EXIT LAUGHING by MATT WINDMAN
Enter Laughing is back for a second go round at the York Theatre Company. It's still a load of laughs.
Enter Laughing is back for a second go round at the York Theatre Company. It's still a load of laughs.
There's nothing wrong with playing Private Lives for its emotional truth, rather than merely its clever repartee, but this production goes overboard.
Word has it that West End and TV star Sheridan Smith will play Elle in the London bow of Legally Blonde later this year.
It's not only the travails of Richard Dreyfuss that are on view in Complicit . The play itself is weak and already dated.
Almost 30 years on, Duet for One has lost none of its ability to hit us where it hurts.
William H. Macy's come to the rescue of Speed-the-Plow ...in more ways than one.
Modern in tone, but old fashioned in its setting, this fundamental split dooms this revival of Hedda Gabler.
Peter Pan to play Kensington Gardens
Richard Greenberg's The American Plan is a droll but constricted play about mendacity, set where else, but in the Catskills.
Argue with the approach all you like: Mary-Louise Parker's Hedda Gabler is eminently enjoyable.
The Norman Conquests heading to Broadway in April
This expert revival reveals The American Plan to be one of Richard Greenberg's finest plays.
This Oliver! is a blowsy, rambunctious entertainment that honors the exclamation point in the show's title.
Royal Court to stage Churchill's new play.
London Spring Awakening extends before it opens.
Something worthwhile shimmers here, despite a flawed script and uneven cast.
There's little reason to see this preparatory exercise which Tennessee Williams' himself considered subpar.
The Bridge Project gets off to a smashing start with a revival of The Cherry Orchard . Special kudos to Sinead Cusack and Simon Russell Beale, who stand out in an outstanding cast.
George Bernard Shaw's Mrs. Warren's Profession may be considered a drawing room comedy. but, in reality, it's a tad short of laughs.
Nicholas de Jongh's Plague Over England into West End's Duchess
This isn't dividing the estate, this is losing the estate. With The Cherry Orchard, Sam Mendes' transatlantic project takes flight
Next to Normal is an absolutely gorgeous, invigorating rock musical that explores family, grief, loss and memory with shimmering clarity.
Our reviewer examines a New York theater year in which various revivals made old chestnuts seem new and where Broadway, against the odds, still managed to sing.
Spring Awakening director Michael Mayer eyes West Coast for new musical
Dance and Music at London's Young Vic