Photo from the show Pink border doodle

New vision for ‘1776’ is not as revolutionary as it thinks

A review of 1776 by Brittani Samuel | October 6, 2022

In this take on the musical — which is receiving its second revival from Roundabout Theatre Company (the first was in 1997) — an ethnically diverse chorale of women, trans and nonbinary performers are our revolutionaries. Unfortunately, this choice, which genuinely makes the sedative of a show more interesting to look at and listen to, further locks its subjects into binary stereotypes.

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The Gorgeous ‘Cost of Living’ Depicts Disability in Groundbreaking Ways

Christian Lewis | October 3, 2022

Last season, Martyna Majok stunned audiences with her gripping portrayal of immigrant life in Sanctuary City; now her earlier play, Cost of Living, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2018, is making its Broadway debut–as is the playwright. Last year I extolled her work as “off-Broadway at its best,” and this year I […]

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Loss and Remembrance are at the Heart of the Magnificent ‘Leopoldstadt’

Ran Xia | October 2, 2022

Everything in Leopoldstadt unfolds like a game of cat’s cradle. It’s 1899 and the Merz & Jakobovicz family portrait is one of abundance and contentment. The conversations flow along with whiskey and music, as family members discuss Freud’s latest theories, which Hermann Merz (David Krumholtz) disdains, mathematician Riemann’s still unsolved hypothesis, which Ludwig Jakobovicz (Brandon […]

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