Review: Private Eyes at ShakesCo is a befuddling tangle of lovers and cheaters. Or is it…
Burns and Murray review Shakespeare & Co’s “Private Eyes” and find it is a mystery play in more ways than one.
Burns and Murray review Shakespeare & Co’s “Private Eyes” and find it is a mystery play in more ways than one.
Jim Brochu mingles his life story with those of the famous and near-famous of theatre, alternately performing himself or simply selling those watery orange drinks in Broadway’s Alvin Theatre, now called the Neil Simon.
A ghostly goulash of Borscht Belt jokes, Broadway tunes and dead sitcom characters, The Addams Family delights fans of the Addams Family, and newcomers to this goofy, ghastly show.
An unlikely couple finds each other in this new romantic comedy between an injured dancer and a young man with Asperger's Syndrome who needs to learn how to dance and be social.
Irving Berlin’s music is well sung and danced at the Theater Barn, celebrating the Russian-born composer who shaped the Great American Songbook..
The world of Henry IV is filled with fascinating characters including the fatherly Falstaff, young Prince Hall and his nemesis Hotspur, plus the swaggering Pistoll. Centuries later, it’s still a fascinating coming-of-age story.
Under the Table Theatre Company returns to The Fringe with two deft – and daft – physical comedies.
Garrison delivers a long and colorful stream of anecdotes, opinions, Biblical quotes, a passage from Heminway’s “Old Man and The Sea” and even a few notes of an aria in a home run of a performance.