“Isandlwana Lecture: Narration through Song” is a Transformative Musical Experience!
Recently staged to SOLD-OUT audiences at the Joburg Theatre, the Isandlwana Lecture: Narration...
Read MorePosted by Tonderai Chiyindiko | 12th Mar 2020 | Review, South Africa, Theatre and Dance
Recently staged to SOLD-OUT audiences at the Joburg Theatre, the Isandlwana Lecture: Narration...
Read MorePosted by Cate Cammarata | 12th Mar 2020 | Interview, New York, Playwriting, United States of America
We can’t discuss unpleasant historical events or why you or I voted for that candidate without generating anger and accusations. A society which is afraid to think and respectfully consider different points of view will inevitably degrade its ability to understand. Then what?
Read MorePosted by Nora Amin | 11th Mar 2020 | Egypt, Essay, Puppetry, Theatre and Decolonization
An essay by Nora Amin that traces the presence of shadow theatre within the modern and...
Read MorePosted by Maria Delgado | 11th Mar 2020 | Review, Spain, Theatre and Politics
Guillem Clua has produced a varied body of work for the Catalan theatre. His plays sometimes have...
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 10th Mar 2020 | London, Review, United Kingdom
The idea of the perfect murder is a genre standard. The fantasy that you are so intellectually...
Read MorePosted by Maria Jovita Zárate | 10th Mar 2020 | Adaptation, Philippines, Review, Theatre and Politics
In Orteza’s and director Sigion-Reyna’s Katsuri, representations of sacada (sugar farmers in the island of Negros) veer away from the typical, almost iconic, images of the sacadas as rendered by the social realist painters of the 70s— hoodied heads, a pair of eyes peering from layers of cloth wrapped around their faces, and hunched bodies. Katsuri’s stage harbored a diverse group of farmworkers housed in a kuwartel (quarter, usually of horses), carrying their own physicalized expressions of angas (spunk), a thin cache of spunk that fizzles out when the hacienda foreman and his overbearing son swing by to make routine inspections.
Read MorePosted by Wendy Arons | 9th Mar 2020 | Pittsburgh, Review, The Pittsburgh Tatler, United States of America
There are likely as many ways to relate to Molly Smith Metzler’s play Cry It Out as there are ways...
Read MorePosted by Natasha Sutton Williams | 8th Mar 2020 | Interview, Theatre and Disability, United Kingdom
Natasha Sutton-Williams interviews Sophie Woolley about her play Augmented – a personal story...
Read MorePosted by Trevor Boffone | 8th Mar 2020 | Chicago, Playwriting, Review, Theatre for Young Audiences, United States of America
Welcome to the Age of the Latina Nerd! Anywhere you look—on stage, on screen, on the written page,...
Read MorePosted by James Montaño | 7th Mar 2020 | Boston, Review, Theatre and Dance, United States of America
From Stravinsky’s dissonant strings heralding the arrival of four black and white clad men in the...
Read MorePosted by Ivanka Apostolova Baskar | 7th Mar 2020 | Germany, Interview, Playwriting
Ulrike Syha was born in 1976 in Wiesbaden, Germany. She studied Dramaturgy at the Hochschule für...
Read MorePosted by Daniele Avila Small | 6th Mar 2020 | Brazil, Documentary Theatre, Essay, Festivals, Theatre and Gender
Stabat Mater is the most recent work by Brazilian actress, playwright, and director Janaina Leite,...
Read MorePosted by Abigail Weil | 6th Mar 2020 | Design, Japan, New York, Review, Transcultural Collaborations, United States of America
Suicide Forest, written by and starring Haruna Lee is a trippy meditation on the extremes of...
Read MorePosted by Aida Rocci | 5th Mar 2020 | Immersive Theatre, London, Review, United States of America
United Queendom shines with potential. The location itself offers the thrill of being after hours in a royal palace, the expectations of whispers and court intrigue. Queen Caroline and Henrietta Howard bring a captivating tale and Les Enfants Terribles have a relevant lens to approach it and a bold aesthetic to make a memorable event. But I wished I had been part more of an immersive show than of a historical tour.
Read MorePosted by Aleks Sierz | 5th Mar 2020 | London, Review, Theatre and Dance, United Kingdom
Once radical theatre companies are increasingly celebrating anniversaries, as if to say, hey,...
Read MorePosted by Anna Galayda - Russia Beyond Headlines | 4th Mar 2020 | Brazil, Interview, Russia, Theatre and Dance
Twenty years ago, the school’s founders included leading Moscow ballet masters and today, a...
Read MorePosted by Vikram Phukan | 3rd Mar 2020 | Essay, India, Theatre and Politics
In the play, Colors of Trans 2.0, when the transgender performer Living Smile Vidya bares her...
Read MorePosted by Matt Hanson | 2nd Mar 2020 | Review, Theatre and Art, Turkey
At the inaugural show of Istanbul’s newest art space KoloniX, the all-women collective...
Read MorePosted by Saraswathy Nagarajan | 2nd Mar 2020 | India, Review, Theatre and Art
For more than three decades, the artist has been applying the intricate and distinctive make-up of...
Read MorePosted by Colin Hambrook | 1st Mar 2020 | Interview, London, Theatre and Disability, United Kingdom
Touretteshero teams up with Battersea Arts Centre to make South London’s premier theatre space the...
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