'Wicked' co-stars Ariana Grande, Jonathan Bailey reunite for 'Sunday in the Park with George' revival
Grande and Bailey most recently starred together as Glinda and Prince Fiyero in "Wicked: For Good."
Grande and Bailey most recently starred together as Glinda and Prince Fiyero in "Wicked: For Good."
Carrie Coon stars in the hair-raising revival of Tracy Letts' freaky and potent 1996 drama that opened Thursday night on Broadway.
Star fans included Sarah Jessica Parker, Robert Downey Jr., Jonathan Groff, Nathan Lane, Cynthia Nixon, Marsha Mason, Christine Baranski, Alan Cumming and many, many more.
Broadway must be eyeing this big-hearted little bear with envy, because New York's got nothing close that hasn't already been chugging along for over a decade.
The stage and screen legend is back home on Broadway, where she got her start in "Gypsy" opposite Ethel Merman in 1960, for the first time in eight years.Â
The show officially opened two weeks ago.
As "Wicked: For Good" is about to hit theaters, what many forget is that "Wicked" the musical didn't start off as a surefire juggernaut that was destined to gross $6 billion.
British actor Sam Tutty is funny, Shirley Temple endearing and effortlessly magnetic as in the new meet-cute musical.
The "Death of a Salesman" actress lost her battle to cancer.
Last week, "First Shadow," which only landed on Broadway in late March, played to just 75% capacity. The seven days before that? 65%.Â
British writer-director Robert Icke has wrestled Sophocles into 2025, breathtakingly so, with his starkly intense revival from London starring Lesley Manville and Mark Strong that opened Thu…
Tom Felton is making magic happen on Broadway.
At the center of the Broadway musical "The Queen of Versailles" is an unfinished, 90,000-square-foot house in Florida " one of the biggest private homes in America.
Fans of the famed dance troupe will get a thrill out of New York City's big tribute to the dancers as they mark their centennial.
Felton, who will soon star in the play "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child," says his former movie co-star with more stage experience has lent him a hand.
"Grease" is no longer the word. Now the word is "Vape!" -- an off-Broadway parody that reimagines the beloved musical set in a 1950s high school as it would look in today's woke world.
It's a hard-hitting, hard-laughing show that combines topics that you arrive at the theater not itching to confront " the COVID pandemic, meth addiction, health insurance, shift pay " into a…
Bess Wohl's 1970s-set dramedy comes plenty of hot-tempered clashes, solid jokes and, to ensure no one dozes off, an extended full-frontal nudity scene.Â
That's what this entire exercise in soulless IP exploitation is: A fun movie masquerading as an interminable musical.
The venerable Canadian theater festival's revival of "Annie" plays well into December " one of spring-and-summer Stratford's longest runs ever. So the sun will come out tomorrow, albeit for …
The show will go on!
Stripping away the excesses of Lynn Ahrens, Stephen Flaherty and Terrence McNally's 1996 musical about the turn of the 20th century amplifies its many, many flaws. Â
The Rockettes are getting a Christmas present: Radio City Musical Hall is kicking up the sound quality.
Christine Sherrill was teaching fifth graders in Kenosha, Wisconsin, when she got the call she'd landed her first Broadway role.
It's "Sleep No More" meets "The Music of the Night."