Online This Week: Keeping It Lit
From festival readings to benefit cabarets, on-demand stage captures to immersive soundscapes, there’s no shortage of at-home theatre.
Stories with a national scope.
From festival readings to benefit cabarets, on-demand stage captures to immersive soundscapes, there’s no shortage of at-home theatre.
The virtual workshop will teach 26 NYC educators about directing in the classsroom.
The New Mexico company, hit by the cancellation of its international-focused Revolutions Festival, will close down to retire debt and reevaluate.
The group, with founding members including Audra McDonald, Phylicia Rashad, and Billy Porter, unites Black voices for social change.
The organization will support anti-racism through eight areas of community and educational programming.
Young theatre artists will participate in a week-long professional program and collaborate on 24-hour projects.
The Chicago theatre will begin its season in February 2021 and move a planned world premiere to the 2021-22 season.
The Idaho new-play development conference, usually an intense, immersive small-town experience, went virtual this year but kept its spirit intact.
The free online workshop, open to non-Scouts, will feature music and choreography from ‘Frozen,’ ‘Aladdin!’ and ‘The Lion King.’
A special edition of the 24 Hour Plays: Viral Monologues series will benefit Arizona Theatre Company.