How do you see when you can't fathom what's 20 feet ahead of you? Sonya Kelly's riotous one-woman romp shows you how she did it.
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Theater Review (NYC): ‘The Life and Sort of Death of Eric Argyle’ by Ross Dungan
Eric Argyle has just been hit by a car and killed. There just might be enough time to rectify something from his past to help someone in the present.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘A User’s Guide to Hell Featuring Bernard Madoff’ by Lee Blessing
Madoff's hell is not like anything we've read about in religious books.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘The Life and Sort of Death of Eric Argyle’ by Ross Dungan
Hit by a car and killed, 58-year-old Eric Argyle awakens into a bewildering procedural nightmare.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Sacred Elephant’ by Heathcote Williams
A play that awakens our empathy and opens our minds and hearts to the torment of these wonderful creatures.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Tchaikovsky’ by Andrew Wyeth Neal
The life, times and music of the great Russian composer Tchaikovsky revealed in an innovative and exhilarating play.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Brendan at the Chelsea’ by Janet Behan
A scintillating play explores the time Brendan Behan spent in New York's Chelsea Hotel in 1963 shortly before his early death.
Read More »Theater Review (LA): ‘The Old Settler’ by John Henry Redwood
A difficult period in the history of race relations in America is nevertheless given a nostalgic hue in this familiar but effective story of a May-September romance.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘The Awake’ by Ken Urban
"...to sleep perchance to dream...ah what dreams may come?" Ken Urban's play challenges us about the division between reality and the dream-state. Does it exist?
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Night Blooming Jasmine’ by Israela Margalit
A well-told tale of Jews and Israeli Arabs proves Romeo and Juliet never really died.
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