of Things to Come," a breezy musical at York Theater Company, four friends navigate the 1950s, the 1960s and the inevitability of change.
In "A Taste of Things to Come," a breezy musical at York Theater Company, four friends navigate the 1950s, the 1960s and the inevitability of change.
The Broadway musical and the man it's about are the subject of a "Great Performances" documentary.
Jonathan Rockefeller's puppet play at DR2, 'That Golden Girls Show! A Puppet Parody,' features the familiar sitcom characters, doing what they always did.
The overall portrait in this 1953 play by N.C. Hunter is of an economically comfortable English family in coastal Dorset in the anxious postwar years.
Inspired by the career of a former F.B.I. agent who infiltrated white supremacist groups, the film may get moviegoers' blood boiling.
"History of the World, Part I" is one of seven Brooks movies being served with food and drinks at the theater-restaurant Syndicated.
Michael Counts's newest adventure mixes theatrical flourishes with the escape-room fad.
Outdoors at Marcus Garvey Park, a Shakespeare classic plays out in a free production that's enhanced by its urban surroundings.
Another mash-up from the team that turned "Full House" and "Saved by the Bell" into stage parodies.
Noah Diamond delivers a precise revival of Groucho and Company's first assault on Broadway.
This comedy isn't above lowbrow humor as it melds elements of "Gilligan's Island" and "Lost."
In a ratty Texas liquor store, several people show up, along with that small-town specter, the rift between those who leave and grow and those who don't.
There are positive and negative aspects to this York Theater Company production's casting of young children instead of adults.
A stage actor struggling with the demons of old age is propped up by his personal assistant in this period piece, set during World War II.
This HBO film, directed by Jay Roach and covering Johnson's first year in office, is based on Robert Schenkkan's Tony Award-winning play from 2014.
The play, by Sevan K. Greene and directed by Kareem Fahmy, is inspired by a memoir written by Mr. Fahmy's grandmother.
Dena Blizzard's solo show about the travails of motherhood offers an evening of easy laughs but little insight.
If David Carl as Gary Busey as Hamlet is not exponential enough, the New York Shakespeare Exchange is offering "Hamlet" to the 10th power.
A play that may have been at least partly written by Shakespeare is mounted by the Letter of Marque Theater Company.
A solo show from a writing partner of Dave Chappelle, mixes one-liners, stand-up and the confessional.
The veteran stage clowns Bill Irwin and David Shiner bring back their sketches to the Pershing Square Signature Center.
Mr. Birbiglia's one-man show is an indescribably ridiculous collection of anecdotes and asides that miraculously blend into a whole.
Mr. Orloff, in this play, seeks to humanize members of a group dismissed by his friends and characterized as loudmouth reactionaries.
This play imagines what happens to an author after he tires of railing against the capitalist system.
With its bar-raising razzle-dazzle, "Grease: Live!" propels the trend of musicals-on-television toward a new art form: not theater; more like the movie, but performed live.