Parkland’s A Charlie Brown Christmas brings the love
A live-action version of a beloved holiday television special brings heart and warmth to the forefront this winter season.
A live-action version of a beloved holiday television special brings heart and warmth to the forefront this winter season.
Meghan reviews Every Brilliant Thing, a show that successfully strived to remind us all of life's little joys through depression by a list of brilliant things.
The Penny Dreadful Players present Romeo and Juliet – after the curtain falls.
Rebecca speaks with director Latrelle Bright about staging Snoopy at Parkland’s Theatre. Things get philosophical about that pathetic little tree.
After two fairly dark dramas, Rebecca finds out more about Every Brilliant Thing, the one-man comedy about depression that should lift our spirits.
Conor McPherson’s adaptation of The Birds by Daphne du Maurier tries to rival that of Alfred Hitchcock’s famous 1963 movie starring Tippi Hedren. But is the play as frightening as the movie or original story?
The amount of sex and intrigue in the first opera at Krannert is nearly equal to a thrilling TV series, so Rebecca gets the dirt from visionary director Madeline Sayet about re-creating Poppea.
Rebecca chats with the cast of The Birds, opening tomorrow at the Station theatre, and lets them assuage her fears.
Meghan reviews The Minotaur at Krannert Center of Performing Arts, where the classical Greek myth gets a modern take.
Shelly previews Lucky Plush's high-flying dance production about superheroes fighting for social justice.