Off-Off-Broadway Review

Sort by:

  • Review

    Tearoom Tango

    Six men cruising a public bathroom in a park in an unnamed American city share with us their reasons for being there and how they feel about being gay.

  • Review

    The Cambria

    "The Cambria" was the name of the ship that in 1845 took the great African American Frederick Douglass from Boston to Ireland.

  • Review

    Judas and Me

    The overabundance of parodies and punch lines is the primary flaw in an otherwise clever, witty, irreverent musical.

  • Review

    Hurricane

    "Hurricane" tells the story of a brutal hurricane that ravaged New England on Sept. 21, 1938.

  • Review

    The Cure

    "The Cure" attempts to address the profound issues of death and immortality. The aim is admirable but it ultimately doesn't meet its goal of taking them seriously.

  • Review

    Topsy Turvy Loves

    "Engaged" may well have been William S. Gilbert's most popular work apart from Sullivan. But whatever its Victorian charms, here the satire is largely overwhelmed by the music

  • Review

    Lorenzo

    An uneven tuner attempts to combine musical theatre with opera.

  • Review

    Under Fire

     In "Under Fire," writer Barry Harman attempts to look at gray areas in the realms of love, war, and journalism.

  • Review

    23 Coins

    This musical manages to insult its audience, logic, and good writing in just two hours.

  • Review

    Good Bobby

    As Robert F. Kennedy, Brian Lee Franklin mutters zippy comebacks and frustrated retorts with aplomb. As the author of the play "Good Bobby," he shows less skill.