Originally written for the Chicago Humanities Festival in 2001, "America 1941" has been reworked to include a part for Steppenwolf Theatre and "Frasier" actor John Mahoney, who came on board…
At Thursday's opening night of "The Producers," it was hard to believe that this was Los Angeles. Oh, certain things were familiar. Hollywood Boulevard was closed; there was a red carpet; there were fabulous beaded, backless gowns; and, of course, there were celebrities — Tim Allen, Alec Baldwin, Goldie Hawn, Cloris Leachman to name a few.
So it was a tiny bit like the Oscars, only smaller. And, as one publicist put it, everyone was wearing his or her own clothes.
This Pearl Theater Company production is an earnest but uninspired revival that never quite captures the play's romance or tragedy.
Confirming the early rumors surrounding her casting, R&B/soul singer Mary J. Blige has officially signed on to play strip club owner Justice in the upcoming movie adaptation of Rock of A…
As charmingly neurotic Pikesville-born playwright Cherie Vogelstein prepares a new play for broadway, the pressure is on, and so is the procrastination.
That ol' devil Lucifer is having a good season in Chicago.
If you thought "Urinetown: The Musical" was off the beaten path, wait until you tune into "Yeast Nation (the triumph of life)," the latest work from the offbeat minds of Greg Kotis and Mark …
Sometimes stepping into the past can be a good thing. So says director Mary Zimmerman, who brings back "Mirror of the Invisible World," her adaptation of an ancient Persian poem, to the Good…
GRAND ENTRANCE: Rock fireball John Cameron Mitchell woke up a slugglish Breeders set at the Bowery Ballroom when the "Hedwig and the Angry Inch" star seemingly flew out on stage in shorts an…
Though theater exceeded its goal, organizers had set lower target because of economy
Two-time Tony Award nominee Mary Testa performs her latest one-woman show, Classically Speaking, Sept. 27 at 9:30 PM at the Laurie Beechman Theatre.
Mint Theater Company is giving the first New York revival of Allan Monkhouse’s slyly subversive 1911 drawing-room comedy “Mary Broome,” and