DESKTOP
Contact
The Season
On Broadway
Login

Search BroadwayStars

Search:
Author:
Source:
Date Range: From: To:
Sort by: Most Recent   Most Relevant
1,151 stories from The New York Observer

David Loud Remembers Some of Broadway's Best Musicals in 'Facing the Music' by Harry Haun

The conductor and music director looks back in a new memoir.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 12:21pm on April 11, 2022

Review: So Little Has Changed in Baseball That It Is Unquestionably the Right Time for 'Take Me Out' by Rex Reed

Real life has changed since 2003, but baseball has not. It's still the right time for a brave, powerful, poignant play about a gay professional baseball player who comes out of the closet at…

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 8:03pm on April 4, 2022

After 25 Years, Barry Manilow and Bruce Sussman Bring 'Harmony' to New York by Harry Haun

Their musical biography of the Comedian Harmonists is now at the Museum of Jewish Heritage.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 3:28pm on April 1, 2022

Review: Is It Worth Checking into 'Plaza Suite' on Broadway? by David Cote

An average ticket price of $212.67 will make a person believe anything. It can turn a Best Western into the Four Seasons. 

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 8:00pm on March 28, 2022

It's Time to Get Out of Your Apartment! Spring Activities in New York City by Erin Taylor, Erin Taylor

Weather is warming and New York City is bustling with life, from food and art fairs to public art and theater.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 11:02am on March 25, 2022

Woman Suspected of Shoving Broadway Vocal Coach Charged with Manslaughter by Helen Holmes, Helen Holmes

Lauren Pazienza turned herself in to police on Tuesday morning, one week after vocal coach Barbara Maier Gustern died from her injuries.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 4:44pm on March 22, 2022

'Coal Country' Digs Deep Into Workers Rights and Justice by David Cote

The documentary play 'Coal Country' examines the aftermath of such a cataclysm, the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster of 2010, in which 29 out of 31 miners were killed in a coal dust explosion.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 9:00pm on March 10, 2022

Theater in Spring Hopes for a Dramatic Return to Normal by David Cote

Fifteen new productions will open on Broadway in the month of April, that's one every other day.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 1:41pm on March 10, 2022

Costume Designer Paul Tazewell Talks Building Characters Through Fabric and Color by Annie Levin, Annie Levin

His Oscar frontrunner status seems richly deserved.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 12:06pm on March 10, 2022

'The Chinese Lady' Grapples With Chinese-American History by David Cote

The 90-minute drama charts Moy's journey in America from hopeful teen to jaded adult, a progression shadowed by American attitudes toward Chinese immigrants"ranging from Orientalist condesce…

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 11:15am on March 9, 2022

Choreographer Ellenore Scott Is Changing Broadway Two Shows at a Time by Sarah Parker, Sarah Parker

I know I am really good at what I do, and now I can't wait to prove that I'm not just a pawn for the creative team, I deserve to be where I am. 

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 3:04pm on March 2, 2022

Associate and Resident Directors and Choreographers Unionize with SDC by Annie Levin, Annie Levin

Some associates were making less than minimum wage and had no healthcare, while others had benefits and made three thousand dollars a week.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 11:40am on February 28, 2022

Losing in Translation: Iranian Students Struggle with Feelings in 'English' by David Cote

Cross-cultural tension looms over Sanaz Toossi's English, an understated classroom dramedy about the things we lose in crossing linguistic borders. 

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 8:00pm on February 22, 2022

'The Music Man': Hugh Jackman Dazzles in the Perfect Role by Rex Reed

This is the kind of corn that never grows stale.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 4:29pm on February 11, 2022

Matt Doyle and the Gender Flipped Tongue Twister That's Lighting Up Broadway by Harry Haun

In the revival of Sonheim's 'Company,' Doyle shines with his rendition of the complicated 'Getting Married Today.'

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 12:00pm on January 13, 2022

A Star Among the Stars, Cecily Strong Searches for Intelligent Life by David Cote

Wagner's message is a simple but deeply humanistic one: We're all specks in the universe, random, unknowable bio-containers, and who knows where my atoms end and yours begin?

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 8:00pm on January 11, 2022

Mobilization Director of Actors' Equity, Stefanie Frey, Talks Organizing Theater by Annie Levin, Annie Levin

Frey told Observer, "The labor movement was becoming hot, so to speak, and members were really getting activated and needed a way to organize and funnel that energy."

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 9:03am on January 3, 2022

Letters From Sondheim and the Offstage Magic of Mail From an Idol by Brijana Prooker, Brijana Prooker

"It's a lesson in humanity and connection," Tom Kitt tells Observer. Kitt, a Tony, Grammy and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer (Flying Over Sunset, Jagged Little Pill) credits Sondheim with i…

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 11:48am on December 27, 2021

Remarks by Broadway League President Enrage Theatre Community by Annie Levin, Annie Levin

Broadway has been roiled by controversy following contentious remarks made by Charlotte St. Martin, President of The Broadway League.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 1:14pm on December 24, 2021

No Total Lockdown for Broadway During Omicron Surge by Annie Levin, Annie Levin

Gooen describes the Omicron spike coming with a new set of restrictions for Broadway, with increased vigilance during "mask up shifts" and some theaters now requiring PCR testing and vaccine…

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 10:53am on December 22, 2021

'Flying Over Sunset' Tries for Introspection but Achieves Self-Indulgence by Rex Reed

It's better than 'Mrs. Doubtfire', but you will not be singing these tunes as you walk home from the theater " unless you love to rhyme "penis" and "Venus" or "smelly" and "Botticelli."

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 10:05pm on December 13, 2021

Rise! Rise! Rise! This Gender Swapped 'Company' Wins Our Hearts by David Cote

One thing I am certain of: 'Company' is the most sophisticated fun I've had in a theater in ages.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 8:00pm on December 9, 2021

Sweet Sixteen Has a Bitter Edge in New Musical 'Kimberly Akimbo' by David Cote

It's a downbeat fable about escaping the toxic narcissists who created your body.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 11:39am on December 9, 2021

Aiming for Big Tent Family Fare, 'Mrs. Doubtfire' Is Just a Drag by David Cote

It's a patriarchal pangender fantasy that simultaneously de-centers and re-centers cishetero masculinity. Fancy lingo for: kinda outdated and icky.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 10:49am on December 6, 2021

Stephen Sondheim (1930"2021): Master of the Modern Musical by David Cote

He will continue to shape the future of musical theater because he trained our ears, set the bar high, and new composers and lyricists will study his work. For a hundred who try, misguidedly…

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 10:33am on November 28, 2021
« Previous 25   Page 13 of 47   Next 25 »