Two plays make introductions
Out of the '50s basket
Everyone in William Inge's Pulitzer winning 1953 play Picnic seems to be yearning, striving, or regretting (which is really just another form of yearning). No-nonsense Flo Owens is still wounded by lost love; her husband--who wasn't all he was cracked up to be--left years ago. Meanwhile, her comely ... More >>
Three of New York's best talents sit down with the Voice to talk Edward Albee, bad actor traits, and why Shaw will have to wait
Sam Gold and Annie Baker team up to stage an intimate Chekhov
Dan LeFranc dishes up some multi-generational family fare
John Osborne's British classic faces an American audience again
Alan Rickman stars in Theresa Rebeck's new Broadway comedy
Playwrights Horizons mounts a drama by Bathsheba Doran
Two new plays from Lincoln Center Theater
If he only had the nerve
Kim Rosenstock's dramedy is the latest from Roundabout Underground
New plays at Playwrights Horizons and the Atlantic
In New York theater today, what's not imported is what's underrated
A recap of the 55th annual Village Voice Off-Broadway awards celebration
Following up on her hit Circle Mirror Transformation
Theater's most off-beat talents have a big night
Finding the drama in drama class
Party ahoy! Ars Nova's stupid-fun pirate musical
The Piano Teacher ponders stories; Rag and Bone makes them ponderously cute
Two plays take on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Soda mogul screws up in this pop culture comedy
The Mammary Play: Shamieh Gets Something Off Her Chest
