This Month in Theatre History
From a fire at the Richmond Theatre in Virginia to the birth of Puerto Rican theatre in New York City, December was a memorable month for theatre.
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From a fire at the Richmond Theatre in Virginia to the birth of Puerto Rican theatre in New York City, December was a memorable month for theatre.
The British director, who’s bringing her new Kneehigh show ‘946’ to Berkeley Rep, tells us why gender parity shouldn’t be so hard to achieve.
Seventy-five awards were handed out at Theatre Bay Area’s annual awards ceremony.
Alice Childress’s seldom-produced interracial love story, though set a century ago, gave off fresh sparks at the Intiman.
The writer of ‘The Brother/Sister Plays’ will head Yale’s playwriting program and serve as Yale Rep’s playwright-in-residence.
Playwrights and artistic directors share more fears, hopes, challenges, plans, and self-examination in response to the election of Donald Trump.
More than a mere play collection, the author’s new anthology is a meta-meditation on identity, memory, and meaning.
Next season, the San Francisco theatre will produce plays by Mia Chung and Christopher Chen.
Expanded empathy and sharper edges, new voices and new audiences, are on the agenda for the nation’s playwrights and artistic directors.
What can the theatre bring to this moment of national uncertainty? Our art, our activism, and each other.