The Sirens probes the dark mystery of why women stay with abusive husbands
The poetic power of Ntozake Shange's colored girls; Sweeny seduces with pageantry; Bob Davis' Banjo
Till Death Do Us Part Darrah Cloud began writing The Sirens two years ago, long before the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson made domestic…
Forced humor swallows The Art of Dining; in Betrayal a house collapses under treacherous games
On the Brink One of our dearest, oldest and most unusual arts institutions is teetering on the brink of demise: On the eve of…
Way Down South It appears several of your native daughters and sons have been lured to Los Angeles: Ellen Sebastian is currently in rehearsal…
Laundry and Bourbon & Lone Star Plays about Texas are a genre unto themselves, obsessed with excessive heat and endless complaints about same, the…
The Challenge A Traveling Jewish Theater is the lucky winner of a $150,000 challenge grant from the National Endowment for the Arts — money…
June Bride” only hints at Sara Felder's juggling genius; “History of Homosexuality” plays like a series of frat-house skits Writer-performer Sara Felder's work centers…
“The Play's the Thing” amuses after a slow start; “Touch” gives a sweet, comic look at sometime occultists