Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | December 3, 2024
Betty Gilpin Will Take Over Broadway's Oh, Mary! in 2025
Cole Escola's campy comedy about the famed first lady has extended its run with a new star.
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | November 7, 2024
Conrad Ricamora and Cole Escola Exchange Expletives Before Oh, Mary! Performances
Find out which barbs are part of the stage stars' pre-show ritual at Broadway's Lyceum Theatre.
Article | By Molly Higgins, Logan Culwell-Block | October 19, 2024
Conrad Ricamora Out of Broadway's Oh, Mary! After Bike Accident
Ricamora plays Mary's Husband in Cole Escola's hit comedy.
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | September 19, 2024
Oh, Mary! Extends Into 2025 on Broadway
Cole Escola's wacky comedy take on Mary Todd Lincoln is getting its second extension on Broadway.
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | July 23, 2024
Oh, Mary! Extends Broadway Run Into November
The Broadway transfer of Cole Escola’s campy comedy officially opened July 11 at the Lyceum Theatre.
Article | By Diep Tran | July 12, 2024
On the Red Carpet: Oh, Mary! Star Cole Escola Feels Like 'The Luckiest Idiot Girl in the World'
Patti LuPone, Ruth Negga, Laura Benanti, Molly Ringwald, and more showed up to celebrate Broadway's new first lady.
Article | By Molly Higgins, Logan Culwell-Block | July 12, 2024
Reviews: What Do Critics Think of Cole Escola’s Oh, Mary! on Broadway?
The Broadway transfer of Escola’s campy comedy officially opened July 11 at the Lyceum Theatre.
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | July 11, 2024
Oh, Broadway! Cole Escola's Off-Broadway Sensation Oh, Mary! Opens at the Lyceum July 11
Escola, who penned the campy comedy, also stars as Mary Todd Lincoln opposite Conrad Ricamora as Abraham Lincoln.
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | July 8, 2024
Get a 1st Look at Cole Escola's Oh, Mary! On Broadway
Escola, who penned the campy comedy, also stars as Mary Todd Lincoln opposite Conrad Ricamora as Abraham Lincoln.
Article | By Jack Viertel | February 9, 2007
Ziegfeld, The Follies, Follies and Encores! 2007
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | October 10, 2024
In Off-Broadway's Blood of the Lamb, Abortion Is the Subject of a Suspense Thriller
Arlene Hutton began writing her play before the fall of Roe v. Wade, only for her invented scenarios to become horrible realities.
Article | By Matt Dobkin | October 10, 2024
How Osvaldo Golijov and David Henry Hwang Came Together to Create Ainadamar
The opera, about the tragic life of writer Federico García Lorca, will play at the Met.
Article | By Diep Tran | August 20, 2024
Sara Bareilles on Whether She's Starring in Her New Musical, The Interestings
The three-time Tony nominee also shares the first song from the new musical, and updates for Girls5eva and Waitress.
Article | By Dylan Parent | August 13, 2024
To Kristen Smyth, Frankenstein Is a Metaphor for the Transgender Experience
Her solo show Cruel Britannia: After Frankenstein is currently running at Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Article | By Diep Tran | July 17, 2024
Aaron Lazar Has Made Peace With ALS
The Broadway favorite was diagnosed in 2022, and he’s now an advocate for ALS research and the spiritual mindset of health.
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | May 16, 2024
Inside Orchestrator Jonathan Tunick's Project to Make Sondheim's Scores Sound Bigger
A re-orchestrated version of A Little Night Music will premiere at Lincoln Center. Tunick says Sweeney Todd is next.
Article | By Logan Culwell-Block | February 22, 2024
André De Shields Looks Back on 50 Years of The Wiz, Haarlem Nocturne, and Looking Fabulous
The Hadestown star and Tony winner is performing at 54 Below through February 24.
Article | By Talaura Harms | December 14, 2023
In Life & Times of Michael K, a Wooden Puppet Becomes an Everyman
Writer-director Lara Foot on why puppetry was the best way to tell the tale of a man living in apartheid-era South Africa, in a show currently running Off-Broadway at St. Ann's Warehouse.
Article | By Talaura Harms | November 30, 2023
For Native American Playwright Mary Kathryn Nagle, the Past Is Present
Her Off-Broadway play Manahatta looks at how the Lenape people lost their land and how that connects to the housing crisis of 2008.
Article | By Talaura Harms | May 8, 2023
Designer Simon Scullion Gets It Right With Peter Pan Goes Wrong
With the company's biggest gag yet, Mischief’s latest Broadway comedy spins out of control—literally—eight times a week.
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