"Hurricane" tells the story of a brutal hurricane that ravaged New England on Sept. 21, 1938.
Off-Off-Broadway Review
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"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.
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"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
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An uneven tuner attempts to combine musical theatre with opera.
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In "Under Fire," writer Barry Harman attempts to look at gray areas in the realms of love, war, and journalism.
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This musical manages to insult its audience, logic, and good writing in just two hours.
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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.
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The Walk Across America for Mother Earth
Taylor Mac and the Talking Band's new play about failure feels as if it gives up way too easily.
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This multilayered riff on Act 3, Scene 6 of "King Lear" wants to be anarchic fun, but its core is just a collection of donnish theater-geek in-jokes.
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In "Without You"—based on successful "Rent" actor Anthony Rapp's 2006 memoir— reveals that the late 1990s was also a time of great personal loss.










