THEATER REVIEW: Loveliness Gives Way to Terror in EgoPo’s Machinal
Director Brenna Geffers’ visually stunning production turns an old play into the freshest, most daring show in town.
Director Brenna Geffers’ visually stunning production turns an old play into the freshest, most daring show in town.
Laura Eason’s play, a mix of serious themes and meet-cute glibness, is simultaneously overwrought and undercooked.
This Crucible, a veritable melting pot of theatrical ideas, is by turns heartbreaking and brilliant, overwrought and silly.
Here, in the original “Room Where It Happens,” nothing interesting happened.
Jennifer Haley’s gripping play is part cyber-thriller, part character study, part science fiction.
Rebecca Wright’s beautiful production finds the essence of Shaw’s gorgeous, unwieldy play.
Though a self-consciously clever production sometimes threatens to derail An Octoroon, an excellent cast and Brandon Jacobs-Jenkins’ brilliant script carry the day.
In this gripping production, one of August Wilson’s less frequently produced plays looks instead like one of his greatest.
Director Jack O’Brien gives us the show in glorious technicolor, while masterfully finding some darker undertones.
Forget the 1939 movie — this deconstructed, provocative production will have you thinking about the play as never before.