Edward Albee’s “Three Tall Women”: A Dissent
My reaction to Edward Albee’s Three Tall Women when it first arrived in New York in 1994 was...
Read MorePosted by Jonathan Kalb | 4th May 2018 | New York, Playwriting, Review, Theatre and Age, United States of America
My reaction to Edward Albee’s Three Tall Women when it first arrived in New York in 1994 was...
Read MorePosted by David Vernon | 2nd May 2018 | New York, Playwriting, Review, United States of America
Tennessee Rising is a theatre piece that requires yet easily commands your full attention. 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 Magda Romanska | 29th Apr 2018 | Devised Theatre, New York, Polish Theatre Abroad, Review, United States of America
The Wooster Group’s newest production, A Pink Chair (In Place of a Fake Antique), was...
Read MorePosted by Diwan Singh Bajeli | 25th Apr 2018 | Belgium, Festivals, India, News, Poland, Polish Theatre Abroad, United States of America
Focusing on varied issues, three foreign plays staged at the 8th Theatre Olympics appealed with...
Read MorePosted by David Vernon | 24th Apr 2018 | Devised Theatre, Festivals, Interview, New York, United States of America
Jacob Storms is the recipient of the 2017 United Solo Award for Best One-Man Show after he...
Read MorePosted by Kristin Tomecek | 15th Apr 2018 | Boston, Review, Theatre and Opera
Audiences found themselves amidst fermentation vessels and set dressings alike this past Thursday...
Read MorePosted by The Theatre Times | 14th Apr 2018 | Musical Theatre, New York, Review, United States of America
There’s no curtain to create the traditional pomp and circumstance of American theatre. The stage...
Read MorePosted by Keith Powers | 13th Apr 2018 | Boston, Denmark, News, Theatre and Opera, United States of America
It was like the Dreyfus Affair. The Sacco-Vanzetti Trial. Any of those singular moments in history...
Read MorePosted by Michael Appler | 12th Apr 2018 | Musical Theatre, New York, Review, United States of America
There is magic in this production, though it is Broadway magic arguably used for ill.
Read MorePosted by Rachel E. Diken | 9th Apr 2018 | Immersive Theatre, New York, Review, United States of America
Wow. In & Of Itself, written and performed by Derek DelGaudio for long runs with numerous...
Read MorePosted by Katrina Holden-Buckley | 8th Apr 2018 | Boston, Review, Theatre and Opera, Theatre and Politics, United States of America
On Friday, March 23rd, Boston Lyric Opera continued its run of The Threepenny Opera to a sold-out...
Read MorePosted by Jonathan Kalb | 7th Apr 2018 | Adaptation, New York, Review, United States of America
Last Monday, about forty minutes into the final preview of Yerma at the Park Avenue Armory—Simon...
Read MorePosted by The Theatre Times | 4th Apr 2018 | Millennial Perspectives, Musical Theatre, New York, Review, United States of America
With downtown theatre audiences, the never-ending challenge is how to push boundaries and create...
Read MorePosted by Ryan Raul Bañagale | 4th Apr 2018 | Essay, Musical Theatre, United States of America
Musicals have long depicted utopian worlds, offering an escape for audiences, if only for a few...
Read MorePosted by Marcina Zaccaria | 31st Mar 2018 | New York, Review, Theatre and Dance, Theatre and Opera, United States of America
BAM’s Harvey Theater always feels like a mammoth work in progress. Walls to the larger opera house...
Read MorePosted by Barbara Adams | 28th Mar 2018 | Playwriting, Review, United States of America
If you’re fortunate, you have at least one friend who’s a creative and adventurous cook—and who...
Read MorePosted by Ahram Online | 26th Mar 2018 | Egypt, New York, News, Theatre and Dance, United States of America
Egypt’s renowned prima ballerina Magda Saleh was honored during the event From The...
Read MorePosted by Madison Parrotta | 23rd Mar 2018 | New York, Review, Theatre and Disability, United States of America
What do you do with a disabled child you can’t emotionally support? While not the biggest question...
Read MorePosted by David Vernon | 18th Mar 2018 | Directing, Interview, New York, United States of America
My aesthetic as a stage director is built first on a desire to create an experience that captures the poetic nature of the human condition. It’s a desire to connect with something larger than our sense of self, something sacred. And that’s what I see as the beauty of the theatre. In terms of the expression of that desire, my process is to bring to life a very visual, theatrical, and specific life on stage that illuminates increments of thought as components of physical action, which is how I articulate the methodology of One-Thought-One-Action.
The beauty of OTOA is that if you want to, you can use it almost like the cinematic process of editing film where one can compose one frame of action at a time. It’s how the text supports the physical actions on stage so that even if you could turn off the sound of the actors, the viewer would still get the story being told through the visual embodiment of thought as physical action.
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