Holiday Inn
Reviews Reviews

Holiday Inn

Holiday Inn, which was written by Chad Hodge and Gordon Greenberg, follows a song-and-dance team who part ways when Jim, determined to escape showbiz, buys a farm in Connecticut.

Read More
Stuffed
Reviews Reviews

Stuffed

First loves are often the subject of works of drama, but the first loves reminisced about in Stuffed differ greatly from those of a Shakespearean tragedy. Instead of a next-door neighbor or a classmate in school, these loves are food. Sugary, fatty, deep-fried and almost always forbidden.

Read More
Slumber
Reviews Reviews

Slumber

The first full-length, live production from the circus and theatrical production company Hideaway, Slumber walks the tightrope of balancing style and substance, and, unlike its skilled and talented cast, it is unable to maintain the necessary equilibrium.

Read More
The Encounter
Reviews Reviews

The Encounter

The meaning of time is constantly pondered, discussed and perhaps even escaped from by the protagonist of The Encounter, Simon McBurney’s new play on Broadway, but, for theatergoers at this overstimulating and exhausting production, it is never forgotten.

Read More
Bachelorette
Reviews Reviews

Bachelorette

Leslye Headland’s searing portrayal of toxic female friendships, accompanied by copious amounts of alcohol and drugs, leaves the audience exhausted and perhaps feeling a bit intoxicated – or hungover.

Read More
The Wolves
Reviews Reviews

The Wolves

The Wolves consists of the conversations between the teenage girls on the team while they warm up for their games. Their conversations intertwine and overlap as they talk about everything from international news to the quirky behavior of their newest team member.

Read More
The Birds
Reviews Reviews

The Birds

A sign at the entrance of The Birds warns audience members that the production contains the use of fog and nudity. However, neither of the two aspects of the play that require warning are shocking or frightening, despite the clear intention that they are.

Read More
Quietly
Reviews Reviews

Quietly

Quietly presents confrontation decades in the making, in which grief and rage are served up in equal amounts and the past and the present combine all too easily.

Read More
Cats
Reviews Reviews

Cats

Cats, which was embraced with numerous awards and a lengthy run on Broadway, presents a disturbingly patriarchal atmosphere obsessed with youth and beauty and tainted with slut-shaming and misogyny.

Read More
The Women of Summer

The Women of Summer

When Ayad Akhtar brought his new play Junk to Vassar and New York Stage and Film’s Powerhouse Theater, the work was an unfinished product. Only two acts had been written of what would ultimately be a three-act play, so after the first two acts had been read to the audience, the playwright took on a new role: that of storyteller. Akhtar stood up and told the audience what would happen and how the play would end.

Read More