A Windy City Mirror
Some of the nation’s biggest theatrical questions are being asked, and vigorously answered, in Chicago.
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Some of the nation’s biggest theatrical questions are being asked, and vigorously answered, in Chicago.
Small theatre is an aesthetic as well as an economic designation, and both aspects deserve attention.
The subject of our September cover is a fiercely individual American master.
Stage sound comprises more than dialogue, effects, and music, and the folks who design it are doing more than mere augmentation.
Not much makes it to the stage in our nation’s putative theatre capital that didn’t come from somewhere else.
The success of Black artists should be good for Black theatres, but too often there’s a disconnect.
Arts and theatre programs won’t fix our nation’s incarceration problem, but they can do concrete and demonstrable good.
From emerging talents to unsung veterans, our regular Role Call feature shines a light on folks you ought to know.
Our current political moment both evokes theatrical analogies and provokes theatrical responses.
The momentum behind gender parity in the American theatre seems unmistakable, with 30 percent of all plays and 40 percent of new ones written by women.