‘Schmigadoon!’ Review: Oh, What a Beautiful Sendup
Cinco Paul’s loving spoof of Golden Age musicals, adapted from a TV series, comes to Broadway, where its charming musical numbers can really shine.
Cinco Paul’s loving spoof of Golden Age musicals, adapted from a TV series, comes to Broadway, where its charming musical numbers can really shine.
“The Fear of 13,” about a man who spent two decades on death row for a murder he didn’t commit, is a story that the playwright says she “couldn’t shake.”
New York City Ballet opens its spring season with classic works by George Balanchine and more. Here are some dancers who will surely stand out.
Lust is the comic engine driving the action of a riotous revival of one of Noël Coward's early plays, with Rose Byrne and Kelli O'Hara, at Todd Haimes Theater.
Stars and luminaries honored the dance company's 100th anniversary with dinner, performances and a champagne toast at the New York Public Library.
His "Cassette Vol. 1" has a 1980s mix tape soundtrack and nods to postmodern American dance vocabulary.
John Lithgow in "Giant," a triumphant revival of "Death of a Salesman" and vogueing cats at "The Jellicle Ball": These productions are worth knowing about.
As portrayed in shows like "Smash," "Slings & Arrows" and "American Classic," life onstage is a grab-bag of archetypes both hilariously wrong and a little bit right.
Producers and the cultural authorities hope that technology can overcome a language barrier and take the country's shows to the world.
The actress stars as a haunted genius opposite Don Cheadle as her father in David Auburn's 2001 drama. This revival, though, exposes the play's lack of rigor.
Roundabout Theater Company, one of the four nonprofits with Broadway houses, plans three Broadway shows next season.
A new London production highlights the story's racial element and shows how much has changed since the play's 1963 premiere.
Adrien Brody and Tessa Thompson make confident Broadway debuts, but the uneven script makes for a narratively slippery prison drama.
Other picks include the historical hip-hop musical "Mexodus," an Anne Carson radio play and a century-old play about machines replacing humans.
Daphne Rubin-Vega stars as a laid-off office worker who spins into a murderous rage in this update of Elmer L. Rice's 1923 classic.
The violinist Johnny Gandelsman wanted his music to move. In the overly winsome "Johnny Loves Johann," he performs Bach's cello suites alongside four dance artists.
Mark Rosenblatt's Broadway play, starring John Lithgow as the British children's book author, draws from Dahl's comments over the years.
The pair performed a scene from 'The Fear of 13' at The New York Times.
The actor-comedian said he will return to Broadway this fall with a new solo show called "860," named for the address of his destroyed family home.
Critics reflect on the 2026 Olivier Awards, which recognized homegrown British talent and some productions headed for New York.
At the School of American Ballet's new health and wellness center, bodies and minds share equal billing and everyone gets the help they need.
This "Titanic" parody fueled by Dion's hits, silly ad-libs and pop culture references had the humblest of beginnings. Now the show has docked on Broadway.
The hit musical about the beloved bear won seven awards at Britain's equivalent of the Tonys. "Evita," starring Rachel Zegler, took home two prizes.
Before each performance, the actor sprints around the Hudson Theater enlisting audience members to take part in the interactive show.
Her dance company, the oldest in the United States, celebrates its centennial in a series of mixed bills. But why aren't all the dances by Graham?