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3,308 stories from Newsday

Tony Award nominations: Will 'Dear Evan Hansen,' 'Groundhog Day,' 'Come From Away' win big?

Tony Award nominations will be announced Tuesday morning for what has been one of the busiest, best and most competitive seasons in recent memory. After 13 new musicals, five musical revival…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 5:31am on May 2, 2017

'A Doll's House, Part 2' review: Worthy Broadway sequel to Ibsen's shocker

The whereabouts of Nora Helmer have been imagined, debated and even dramatized since 1879, when she shocked the Victorian world by slamming the door on her ostensibly happy marriage in Henri…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:24pm on April 27, 2017

'Bandstand' review: Band of war vets serves up music and emotion

The title "Bandstand" is a curveball. So is the subtitle, "The New American Musical." For audiences of a certain age, the name of the season's final musical suggests those dopey and adored t…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:12pm on April 26, 2017

'Six Degrees of Separation' review: Cons and connections still timely in revival

When John Guare's "Six Degrees of Separation" opened in 1990, the scintillating tragic-comedy was scathing and wildly enjoyable, even though one of the targets -- New York's radical chic -- …

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:24pm on April 25, 2017

'Anastasia' review: A vapid journey to the past on Broadway

Every couple of years -- OK, two years ago and now -- Broadway producers have felt compelled to stage a big, bombastic, romantic musical about recent Russian history, preferably based on at …

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:31pm on April 24, 2017

'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' review: Saccharine overload

For a musical about the wonder of pure imagination, "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" is bizarrely lacking in it.

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:31pm on April 23, 2017

'Hello Dolly!' review: Singing Bette Midler's praises in a happy show

If there were such a thing as a happiness meter at the Shubert Theatre these days, where, oh, where would that be placed? The obvious position is in the audience, where fans of "Hello, Dolly…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 10:12pm on April 20, 2017

'The Little Foxes' review: Good reason to see it twice

The next time anyone challenges the need to have nonprofit Broadway houses alongside the commercial theaters, I'm going to shout out, "The Little Foxes."

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 10:06pm on April 19, 2017

Andy Karl cuts back on 'Groundhog Day' appearances

Andy Karl, who performed at the opening of "Groundhog Day" Monday and the following day despite a serious knee injury, has cut back his appearances this week to just Friday and Saturday even…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 11:02am on April 19, 2017

'Indecent' review: Gripping, extraordinary play about a play

Has there ever been anything quite like "Indecent," a play that touches -- I mean deeply touches -- so much rich emotion about history and the theater, anti-Semitism, homophobia, censorship,…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:42pm on April 18, 2017

'Groundhog Day' review: Andy Karl's injury shadows terrific musical

I saw Andy Karl in "Groundhog Day" on Thursday, and he was terrific. So, in fact, was the show, an ingenious, witty, dark yet joyously offbeat musical about Phil Connors, a snotty big-city T…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:31pm on April 17, 2017

Where star vehicles took Carol Channing, James O'Neill and other actors

We don't often get the chance to think about Carol Channing and Eugene O'Neill's father in the same space. But here we are, pondering actors who famously made their careers with massively po…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 2:02pm on April 17, 2017

'Groundhog Day' star Andy Karl injured during preview

Andy Karl, the star of the new musical, "Groundhog Day," injured his knee toward the end of Friday's performance, which may have jeopardized Monday's opening of the much-anticipated show.

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 11:36am on April 15, 2017

'War Paint' review: Patti LuPone, Christine Ebersole as cosmetics queens Rubinstein, Arden

Patti LuPone's voice glistens in many dark shades of steel -- shards with sharp points and astonishing smooth edges. Christine Ebersole sounds classy and creamy, but cream that bites and sti…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:42pm on April 6, 2017

'Present Laughter' review: Kevin Kline back on Broadway

Kevin Kline has always struck me as a character actor trapped in a leading man's body -- too quirky and complicated to be satisfied as a romantic hero, but too great looking to simply play t…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:06pm on April 5, 2017

'Gently Down the Stream' review: Harvey Fierstein returns to drama

We have learned many things about Harvey Fierstein since his breakout 1983 Tony-winning "Torch Song Trilogy" inspired him to declare himself the first "real-life, out-of-the-closet queer on …

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 10:12pm on April 4, 2017

'Amelie' review: Phillipa Soo shines in weirdly original show

The Broadway season has many openings left before the late-April cutoff, but it seems safe to say that none is likely to be weirder than "Amelie." Given the bushels of imagination in directo…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 10:06pm on April 3, 2017

'The Play That Goes Wrong' review: The comedy goes right

How many times must characters get smashed in the head with doors and other wooden planks before, I admit it, even the most farce-averse among us gets worn down enough to love it? Is there a…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 10:02pm on April 2, 2017

Laura Linney, Cynthia Nixon alternate roles in 'Little Foxes'

When Lillian Hellman's "The Little Foxes" opens on Broadway later this month, Laura Linney will crawl under the thick skin of Regina, the furious Southern wife cut out from her family inheri…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 3:48pm on March 31, 2017

'Latin History for Morons' review: Leguizamo as eager teacher

John Leguizamo is out to teach us something in "Latin History for Morons," but don't run for the door. He's wearing a professorial tweedy sport jacket and a tie, and is surrounded by books, …

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:48pm on March 27, 2017

'Sweat' review: Lynn Nottage gives intimate glimpse of lost factory life

For a brief moment before the November election, the news was filled with stories about disenfranchised blue-collar voters in the Rust Belt. At the same time, smack in the eye of the news cy…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 10:03pm on March 26, 2017

'The New Yorkers' review: Spirited revival of racy Cole Porter musical

Cole Porter wrote a lark of a racy musical called "The New Yorkers" to cheer people up during the financial panic of 1930. Three days later, the Bank of the United States failed. Twenty week…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 8:24pm on March 24, 2017

'Miss Saigon' review: Helicopter lands, passion soars

Well, the helicopter has landed again and it's still very big. The mercenary Eurasian pimp known as The Engineer is bumping and grinding again on the hood of another Cadillac while singing a…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 11:03pm on March 23, 2017

'The Fantasticks,' off-Broadway's longest-running show, set to close

Off-Broadway's longest-running show closes at the Jerry Orbach Theater in Times Square.

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 1:03pm on March 21, 2017

'How to Transcend a Happy Marriage' review: Play questions monogamy

What looks alarmingly like a dead, skinned goat hangs upside down from a hook at the start of Sarah Ruhl's "How to Transcend a Happy Marriage." A willowy woman enters, seems to whisper somet…

SOURCE: Newsday Subscription at 9:18pm on March 20, 2017
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