Rising Star nominees
The Paper Mill Playhouse has announced the nominations for the 2003 Rising Star Awards recognizing excellence in New Jersey high school musical theater.
The Paper Mill Playhouse has announced the nominations for the 2003 Rising Star Awards recognizing excellence in New Jersey high school musical theater.
For uninitiated playgoers, "Kiki & Herb: Coup de Theatre" takes a bit of preliminary explanation.
Theater officials trying to save the John Harms Center for the Arts in Englewood have reached an agreement with Fleet Bank that could lead to the reopening of the former movie palace turned …
Cliffside Park native Betsy Blair is best known for her Academy Award-nominated performance as Clara, the plain-looking schoolteacher in the 1955 film "Marty." At the time, her husband was G…
Anthony Herrera spent three years talking to movie producers hoping someone would finance his -- still unproduced -- independent feature.
Plot twists in portrait of stale marriage make 'Greek Holiday' worth the trip to Madison
A spotty Broadway season comes to a brilliant conclusion with "Long Day's Journey Into Night" -- an exceptional and electrifying production of a truly great drama.
One of the words in the title of "Stinkin' Rich" pretty much describes the play currently at the Two River Theatre Company in Manasquan.
Alas, the word is not "rich."
Bill Maher takes his humor to Broadway
In star turn, Bernadette Peters clearly is uncomfortable with role
You keep venturing, sometimes you gain.
Mayo Simon twice sent his play "Greek Holiday" to the annual play writing contest sponsored by TheatreFest in Montclair. He won neither time, but on the second go-around the play apparently made a big impression on two of the judges.
Two leaders of the shuttered John Harms Center for the Arts in Englewood have joined with an Alpine councilwoman to form a new nonprofit corporation to try to bring the Harms back to life.
Pacino wasted in lifeless reading of excessively wordy play
'Enchanted April' recalls charming Broadway 'matinee plays' of long ago
Colorful people emerge in pre-French Revolution love triangle
Musicals have been adapted from novels, plays, movies and even comic strips. But can one be fashioned from a textbook?
Steven Skybell has always wanted to do "Uncle Vanya."
Amanda Plummer hasn't.
But they're both in Emily Mann's cast, when her translation of Chekhov's 1898 masterpiece begins performances on Tuesday at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton.
Mary Todd Lincoln is on the move.
Plus news on Paper Mill and the "Shakespear-e-thon."