New York City welcomes a bountiful gathering of Off-Broadway stage productions this Spring, focusing on sisterhood, motherhood, and family: Chinese Republicans (Alex Lin, Roundabout Theatre), Meat ...
Off Broadway theater company Playwrights Horizons is being sued for discrimination over a one-night discount during its run of Nazareth Hassan’s Practice. A New Jersey–based musician named Kevin Lynch ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The lawsuit, against the prominent Off Broadway theater, is backed by Edward Blum, who has long challenged race-based policies. Playwrights called it ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. Characters stepping out of their plays to address an audience is hardly a new phenomenon. Playwrights have been ...
Cults have seldom been so robustly represented in popular culture. We have the Zizians, the Sarah Lawrence sex cult, Nxivm, and the cult of Mother God, with each dutifully unpicked in articles and ...
On Oct. 26, Black Community and Student Theater (BlackCAST), a Harvard College student-run organization committed to cultivating interest and providing support for Black theater, presented staged ...
Orlando Shakes PlayFest is back after a too-long two-year hiatus, in partnership with UCF. This year’s showcase features five staged readings over two weekends. Over the years, the festival has ...
Google’s Angular team has open-sourced a tool that evaluates the quality of web code generated by LLMs. It works with any web library or framework. Google’s Angular team has unveiled Web Codegen ...
In the late days of June, as the old theatre season was ebbing away and new-season announcements were streaming in, a shock hit New York. Playwrights Horizons, the birthplace of shows including the ...
Thirty years ago, Ricardo Morris, a graduate student at what was then the Yale School of Drama, came up with a creative way to connect with New Haven youth living just outside campus. With the drama ...
“I’m so tired” are the first words that playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins utters when he gets on the phone. There’s good reason for that: Almost one year after winning the Tony Award for best revival ...