THEATER REVIEW: In Fun Home, The Days and Days that Make Up Our Lives
This extraordinary musical has virtuosity to spare—but what really shines is its humanity.
This extraordinary musical has virtuosity to spare—but what really shines is its humanity.
On her upcoming appearance here with Seth Rudetsky, her performing history in Philadelphia, and (surprise!) … how polite the locals are.
This amped-up version has its own rewards—especially in the marvelous Euan Morton.
One of the supreme classics of musical theater seen here in a brilliantly theatrical staging.
Songs and spectacle win our hearts in this Rodgers and Hammerstein classic.
In this extraordinary sensory experience, the human dimension sometimes fades into the background.
Every entertaining minute is awash in excess in a show that practically defines “guilty pleasure.”
The heroine of Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey’s musical imagines her life on two paths. If only even one of them led to a better show.
Director Jack O’Brien gives us the show in glorious technicolor, while masterfully finding some darker undertones.