Off-Broadway Review

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  • Review

    Santa Claus Is Coming Out

    So who knew? Santa Claus is a ho-ho homosexual. When the story goes public, it rocks the world. Well, at least in writer-performer Jeffrey Solomon's "Santa Claus Is Coming Out."

  • Review

    Do Not Go Gentle

    While playwright and actor may know their Dylan Thomas and Welsh heritage, fans of the poet will learn little, and fans of the play may find it less satisfying than in previous productions.

  • Review

    Groovaloo Freestyle

    Forget that gritty, raw, sassy, often violent aesthetic that you may have come to associate with authentic hip-hop performance.

  • Review

    Stifters Dinge

    Difficult to categorize but a privilege to absorb, the show is Shelley meets Beckett meets Rauschenberg, and it's all new again.

  • Review

    Quartermaine's Terms

    Williamstown Theatre Festival presents a vibrant production about a nonentity disconnected from life.

  • Review

    Still Life

    Playwright Alex Dinelaris has a few entertaining tricks up his sleeve in this tale of an unhappy ad man and a blocked photographer.

  • Review

    Penny Penniworth

    The source material for the 70-minute send-up "Penny Penniworth" is largely mid-Victorian English lit, and the comedic result is priceless.

  • Review

    All's Well That Ends Well

    "All's Well That Ends Well," offers an example of why the National Theatre is one of England's greatest treasures and why it could become, thanks to this series, one of the whole globe's.

  • Review

    A Disaster Begins

    This solo play about a fictional author who wrote a book about the Galveston hurricane becomes a journey into one woman's regrettable nonexistence.

  • Review

    Dark Sisters

    I was looking forward to composer Nico Muhly and librettist Stephen Karam's new opera, so it's with great disappointment that I have to report that it's an awfully wan piece of work.