In theater, 10 to remember
A vote for politics " and it's a good year when the National Theatre's active.
A vote for politics " and it's a good year when the National Theatre's active.
Liv Ullmann brings a Bergman memoir to Washington.
Liv Ullmann directs the National Theater of Norway at the Kennedy Center.
Writer-performer Deen's solo show features a clever sleight of hand.
Slice-of-life drama looks at one extended family's night in a hotel room.
Where's the orchestra? Cue the computer.
Bye bye, 'Mean Girls.'
A Bulgarian experiment in political theater makes its U.S. debut.
"His words are so good. He always wanted to be best known as a writer, which he was not."
A hip 'Twelfth Night' takes off at the Shakespeare Theatre Company.
"The Last Night of Ballyhoo," at Theater J, adds to her growing résumé.
A dutiful if uninspired production at Olney.
Telling the truth with laughs about everything from jail to comedy.
The prickly musical portrait is set in a 1963 bombed Alabama church.
Comedian Felonius Munk comes clean at Woolly Mammoth.
Dan Hoyle's solo show, now in D.C., has channeled U.S. frictions since 2010.
The holiday slate fattens up.
The fit's amiss, even with a cast featuring Broadway vet Donna McKechnie.
Fantasy gets real as the 1982 play distills a millennium of discontent.
Days before opening, the cult favorite's first U.S. project outside New York remained a mystery.
'Mean Girls' primps during previews; 'Annie' & 'Crazy for You' begin holiday stands.
"Isn't high school funny, once you're out of it?"
It's now in Baltimore, and the big surprise is . . . just kidding, no surprises.
"I was totally idolizing these guys."
Tony Award winner Donna McKechnie is still kicking her way through musicals.