Theater
2734 results
Page 240

Beckett's "Endgame' by EgoPo (1st review)
Not quite the end
Samuel Beckett's Endgame is an enduring play that's been turned on end in a new production by EgoPo. Director Lane Savadove's innovations add new dimensions to a classic work. They also subtract.
Articles
4 minute read

"Rabbit Hole' at the Arden
Grief lessons
In David Lindsay-Abaire's Rabbit Hole, a decent husband and wife face the indecent horror of the loss of a child and try to deal with a grief that has left them in separate and opposed universes. Jim Christy's thoughtful production respects the play's bleak integrity and its message of chastened hope.

Articles
4 minute read

Rebeck's "The Understudy' in New York
Actors without audiences
As its title suggests, Theresa Rebeck's pointy comedy The Understudy concerns unappreciated people. Rarely is a comedy this entertaining also so human.

Articles
3 minute read

Fugard's "Coming Home' at the Wilma
Oupa's gift (and the Wilma's, too)
As her dreams collapse around her, a high-spirited South African woman discovers an unexpected silver lining. In this riveting and lyrical production, the Wilma Theater continues its long-standing role as an incubator for Athol Fugard's continuing growth in the post-apartheid era.

Articles
4 minute read

Theatre Exile's "Hunter Gatherers'
Communing with your inner caveman
Peter Sinn Nachtrieb's Hunter Gatherers is the only play I know that takes its view of human nature from the relatively new science of evolutionary psychology. But no one could call Nachtrieb's work sexist— it's too damn funny.

Articles
5 minute read

"Finian's Rainbow' on Broadway
Something sort of grandish
Finian's Rainbow, now in gorgeous revival on Broadway, possesses all the old-fashioned charm that can make musical theater such a pleasure.

Articles
3 minute read

Luna Theater's "Slasher'
The sluttiest girls die first
Slasher, Allison Moore's feminist satire of horror films, is the most deliciously humorous spoof I've seen in some time. But Moore never quite clarifies her views on the potential exploitation of actresses in these films.

Articles
3 minute read

"Love's Labour's Lost' at Annenberg
A lesson for Kenneth Branagh
London's Globe Theatre has taken one of Shakespeare's most difficult plays and made it look swift, effervescent and easy.
Articles
5 minute read

InterAct's "Chad Deity'
Sport masquerading as drama (and vice versa)
Like the best professional wrestlers, the six male actors in Chad Deity are engaging fellows who understand how to beat each other up and make it look it real. But once that novelty wears off off, Chad Deity reverts to that old InterAct standby: didactic preaching to the audience.

Articles
4 minute read

Sport vs. theater: "Chad Deity' and "Grace'
Sport vs. theater: If you can't beat 'em, join 'em?
Americans are famously sports-obsessed, but you'd never know it from most plays. Two new productions cross the line by presenting professional wrestling and mountain climbing on stage. Both represent refreshing attempts to expand theater's relevance, not to mention its audience.

Articles
4 minute read