In the late 1950s, Broadway and Off Broadway theater had become a bit grim. The major hits of the era presented a rather pessimistic view of life, especially of the family: the home as prison (“A Raisin in the Sun,” “The Miracle Worker”), monster parents (“Gypsy”)
Theater
A Strange and Urgent Tale: The Gospel of Mark, retold
A bearded, haunted man scrambles into the black box theater wearing a soot-colored hoodie, jeans with fist-sized holes at both knees, and a slim backpack, while red siren lights flash and tense cop-show music blares. He crouches behind trash cans to elude an unseen pursuer. When the threat appears t
Creature Discomforts: Journeys of hurt and healing on Broadway
Journeys of hurt and healing on Broadway: ‘Of Mice and Men’ and ‘The Cripple of Inishmaan’
A Good Fight : L.B.J. campaigns for civil rights in ‘All the Way.’
L.B.J. campaigns for civil rights in ‘All the Way.’ A review from theater critic Rob Weinert-Kendt.
Through a Glass Darkly: Reviving Tennessee Williams
Tennessee Williams’s The Glass Menagerie first appeared on Broadway in 1945, beginning what would be a wave of great American plays about troubled families. Arthur Miller’s “All My Sons” and “Death of a Salesman,” William Inge’s “Picnic,” Eugene
A God-Shaped Hole: A new ‘Godot’ on Broadway affirms Beckett’s brilliance
A new ‘Wait for Godot’ on Broadway affirms Samuel Beckett’s brilliance
O’Neill’s Dark Passage: Was the playwright seeking God ‘man to man’?
Take another look at the work of a man who struggled mightily to grasp truth.
Family Troubles: Reviving ‘The Glass Menagerie’
Tennessee Williams’s “The Glass Menagerie” first appeared on Broadway in 1944, beginning what would be a wave of great American plays about troubled families. Arthur Miller’s “All My Sons” and “Death of a Salesman,” William Inge’s “Picnic,&
Reviewing ‘A Man for All Seasons’: America on the original play and the 1966 film
In These Pages: From 1961 and 1966
