Is this the underwhelming Kit Kat Club all over again? Well, yes and no.
O’Hara discusses encouraging complicity between the audience and the production.
Darren Criss and Helen J. Shen turn the slightest of touches into electric connection.
Rachel Zegler and Kit Connor’s casting will persuade their fans that this story is dope AF.
‘Sunset Boulevard’ Review: Nicole Scherzinger Is Ready for Her Close-up in Bloated Revival
Sunset Boulevard’s heavy bones drag behind Jamie Lloyd’s austere vision like a body bag.
The unendurable passage of time haunts both plays.
‘McNeal’ Review: Ayad Akhtar New Play Artificially Grapples with the Realities of A.I.
Not knowing what’s real and what’s not is less compelling than McNeal contends.
Hwang discusses his expectations for the autobiographical play now that it’s on Broadway.
At its funniest, The Roommate is a comedy of manners, an unapologetic throwback.
If the show isn’t just riotously funny but whipsmart and lovely, too, so are its new stars.
With Life and Trust, Emursive has opted wisely for mood over minutiae.
Job preserves an unsettling undercurrent, despite its ridiculous premise.
Despite the 12 Angry Men-like setup, there’s nothing anonymous about the women here.
There are at least four celebrated contenders vying, all equally convincingly, for the top prize.
Each play poeticizes the cradle-to-near-grave journey of so-called ordinary American lives.
The show ultimately overlooks its own message: that a little isolation goes a long way.
The play examines the provenance of a photo album from Auschwitz.