Stephen Sondheim's "Sunday in the Park With George" and Stew's "Passing Strange" both opened last month.
They are the two best musicals of the Broadway season thus far.
So much, it would seem, for similarities.
Bending Over Backward for a Well-Known Lout by MICHIKO KAKUTANI
More than three decades after his death, John O'Hara is chiefly remembered for two novels, "Appointment in Samarra" and "Butterfield 8," for several collections of short stories (including those that became the basis for the musical "Pal Joey") and for his snobbish and belligerent demeanor: his truculent drinking, his propensity for beating up men and women and his willful name-dropping and social-climbing.
CAMBRIDGE -- The snow in the American Repertory Theatre production of "Snow in June" drifts down as lightly as Colorado powder, only it's not wet and it's not actually snow.
About the author: By any measure, the film and stage versions of Billy Elliot presented a hard act to follow for Lee Hall. The delightful 1999 feature f...
Neither the poet W.H. Auden nor composer Benjamin Britten were exactly famous for knockabout comedy. The surprise of Alan Bennett's new fictionalized bio-drama about their tussles between re…
Tony-winning Addams Family star Bebe Neuwirth and her mother, artist Sydney Neuwirth, will co-host "The Mother/Daughter Art Show," a one-night-only benefit sale of photographic prints by Be…
Architect, set designer and Tony nominee David Rockwell won at the Art Directors Guild Awards, held in Beverly Hills on Saturday, February 5. Rockwell won for his work in designing for the 8…
Target Margin Theater's play, which is based on Euripides' "Suppliant Women," is a poetic tissue of image and allusion that communicates emotion more clearly than plot.