Flux Theatre takes on the climate crisis with a dystopian theatrical vision drawing on Greek myth, glam rock, and time travel.
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Theater Review (NYC): ‘The Sea Concerto’ by August Schulenburg
A deeply personal story of love, weakness, and venality, 'The Sea Concerto' addresses wider issues too, often with penetrating clarity.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Am I Dead?’ by Kevin R. Free
The playwright had the brave idea of hanging emblematic tales of black men's struggles on the trellis of the ancient Egyptian myths of Isis and Osiris.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘World Builders: A Love Story’ by Johnna Adams
Marvelous performances light up this too-long two-hander about what might happen when two people who've lived much of their adult lives in their own worlds are sent to a mental health facility to receive an experimental cure.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): A New Twist on Zombie Apocalypse in ‘Rizing’ by Jason Tseng
Flux Theatre Ensemble executes Tseng's brash post-zombie-apocalypse premise with equal parts psychological grace and horror-story panache.
Read More »Interview: Flux Theatre Ensemble’s August Schulenburg on Open Source Theatre
Recently Flux began publishing its budget with its Open Book program. Then the company again broke ground by debuting a pay-what-you-can policy it calls Living Ticket.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC Off-Off-Broadway): ‘Salvage’ by August Schulenburg
Skillful writing, perfect casting, topical timeliness, and fine creative teamwork make 'Salvage' one the very best efforts in Flux Theatre Ensemble’s nine-year history of fine productions.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): Flux Theatre’s ‘Once Upon a Bride There Was a Forest’ by Kristen Palmer
A modern-day adult fairy tale that's perfect for a dark and stormy night.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Jane the Plain’ by August Schulenburg
Schulenberg marshals all his gifts for comedy, poetry, scintillating wordplay and magical realism in his latest Flux Theatre bouquet – until it all runs away from him.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): Honey Fist by August Schulenburg
This implausible by satisfying story concerns a group of buddies who resent their old friend making movies based on their lives.
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