Vanyamachine: Mallory Catlett’s “This Was The End”
An assemblage of intriguing aesthetic strategies, what Mallory Catlett’s This Was The End lacks in...
Read MoreJessica Rizzo is a Manhattan-based theater artist and Doctor of Fine Arts candidate in Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism at the Yale School of Drama. Her writing has appeared in TDR, Theater, Austrian Studies, Cultural Weekly, and Vice.
Posted by Jessica Rizzo | 15th Jun 2018 | New York, Review, Russian Theatre Abroad, Transmedia, United States of America
An assemblage of intriguing aesthetic strategies, what Mallory Catlett’s This Was The End lacks in...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 11th May 2018 | Philadelphia, Review, United States of America
Jessica Rizzo sees the 10-hour, marathon performance of EgoPo Theater’s Lydie Breeze trilogy...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 4th May 2018 | New York, Review, United States of America
On March 24, 1945, there was a party in Rechnitz, an Austrian town on the Hungarian border. The...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 1st May 2018 | Philadelphia, Review, United States of America
As The Basic Byebye Show comes to an end, a pair of enormous papier mâché angel’s wings protruding...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 17th Mar 2018 | Acting, Interview, Playwriting, United States of America
David Greenspan keeps busy. Just two weeks after closing his monumental solo rendition of Eugene...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 15th Feb 2018 | New York, Review, United States of America
Best known in the US for the stunning exemplars of the German Regietheater tradition he regularly...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 8th Feb 2018 | New York, Review, Theatre and Gender, United States of America
The explosively feminine theater of Adrienne Kennedy breaks many of the fundamental “rules” of...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 3rd Jan 2018 | New York, Playwriting, Review, Theatre and Age, United States of America
The ghost of Mary Shelley keeps rudely interrupting Mabou Mines’s Glass Guignol: The Brother And...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 10th Dec 2017 | France, Review
If theater could save the world, it would no doubt do so under the exacting direction of Arianne...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 16th Nov 2017 | LGBTQ+ Theatre, New York, Review, United States of America
In 1967, not one but two productions of Charles Ludlam’s deliciously demented Conquest Of The...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 2nd Nov 2017 | Adaptation, New York, Review, United States of America
After his one visit to the country in 1909, Sigmund Freud reportedly remarked to a friend that...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 1st Oct 2017 | Festivals, Philadelphia, Review, United States of America
The Philadelphia Fringe Festival, now in its twenty-first year, has been gentrified. What began in...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 22nd Jul 2017 | New York, Review, United States of America
Near the end of the Potomac Theatre Project’s production of Pity in History, with England...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 30th Jun 2017 | New York, Review, United States of America
In taking it upon him or herself to depict the horrors of the Holocaust, the artist assumes an...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 3rd May 2017 | New York, Review, United States of America
Though regarded by many as the father of American drama, Eugene O’Neill correctly diagnosed...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 26th Apr 2017 | New York, Review, United States of America
In the closing moments of Richard Maxwell’s Samara, the audience is plunged into near-total...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 31st Mar 2017 | Chile, New York, Review, Theatre and Politics, United States of America
Trauma affects everyone differently. Survivors may become fragile or embittered, depressed or...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 21st Mar 2017 | Devised Theatre, Directing, Interview, New York, United States of America
An originator of the Viewpoints system of training for actors and founder of SITI company,...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 17th Mar 2017 | New York, Review, Theatre and Politics, United States of America
Commitment is hard. Even within the well-defined parameters of traditional monogamy, balancing the...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Rizzo | 2nd Mar 2017 | New York, Review, Theatre and Age, United States of America
In an 1896 essay on “The Tragic in Daily Life,” the Symbolist playwright Maurice Maeterlinck...
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