Tag: Theater
Features
Signature Theatre to Open Permanent New Home on West Side
Monday, January 30, 2012
The non-profit, off Broadway Signature Theatre Company is set to open its new permanent 70,000-square-foot home on Manhattan's West Side Tuesday.
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'Spider-Man' Sets New Weekly Sales Record on Broadway
Wednesday, January 04, 2012
"Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" raked in nearly $3 million last week — the highest weekly sales figure in the history of the Great White Way. "Wicked" held the previous weekly sales record at roughly $2.2 million, which was set in 2011.
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Beloved Yiddish Singer Adrienne Cooper Mourned by Colleagues
Friday, December 30, 2011
On Sunday, December 25, 2011, the Yiddish singer Adrienne Cooper passed away in a Manhattan hospital after battling cancer. She was 65. A memorial for Cooper will be held at the Ansche Chesed synagogue on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.
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WNYC Host Richard Hake Makes Broadway Debut in ‘Mary Poppins’
Friday, December 30, 2011
“Mary Poppins” just celebrated a fifth year on Broadway with over 2,130 performances. The producers of the show gave WNYC host Richard Hake a unique opportunity to experience the show by transforming him into a Chimney Sweep. See a slideshow here.
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2011 Year in Review: The Year in Arts and Culture
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
The Alexander McQueen show at the Met, "Spider-Man" and "The Book of Mormon" opening on Broadway, the kerfuffle around Tony Kushner's honorary degree at CUNY and an exhibit mapping out words New Yorkers use to search for a mate. Here are some of the arts and culture stories WNYC followed this year.
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Actors Get into Character in Shakespeare Theatre's 'A Christmas Carol'
Friday, December 23, 2011
The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey is concluding its 49th season with "A Christmas Carol," staged with a few twists. The company's version was adapted for the stage by British playwright Neil Bartlett, who uses only exact words and passages from the Charles Dickens novel for his treatment.
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Theater Critics Offer Up the Year's Best Plays
Friday, December 16, 2011
The new year is right around the corner. As 2011 comes to a close, WNYC reached out to theater critics to find out what's worth seeing on the Great White Way. Their picks include "The Book of Mormon," "Follies" and "Chinglish."
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St. Ann's Warehouse Signs 3-Year Lease in Dumbo
Monday, December 12, 2011
St. Ann's Warehouse has found a new home -- in its same old neighborhood. The avant-garde theater company, currently located on Water Street, has signed a three-year lease on a 19,000-square foot warehouse at the corner of Jay Street and Plymouth Street.
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Who Am I Anyway? John Hurt Listens to 'Krapp's Last Tape' at BAM
Monday, December 12, 2011
“Krapp’s Last Tape,” which is playing at the BAM Harvey Theater for a limited run through December 18, stars John Hurt as its solitary protagonist in his New York stage debut.
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Snapshot | A New Home for Signature Theatre
Thursday, December 01, 2011
On Jan. 31, 2012, the Signature Theatre Company will open its new permanent 70,000 square-foot home at 480 W. 42nd St. between Dyer and Tenth Avenues. See a picture of one of the theater spaces designed by architect Frank Gehry here.
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Film and TV Stars Get a 24-Hour Crash Course on Broadway
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Stars in the 10th anniversary production of “The 24 Hour Plays On Broadway” included Megan Fox, Tracy Morgan, Jack McBrayer and Jesse Eisenberg. Here's how they did in quick turnaround plays on the Great White Way.
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Bloomberg to Give Arts Achievement Awards to Sondheim, Baryshnikov, Lin
Tuesday, November 01, 2011
On Tuesday, composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim will receive the Handel Medallion, the city's highest award for achievement in the arts.
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'Spider-Man' Producers Respond to Spidey Halloween Spoofs
Monday, October 31, 2011
"The Simpsons" and "LIVE! with Regis and Kelly" featured Spidey spoofs in their Halloween episodes.
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For 'Anonymous' Scribe, A Shakespearean Speculation
Friday, October 28, 2011
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The Insatiable Appetite for 'Sleep No More'
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
"Sleep No More," a play that's part-dance, part-art installation from the British theater group Punchdrunk, was supposed to have closed a number of times. But every time a closing date approached -- the most recent one Oct. 8 -- the production team behind the show decided to add more performances.
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Steve Jobs: Under the Lens at the Public Theater
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Apple founder Steve Jobs died earlier this month. But he lives on in a new play starring and created by Mike Daisey that opened on Monday night at the Public Theater called "The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs.”
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'The Mountaintop' Attracts a More Diverse Audience to Broadway
Friday, October 14, 2011
Although the number of African American audience members has increased slightly on Broadway in the past decade, black ticketholders still make up the smallest percentage of the Great White Way's audience. But Katori Hall's "The Mountaintop," which opened Thursday night, may change that number this season.
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Broadway Is All About Revivals and Outer Borough Theaters this Fall
Thursday, October 06, 2011
This season includes revivals (and revise-als), of "Porgy and Bess" and “Follies.” There's also a host of new, small theaters cropping up in the outer boroughs that are producing interesting work for theater lovers who aren't afraid of taking the subway out of Manhattan.
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The Sun Continues to Rise (for a Few More Weeks) at the New York Theatre Workshop
Wednesday, October 05, 2011
The Elevator Repair Service production “The Select (The Sun Also Rises)” has been extended through Oct. 23. One of the highlights is the trick of breathing life into the bullfight scene that Ernest Hemingway described in his 1925 novel.
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Stephen Sondheim Creates Treasure Hunt for Natural History Museum
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
Three hundred guests participated in “A Little Jurassic Treasure Hunt” in the museum on Monday night. The game was part of a benefit for Friends In Deed, the non-profit crisis center for life-threatening illness.
