The Arrogance of Losing, or Play the Game to Win
How the Colts’ crushing near-victory in the ’96 playoffs helped make me a playwright, for real.
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How the Colts’ crushing near-victory in the ’96 playoffs helped make me a playwright, for real.
The nonprofit theatre’s mandate to serve as a town hall, a sort of secular church for the democratic spirit, has seldom been more salient.
One sign that Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy isn’t going away: No one can agree on what it’s about.
The history of Othello in the U.S. tells a story of race, erasure, and reclamation.
In this excerpt from ‘Steppenwolf Theatre Company of Chicago: In Their Own Words,’ the ensemble recounts their first Broadway transfer.
Whether they’re at home or abroad, the couple makes international stories and activism a priority.
Ticket pricing equilibrium is an ever-elusive puzzle for theatre managers. How do you find the sweet spot?
Sholem Asch’s groundbreaking 1906 play, the subject of the Broadway-bound ‘Indecent,’ gets a new Yiddish revival.
How Dickens’s Christmas perennial is supporting inclusivity and outreach at theatres nationwide.
In this week’s podcast, we discuss our favorite shows of 2016, give you some behind-the-scenes highlights of some notable AT stories, and talk to Kris Vire about what’s going on in Chicago with the Neo-Futurists.