What’s more satisfying than a good resolution? Theater often fulfills the desire to see the bad guy get what’s coming to him, to see lovers live happily ever af...
Some stories, though classically loved and valued, do little more today than reveal growingly irrelevant schools of thought. Driving Miss Daisy, which Georgia E...
In Dry Land at Atlanta Theatre Club, two teenage girls find themselves at a crossroads between childhood and motherhood. In The Wolves at Horizon Theatre, #7 tr...
America touts itself as a land of freedom in which its citizens can fully celebrate their diverse cultures. For Native Americans, however, this freedom has been...
Summer is upon us, and one of the most beloved activities of the season is attending a carnival or fair with friends. The smell of funnel cakes and the roaring ...
The avant-garde is an art form meant to enhance reality in a way that will pose questions about the way we live our lives. This type of theater offers a glimpse...
Surviving a battle requires strength, dedication, patience and courage. Battles are rarely fought alone, and in The Hero’s Wife, these traits describe retired N...
Porcupines, moose, giant purple elephants, oh my! The Center for Puppetry Arts’ Harold and the Purple Crayon, running through May 26, is not your average puppet...
“If you’re an animal, we built the jungle.”
Pipeline, by Dominique Morisseau, examines what happens when racial tensions climb too high and explosive conflic...
The classic Rodgers & Hammerstein musical South Pacific can sometimes seem like too much of a nod to yesteryear to have anything new to offer. However, the ...