How attending live theater became an important part of the American Jewish communal experience
A conversation about André Gregory’s new memoir, ‘This Is Not My Memoir’
Suspended productions of ‘Leopoldstadt’ and ‘The Visit’ try to update the traumas that broke families in World War II
Did the late, splenetic theater and film critic take a secret to his grave?
A final evening of talk and tipple with the owner of a Greenwich Village institution driven out of business by rising rents, before another bit of old New York bites the dust
Panicked audience members feared that a shooting was about to begin
A new play explores how Judaism divides a Jewish family
A very Jewish production speaks, in its specificity, to the universal experience of being a minority
Israel’s Gesher theater company gives the classic tale of religious spirits a modern psychological turn
Born 100 years ago today, Alan Jay Lerner of Lerner and Loewe wrote classic American musicals like ‘Camelot’ and ‘My Fair Lady,‘ whose Jewish themes are not always obvious
Neil Simon, legendary writer of The Odd Couple and countless other hits, has died at 91. He practically invented the sitcom along the way
‘Angels in America,’ ‘The Band’s Visit’ fare excellently
‘One Thousand Nights and One Day’ never fails to be riveting, even when it is frustrating
‘A Walk with Mr. Heifetz’ imagines the famous violinist in conversations about art, Zionism, ego, and everything in between
Rod Serling’s outsider worldview continues to guide and inspire, across decades and media
A new theatrical adaptation of Chaim Potok’s classic novel admires the past without being nostalgic and takes Jews and Judaism seriously
Full of unlikable characters each representing a different half-baked perspective, ‘Diaspora’ is offensive to everyone and no one
Somewhere between a one-woman multimedia play and a live documentary, ‘Say Something Bunny!’ takes audiences on an intimate journey of Jewish life on Long Island