FRANKLIN, Tenn. - Singer-actor Jerry Reed, best known for his role in the "Smokey and the Bandit" movies, is producing an original musical to be performed at a theater in a Nashville suburb.
This innocuous play by Richard Alfieri recalls wan Broadway comedies of years gone by, shows that inexplicably got to New York and then disappeared quickly.
The high kicks don't come anymore, but Doris Eaton can still hit her mark.
Oscar-winning "Chicago" director Rob Marshall is optimistic that his next project will be the movie version of the best-selling novel "Memoirs of a Geisha," despite a battle between major st…
CBS broadcaster Dick Enberg has written a play about the late basketball coach and network sportscaster Al McGuire.
There is some heartfelt writing here, and the evening is helped immeasurably by its strong cast, particularly the incandescent Eileen Atkins who portrays an abandoned wife.
"Strictly Academic" is strictly lesser A.R. Gurney, a slight collection of one-act plays that stretch the thinnest of comic ideas past the point of boredom.
"The Two Noble Kinsmen" will never be included on a list of Shakespeare's greatest hits — but no matter.
Jamie-Lynn DiScala (nee Sigler) of "The Sopranos" fame will play former Hollywood Madam Heidi Fleiss in a USA Network movie tentatively titled "Going Down: The Rise and Fall of Heidi Fleiss."
In the end, "The Boy From Oz" is a show filled with aimless energy rather than inspiration, leaving theatergoers exhausted rather than entertained.
A profile of Peter, with quotes from Ann-Margret, Carole Bayer Sager and Julie Wilson.
This one-woman show expertly walks the line between illumination and entertainment.
On Monday, the Roundabout Theatre Company, which produced "Nine," announced Elfman would not appear in the musical because the show could not change its Oct. 28 reopening date due to the heavy number of Broadway openings in October and November.
That's not what Stamos said...
Beware of characters named Zoe.
Greek for "life," the name invites all manner of pretentious wordplay, annoying even when well-intentioned.
One doesn't need to be a baseball fan to enjoy this show, though it may leave some feeling like uninitiated spectators at a slow-moving pitchers' duel.