Ike Holter’s ‘Put Your House in Order’ to Be Released as Audio Play
The audio version will reunite the cast from the 2017 world premiere at Chicago’s A Red Orchid Theatre.
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The audio version will reunite the cast from the 2017 world premiere at Chicago’s A Red Orchid Theatre.
In the jurisdictional war between Equity and SAG-AFTRA over theatre work made for screens, actors and stage managers have the most at stake.
Lockdown is no blessing, but I am using it for good: to heal, to step off the grant-writing treadmill, and to say no to more abuse.
Diversifying programming and leadership won’t be enough if our boards remain white and privileged.
Reunion readings, Russian troll farms, a married couple in a play about infidelity—there’s plenty to fill your screen time this week.
Stephen Haff’s invigorating new book ‘Kid Quixotes’ recounts a translation process that changed his students and himself as well.
On this month’s episode the critics discuss the recent Tony noms (and the controversy around them), their varied digital theatre diets, and some theatres’ plans to tentatively reopen.
This month Brian talks to playwright and author David Adjmi about family pressure, falling behind, and filling a niche.
In this excerpt from his memoir ‘Lot Six,’ playwright David Adjmi recalls childhood touchstones and the shape and meaning they gave to his pain.
One sign of a shift in traditionally Eurocentric theatre training practices: ‘Black Acting Methods’ was the best-selling theatre book this past summer.