This Month in Theatre History
From the first remote-controlled light board to the founding of the Alley Theatre, November has been a notable month in theatre.
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From the first remote-controlled light board to the founding of the Alley Theatre, November has been a notable month in theatre.
With plays like ‘Wild Goose Dreams’ and ‘Cardboard Piano,’ the Korean writer is making a splash on American stages with stories of displacement and hope.
The free writing she taught us may have opened us up, but she also subtly framed and shaped our sense of theatrical form.
The Tony-winning actor promises his version of Charles Dickens’s classic will not be so jolly, because of income inequality.
Ntozake Shange brought her fearless poetry out of the basements and cafes into the theatre and reached the world.
From a Chicago set designer to a scribe in Atlanta, from a Seattle director to an operations manager in New York City, here are some people to have on your radar.
How my teacher led me home.
Readers respond to a provocative play about race and to a searching essay about theatrical heartbreak.
Shadowy figures, a rogue music box, an iPod-surfing child ghost, and more fill our annual compendium of tales from haunted theatres.
We who were lucky enough to study with the great playwright and teacher felt challenged, inspired, and above all seen.