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Dmitry Zvonkov
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Broadway Theater Review: MOTHERS AND SONS (Golden Theatre)
LOVE, FAMILY AND ALIENATION One of the questions at the center of Terrence McNally’s insightful and moving drama Mothers and Sons is, Why is it so difficult for a mother to love her son for who he is, and vice versa? McNally initially frames the problem in terms of a homophobic mother’s inability to accept…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: DAY OF THE DOG (St. Louis Actors’ Studio at 59E59 Theaters)
THE HUMAN WHISPERER Most theatrical performances feel a little awkward at the beginning; even in good shows it usually takes the actors a few minutes to settle into their characters and to find the correct modulation for their voices. Which is why Milton Zoth’s staging of Daniel Damiano’s hilarious drama Day of the Dog is…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: NO EXIT (The Pearl)
ABANDON ALL HOPE YE WHO ENTER THE THEATER As staged by Linda Ames Key, Paul Bowles’ adaptation of Jean Paul Sartre’s No Exit, a play that imagines three individuals’ hell as being trapped in a room together for all eternity, succeeds less as a conventional show and more as performance art: Ms. Key really lets…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: THE WINTER’S TALE (WorkShop Theater at The Main Stage Theater)
A FINE INTRODUCTION TO SHAKESPEARE It takes a few minutes to get going but once it does Ryan Lee’s staging of Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale becomes dynamic entertainment; Mr. Lee and his fine group of actors succeed in making the experience of watching a 400-year-old play written in verse both intimate and immediate. King of…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: THE SHAPE OF SOMETHING SQUASHED (Paradise Factory Theater)
SQUASHED HOPES MAKE FOR BRILLIANT THEATER What a relief it is, what a glorious pleasure for a viewer, after sitting through so much unnecessary theater, to find oneself finally in the hands of an artist and master. You let yourself fall into them knowing that they will catch you and hold you and carry you…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: PAINS OF YOUTH (The Cake Shop Theater Company at Access Theater)
THE FRUSTRATED AND THE BORED Watching The Cake Shop Theater Company perform Martin Crimp’s brisk new translation of Ferdinand Bruckner’s sharp 1926 play Pains of Youth, about a group of medical students residing in a boarding house in 1923 Vienna, a thought occurred to me: If the same amount of effort as director Katie Lupica…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: BRANCHED, A COMEDY WITH CONSEQUENCES (InViolet Repertory Theater at HERE Arts Center)
A STUMP Sitting through Erin Mallon’s 90-minute play Branched, A Comedy with Consequences, I found myself envying the gentleman who, silently and with the upmost discretion, managed to sneak out of the theater during one of the scene changes; 15 minutes in it is painfully clear that nothing worthwhile will happen on this stage. The…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: TIL DIVORCE DO US PART (DR2 Theatre)
LES MS. Conceived, written and choreographed by Ruthe Ponturo, Til Divorce Do Us Part is a collection of musical numbers, each illustrating different aspects of divorce from the point of view of Kate (Erin Maguire), an affluent, white, middle-aged former wife whose husband left her for his young Pilates instructor. Whether or not you enjoy…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: INTIMACY (The New Group at the Acorn Theatre)
MASTURBATING IN THE SUBURBS As directed by Scott Elliott, Thomas Bradshaw’s ironically titled new comedy Intimacy is not for the squeamish. A male character literally masturbates to internet porn, stroking a formidable erection which the actor has trouble stuffing back into his boxer-briefs when the scene ends’”talk about a game performer. This is just a…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: iLUMINATE (New World Stages)
A DANCE OF LIGHT IN DARKNESS A delight for both kids and adults, the clever and inventive entertainment iLuminate brings to mind the image of dancing graffiti. Wearing black body suits equipped with different colored neon lights, the performers move in darkness; all one sees are illuminations. Populated by fantastic creatures that dance, fly, fall…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: THE CLEARING (Theatre at St. Clement’s)
BROTHERS’ BOND Josh Hecht does an outstanding job directing Jake Jeppson’s effective new play The Clearing, about two brothers who suffer from a dark secret they’ve shared for the past 17 years. Chris Ellis is an emotional man-child in his late twenties; he is burly, excitable, prone to acting out, and unable to deal with…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: KING LEAR (Harvey Lichtenstein Theater at BAM)
LEAR, BECAUSE IT’S THERE A friend commented to me once that as hard to take as Orthodox Jews might seem to us secular ones, it is largely thanks to them and their stubborn adherence to the old ways that the Jewish religion is still around today. Something similar can be said of the practitioners of…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: I AM THE WIND (59E59)
A WIND OF DISAPPOINTMENT Having seen some months ago Paul Takacs’s outstanding staging of a two-character play called Tender Napalm, I was very much looking forward to watching his imagining of Jon Fosse’s enigmatic two-character play I Am the Wind (adapted into English by Simon Stephens). Unfortunately, as tight and inspired as his direction of…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: THE SURRENDER (Clurman Theatre on Theatre Row)
DIARY OF A PRETENTIOUS NITWIT The Woman in the one-woman show The Surrender, adapted for the stage by Isabelle Stoffel and Toni Bentley from Ms. Bentley’s book The Surrender, An Erotic Memoir, tells of how she finds God while receiving her first anal sex, and continues to find Him 297 more times until her dalliance…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF MARINA ABRAMOVIĆ (The Park Avenue Armory)
THEATRICALIZING AN ARTIST’S WORLD The Life and Death of Marina Abramović, a biography or perhaps an imagined eulogy of performance artist Marina Abramović, the show’s still living collaborator, is fairly straightforward in its narrative, at least in the sense of being chronological. The ways in which it differs from the more conventional biographies and stage…
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Off-Off-Broadway Theater Review: A CHRISTMAS CAROL (…blessed unrest…at the Interart Theatre)
A LOVELY INNOVATIVE STAGING OF AN OLD FAVORITE Theater artistry overcomes budgetary constraints in Jessica Burr’s delightful and poignant staging of A Christmas Carol, from Matt Opatrny’s admirable adaptation of Dickens’ novella. Six actors play over seventeen characters in this classic tale of redemption, in which Ebenezer Scrooge, a lonely old miser, is shown the…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: NUTCRACKER ROUGE (Minetta Lane Theatre)
A BEAUTIFUL SHELL WITHOUT A NUT A show can be forgiven many things when its characters are compelling and its dramatics are solid; if the audience is emotionally involved in the fate of the personages, they won’t notice or won’t so much care about the little problems, the little mistakes. Conversely, if we have nothing…
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Off-Broadway Theater Review: NAKED HOLIDAYS (The Cutting Room)
YOUNG, BEAUTIFUL, TALENTED AND NAKED Directed by Russell Dobular and written by him and the Naked Holiday Ensemble, with additional material by Stacy Lane, Endtimes Productions’ annual Christmastime spectacle Naked Holidays, now in its 7th incarnation, subverts the holy days theme with a delightful burlesque variety show full of dancing, singing, comedy, music, and lots…
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Off-Off-Broadway Review: FAMILY FURNITURE (The Flea Theater)
THE GOOD WASPS There’s nothing especially remarkable about A.R. Gurney’s latest offering Family Furniture, a play that investigates a family of 1950s WASPs spending the summer at their Lake Erie vacation home. There are no terrible conflicts or unsolvable problems, no new ideas or exciting subtext, it isn’t suspenseful or particularly dramatic, and its relevance…
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Broadway Theater Review: A GENTLEMAN’S GUIDE TO LOVE AND MURDER (Walter Kerr Theatre)
WHAT’S FUNNIER THAN MURDER? As a critic I’m embarrassed to gush but I must confess I gave my first standing ovation last night to honor Jefferson Mays who plays all eight unfortunate members of the D’Ysquith family in Steven Lutvak and Robert L. Freedman’s musical comedy A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder. Mr. Mays…
Theater Review: HAMLET (National Theatre Company at BAM in Brooklyn)
by Alex Simmons | May 5, 2026
in New York, Theater, ToursTheatre Review: HYMN (Odyssey Theatre Ensemble)
by Ernest Kearney | May 3, 2026
in Los Angeles, TheaterDance Review: GISELLE (Los Angeles Ballet)
by Shari Barrett | May 3, 2026
in Dance, Los Angeles



















