Mikhail Baryshnikov’s One-Man Show Showcases Joseph Brodsky’s Poetry And Their Lifelong Friendship
Throughout their 22-year friendship, Mikhail Baryshnikov and Joseph Brodsky loved nothing more...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Barrett | 23rd May 2017 | London, Review, Theatre and Dance, United Kingdom
Throughout their 22-year friendship, Mikhail Baryshnikov and Joseph Brodsky loved nothing more...
Read MorePosted by Fatma Khaled | 22nd May 2017 | South Korea, Theatre and Dance, Transcultural Collaborations
A Korean b-boying dance crew and a sand artist put on a show outside the Cairo Opera House in...
Read MorePosted by Diwan Singh Bajeli | 22nd May 2017 | Adaptation, India
Under the direction of Bhoomikeshwar Singh, who is trained in modern theatre techniques as well as...
Read MorePosted by Alice Jones | 22nd May 2017 | Acting, London, Review, United Kingdom
“The question is,” says David Baddiel a short while into the second half of his one-man show about...
Read MorePosted by Andreea Scridon | 21st May 2017 | Review, Romania, Theatre and Politics
Marin Sorescu’s Jonah was originally published in 1968 and is considered the playwright’s...
Read MorePosted by Zolima Citymag | 21st May 2017 | Hong Kong, Theatre and Opera
Choreographer Ricky Hu Songwei boards a bus in Shenzhen bound for Hong Kong every day. During that...
Read MorePosted by Nobuko Tanaka | 21st May 2017 | Directing, Japan
At 37, director Shuntaro Fujita says he’s just hitting his prime. “Many people say they liked...
Read MorePosted by Holly Williams | 20th May 2017 | LGBTQ+ Theatre, London, Review, United Kingdom
Salomé: one of the most dangerously seductive female figures ever, often considered the original...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 20th May 2017 | Adaptation, London, Review, United Kingdom
Is God female? It says a lot about Yaël Farber’s pompous and overblown new version of this...
Read MorePosted by Rachel Offer | 19th May 2017 | Canada, Transmedia
Collaboration for theatre artists across borders may become a little easier thanks to an...
Read MorePosted by Emily Goodling | 19th May 2017 | Essay, Germany, Theatre and Politics
Since 2015, over one million refugees have entered Germany. As a political event, the so-called...
Read MorePosted by The Theatre Times | 19th May 2017 | News, Russia, Theatre and Dance
The Boris Eifman Ballet Theater kicks off a new tour in the U.S. and Canada on May 11, and will...
Read MorePosted by Nobuko Tanaka | 19th May 2017 | Japan, Playwriting
On May 12 last year, theater fans all over the world began mourning the death of one of Japan’s...
Read MorePosted by Katrina Holden-Buckley | 18th May 2017 | Boston, Theatre and Opera
Productions by BOC have been leaner in the last few years as the company continues to carve out its identity through quite a bit of growth.
Read MorePosted by Alexis Greene | 18th May 2017 | Dramaturgy, United States of America
I am a dramaturg. I am also a biographer. As a dramaturg, I try to help a playwright tell the...
Read MorePosted by Maria Pia Pagani | 17th May 2017 | Italy, Theatre and Dance
Today, can the myth of a prima donna live in a prima ballerina? The choreographer and director...
Read MorePosted by Lauren Dubowski | 17th May 2017 | News, Poland
The Polish Theatre in Poznan / The Jewish Theatre in Warsaw The Painted Bird, based on a novel by...
Read MorePosted by Jonathan Kalb | 16th May 2017 | Adaptation, New York, Review, United States of America
A Doll’s House made Henrik Ibsen a household name in 1879. It ruffled feathers throughout the...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 16th May 2017 | Review, United Kingdom
I hate the kind of hype that sells out a new play within minutes of tickets becoming available....
Read MorePosted by Heather Waters | 15th May 2017 | New York, United States of America
In Martin Zimmerman’s play Seven Spots on the Sun, civil war leads to a plague which leads to...
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