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Theater

Highlights

  1. How Television Sees Theater Is Quite a Drama

    As portrayed in shows like “Smash,” “Slings & Arrows” and “American Classic,” life onstage is a grab-bag of archetypes both hilariously wrong and a little bit right.

    By

    In Season 3 of “Only Murders in the Building,” the cast appears in a Fosse-like fever dream sequence.
    In Season 3 of “Only Murders in the Building,” the cast appears in a Fosse-like fever dream sequence.
    CreditPatrick Harbron/Hulu
  1. Coming to Broadway: Molière, ‘The Full Monty’ and a Play About D.J.s

    Roundabout Theater Company, one of the four nonprofits with Broadway houses, plans three Broadway shows next season.

    By

    Ruben Santiago-Hudson and Kara Young, left and center, will star in a new Dominique Morisseau play, while Bill Irwin, right, will star in a revival of “The Imaginary Invalid.”
    CreditCj Rivera/Invision, via Associated Press, Eduardo Munoz/Reuters, Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
  2. ‘Giant’ and Roald Dahl’s Antisemitism: What’s Fact and Fiction?

    Mark Rosenblatt’s Broadway play, starring John Lithgow as the British children’s book author, draws from Dahl’s comments over the years.

    By

    The British author Roald Dahl in 1971.
    CreditRonald Dumont/Daily Express, via Hulton Archive, via Getty Images
  3. Julio Torres in ‘Color Theories,’ and More Theater to Stream

    Other picks include the historical hip-hop musical “Mexodus,” an Anne Carson radio play and a century-old play about machines replacing humans.

    By

    Julio Torres in his first Off Broadway play, “Color Theories,” which can now be streamed on HBO.
    CreditEmilio Madrid
  4. ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ Returns With Contemporary Bite

    A new London production highlights the story’s racial element and shows how much has changed since the play’s 1963 premiere.

    By

    Aaron Pierre as Randle McMurphy, front, and the cast of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” at the Old Vic theater in London.
    CreditManuel Harlan
    Theater Review
  5. Billy Crystal Lost His House in the L.A. Fires. He’s Made a Show About It.

    The actor-comedian said he will return to Broadway this fall with a new solo show called “860,” named for the address of his destroyed family home.

    By

    Billy Crystal at this year’s Academy Awards ceremony in March.
    CreditKevin Winter/Getty Images

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  1. How to Be Cultured

    A highly idiosyncratic compendium of what you need to know right now.

    By T Magazine

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