Anti-war comedy is Greek to them By ROBERT DOMINGUEZ
The National Theater of Greece has broken a tragic habit.
The National Theater of Greece has broken a tragic habit.
In seven hours they are scheduled to perform "Saturday Night Rewritten." But the show has not yet been cast, blocked or, most important, written.
"White Chocolate."
A former Miss Universe from Puerto Rico is now working as a cigar roller - on a New York stage. Denise Quinones, who won the Miss Universe title in 2001, is co-starring in an Off-Broadway re…
He's best-known as the maverick filmmaker who ushered in the blaxploitation genre, but Melvin Van Peebles was once a baadasssss on Broadway, too.
Touching moment elevates series
The big question is: Why has the Signature Theater decided to devote a whole season to so minor a writer?
For the college chums behind the drama "Friction," the key to successfully staging their first full production was having no friction at all. Eastcheap Rep is a rarity among theater companie…
"Veronica Mars," with Kristen Bell.
Why film star wanted to get his hands on 'Kevin Hill'
Broadway star Tonya Pinkins is a deadbeat mom, according to her ex-husband, who is suing her for $100,000 in back child support.
At times the images are repetitive, but on the whole "Symphonie Fantastique" is a wonderful visual adventure, like the Bach sequence of "Fantasia."
Are theatergoers ready for a musical version of "Caligula"?
How about a toe-tapping adaptation of the Tom Cruise movie "Top Gun"?
That's just some of the edgy fare being offered up at the New York Musical Theatre Festival.
Some actresses are famous for giving subtle, nuanced performances.
Jackie Hoffman isn't one of them.
Could "Springtime for Hitler" mean more "revenue time" for New York?
Mayor Bloomberg sure hopes so.
Broadway was a bargain yesterday as more than 50,000 fans packed Times Square for a free preview of the upcoming season.
In "Brooklyn, the Musical," starting Broadway previews next week, a down-and-out street singer ends up performing at Madison Square Garden.
Farfetched? Not quite.
A handful of Hollywood heavyweights will honor New York's Bravest tonight and tomorrow - with a play about 9/11.
It may not be inspired theater, but as a way to work off aggressive energy, its therapeutic value is indisputable.