REVIEW: Noises Off is a Wild Night in the Theater
The Walnut Street production’s antic energy is both its strength and its weakness.
The Walnut Street production’s antic energy is both its strength and its weakness.
The playwright and ELLE Senior Staff Writer talks Trump, his new play, and Queen Maxine.
Isis’s earnest but constrained production doesn’t fully resonate.
Despite ingenious moments, the gimmick of Beth Wohl’s play wears out before it’s over.
Part II of the Lydie Breeze Trilogy is linear, concise, and better than Part I.
The Arden’s Toni Morrison adaptation is too much handsome staging, too little Morrison.
Without its companion pieced, Trouble in Tahiti, this difficult late work feels like half of an opera.
David Jacobi’s play wants to capture something important. I wish I knew what.
The audience loved this musical Shakespeare send-up. So did I—sometimes.
A terrific evening of music and theater, and a thrilling affirmation of a magnificent work.