Kingsley’s 1934 Pulitzer winner “Men in White” set the template for the medical procedural too
Kingsley’s 1934 Pulitzer winner “Men in White” set the template for the medical procedural too
Thanks for posting this; they don’t make them like Harry any more…
Nope; it was actually a show I otherwise loved and so would rather not badmouth by name
I was privileged to see her Mary Tyrone and will never forget it as long as I have memory…
This piece makes a great case for why we all need theater: www.theatlantic.com/culture/2025...
You’ve probably noticed all the cheers for Helen Shaw’s appointment as the new New York Times chief theater critic. It’s not only cause Helen’s a great critic (which she is) but because she’s also such a great person. So big cheers from me too: www.nytco.com/press/helen-...
The fact that Talene Monahon’s new play “Meet the Cartozians,” which is opening tomorrow Second Stage, reminds me so much of Lynn Nottage’s “By the Way, Meet Vera Stark” which I saw back in 2011 doesn’t make “the Cartozians” any less entertaining
One of the best things I've seen this summer is "Well, I'll Let You Go," so I was delighted to talk about the show with its playwright Bubba Weiler: bit.ly/stagecraft-b...
It makes sense for off-Broadway shows to perform in church spaces but they need to figure out how to deal with the unbalanced acoustics of those spaces, particularly when they have actors who haven’t been taught to project
Casting for the Broadway production of "The Notebook" was confusing with a young white Noah turning into an older black Noah and a young black Allie into an older white Allie but casting for the national tour sticks to one ethnicity for each character as they age through the stages of their lives
Thank you so much!
I’ve put together an archive of the episodes of my podcast series on Pulitzer Prize-winning plays and musicals on Substack; there's no fee and so I’ll hope you’ll subscribe: bit.ly/atd-substack
I am dying to read your book but in all honesty, I now do all of my reading on my iPad and I haven’t been able to find an e-version of your book
Just posted my annual summer reading list:
broadwayandme.blogspot.com/2025/06/thea...
Really happy that I got to talk to my friend Kelundra Smith about her smart new play about a forgotten part of American history
broadwayradio.com/blog/2025/06...
One of the many things I loved about this year's Tonys is that the men came dressed to play just as much as the women: playbill.com/article/25-s...
I was so honored to have Neil Simon's longtime producer and good friend Manny Azenberg on the most recent episode of All The Drama, my podcast about the plays and musicals that have won the Pulitzer Prize, which this month focuses on Simon's 1991 winner "Lost in Yonkers": bit.ly/atd-lostinyo...
So happy that Branden Jacobs-Jenkins has finally won his Pulitzer Prize
Just back from the party celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Outer Critics Circle: free drinks, free food, lots and lots of great theater people. Who could ask for anything more...
It’s obviously not new (the Greeks did it!) but it seems that more and more shows are relying on characters—the daughter in Liberation, the son in Purpose, the grandson in We Had a World—to provide the context for what’s going on onstage and I can’t decide if that’s efficient or lazy storytelling
One of the best celebrity interviews I’ve read in a very long time
This piece is London-based but “stage dooring” is becoming a big problem on Broadway too. And I fear it’s going to get even worse with all the movie and TV stars scheduled to do shows this spring:
www.theguardian.com/stage/2025/m...
One of my faves—on screen and onstage
Delighted to be starting off the month by looking ahead to the spring theater season on my pal Patrick Pacheco's show: www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_jc...
Hoping that more theaters have the courage to do this:
bringmethenews.com/minnesota-li...
It's so encouraging to see these young people standing up for art and free speech and being rewarded for doing so: www.kqed.org/arts/1397192...
I’ve nothing against Jimmy Fallon but I’m baffled by why he's getting a Sardi’s caricature after doing just one Broadway show (All In) for only five weeks when it used to take years to earn that honor.
Delighted to see the Brits doing the Greeks, which tend to have more central female characters than Shakespeare does but I don't know what to think of the post-modern directorial flourishes. I'm not advocating actors in bedsheets but isn't there anything in between:
www.nytimes.com/2025/02/07/t...
I come from a strong pro-union family, making me naturally inclined to support the workers who are currently striking against the Atlantic Theater Company but this is a truly tough time for off-Broadway theaters. So I don't know who to root for here
www.nytimes.com/2025/02/10/t...
Yes!