Because Shakespeare gave his hero and antihero equal weight, the contest between the actors playing them has never been that easy to call. By Ben Brantley Who exactly is in charge here?
A fresh light—and a glaring one—is being shone on these murky matters by a new production of “Much Ado About Nothing” at the ...
By Thompson Eskew In its second show of the year, Little Theatre of Alexandria brings William Shakespeare’s revered comedy ...
You don't get this much swagger by holding back your insults. Image via Wikipedia. William Shakespeare gave the English ...
A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum transports us to a small corner of ancient Rome, where neighbors Marcus Lycus, ...
A LOST Second World War bomber shot down by the Nazis with a British airman aboard has been found after 82 years. Leslie ...
Displeased with the check on Trump’s power, the president and his allies have lashed out at federal judges — and against one judge in particular: James Boasberg, chief judge of the U.S. District Court ...
Shakespeare was a hero who helped make English the most spoken language around the world, something that we have all benefited from. Why would anyone want to try to rewrite and reinterpret that ...
The “Stranger Things” TV show takes place in the 1980s in Hawkins, Indiana, where mysterious — and monstrous — events go down ...
There are dozens of theater shows in Connecticut to look forward to this spring, from “Ragtime” to “Primary Trust” to “The ...
U.N. climate agreement in Japan has been turned into a play that explores the politics and personalities behind the first ...