To Sell or Not to Sell: How Would You Sum Up ‘Hamlet’?
One sign that Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy isn’t going away: No one can agree on what it’s about.
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One sign that Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy isn’t going away: No one can agree on what it’s about.
At its 5th conference and festival, the Asian-American theatre alliance shared enthusiasm for new work and new strategies, as well as its critiques of persistent inequities.
On this week’s podcast, Lynn Nottage discusses the presidential election and her new play ‘Sweat.’ Plus the editors discuss ‘Hamilton’s America’ and ‘A 24-Decade History of Popular Music.’
How a national short-play project, born from the outrage over police violence, is spreading across the nation.
Why some theatres—and their loyal audiences—keep eagerly boarding the repertory merry-go-round, season after grueling season.
Eight early-career theatre leaders will recieve grants to work with mentors at TCG member theatres.
This larger-than-life talent found her home at a theatre where she could play anything and everything, and did.
‘Roe’ and ‘Dry Land’ are erasing the stigma of portraying women’s reproductive decisions onstage.
A range of voices considers the impact and the lasting legacy—and a few lacunae—of August Wilson’s seminal speech.
A go-to director of new plays, Blain-Cruz likes to work on her feet—all the better to lead a journey through an experience to an idea.