Instant Karma: How ‘The Oldest Boy’ Is Paying Back Its Source
Sarah Ruhl’s play, born in part from the generosity of Tibetans, is raising money for victims of last year’s Nepal earthquake.
Support American Theatre! A just and thriving theatre ecology begins with information for all. Make a fully tax-deductible donation today! Join TCG to ensure you get AT's return to print in your mailbox.
Sarah Ruhl’s play, born in part from the generosity of Tibetans, is raising money for victims of last year’s Nepal earthquake.
The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical gets its first amateur staging at the Curran Theatre while still a hit on Broadway.
Stories about autism, Chicago shows, a musical about a young girl in 1890s Paris, and more take the stage this month.
From a gender-bending actress in the early 19th century to female playwrights on Broadway in the 1920s, April is a month of milestones.
Attractions to include a house haunted by guilt, a slamming-door exhibit, and Little Eyolf’s Rat Race.
His newest Broadway effort aims to tap the power of a little-remembered 1921 show that changed the American musical.
A few farces aside, current plays in the Old Smoke offer no escape from a disturbing world.
What started as a North American short-play project around last year’s Paris talks blossomed into an ongoing worldwide effort.
What did 4 female-led works at New York Live Arts’ Live Ideas Festival have to say to us or to each other—or are those even the right questions?
The artistic director confronts his hometown with difficult, meaty work. Next: Janine Nabers’s ‘Serial Black Face.’