Few literary figures seem as blatantly ripe for satire as the gumshoe detective. Playwright Bill Robens ably answers the call, with an entertaining spoof about ...
A sequel to his 1995 post-apartheid play Valley Song, Athol Fugard’s latest work, Coming Home, tells of the decimation of one person’s dream and the...
Inspired by real-life stories (from writers Peter Sichrovsky's "Born Guilty" and Dan Bar-On's "Legacy of Silence: Children of the Third Reich"), Hannah ...
The fall of Adam and Eve has furnished raw material for countless works of art but one rarely as fantastical as Bryan Reynolds' unpredictable play. A dizzyi...
Leave logic at the door and you'll get your full quota of laughs from this quartet of one-acts, each of which blends sci-fi, sex and absurdity in an enterta...
Religious fundamentalism is alive and well in the United States, making Arthur Miller's heavy-handed take on theocracy and the perils of unbridled mass hyst...
Marking its 10th anniversary, writer-director Paul Storiale's involving play explores the personalities and circumstances surrounding the Columbine high sch...
Be warned that G.B. Shaw's wordy comedy of manners lopes along for almost the entire first act before finally taking off. And then it really flies. It's...
Native American poet and musician Joy Harjo is a woman who communes with spirits, and in this music-embellished piece, she opines about struggle, survival and t...
In May 1968, Father Daniel Berrigan (Andrew E. Wheeler ) and eight other peace activists seized 378 draft documents and publicly burned them with napalm to prot...
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