Free Theater in NYC: 15 Live Shows to See This Spring and Summer
Chekhov, Broadway stars and, yes, Shakespeare. There’s no shortage of free productions in the city this time of year. Here are 15 shows worth seeing.
Chekhov, Broadway stars and, yes, Shakespeare. There’s no shortage of free productions in the city this time of year. Here are 15 shows worth seeing.
Nominations for the 79th Tony Awards will be announced on Tuesday. Here’s the updating list.
John Lithgow in "Giant," a triumphant revival of "Death of a Salesman" and vogueing cats at "The Jellicle Ball": These productions are worth knowing about.
Other picks include the historical hip-hop musical "Mexodus," an Anne Carson radio play and a century-old play about machines replacing humans.
Other picks include the National Theater's "Inter Alia," a successor to the acclaimed "Prima Facie"; Anne Gridley's "Watch Me Walk"; and a Jodi Picoult stage adaptation.
Other picks include a family production of "The Snow Queen," the Broadway-bound "Every Brilliant Thing" and the acclaimed comedy "Sorry for Your Loss."
No phones, no street clothing. The artist Rashid Johnson has returned to the Russian and Turkish Baths with Amiri Baraka's incendiary play "Dutchman."
Check out the Broadway blockbuster, which celebrates its 10th anniversary, and Michael Abbensetts's play about the Guyanese community of London.
In "Oh, Mary!," Escola plays a drunken, melodramatic Mary Todd Lincoln who yearns to return to cabaret.
The Tony Awards begin on Sunday at 8 p.m. E.T., live from Radio City Music Hall in New York City.
Fall for Dance will have its most international lineup since the pandemic; and the center's 2025-26 season will feature Paris Opera Ballet and Dutch National Ballet.
The arts institution, which has shrunk its programming in recent years, unveiled its fall lineup.
Saheem Ali's musical, about the goddess of music finding refuge and love at an Afro-jazz club in Mombasa, Kenya, has been nearly 20 years in the making.
Nominations for the 78th Tony Awards will be announced on Thursday morning. See below for a live list of nominees.
Take in Shakespeare, experimental theater and a three-play series on the fallout of Brexit, all available to watch at home.
The summer lineup will include eight world premieres, including new works by Suzan-Lori Parks, Whitney White and Bobbi Jene Smith.
The 2025-26 season, which includes a Balanchine revival and premieres by Justin Peck and Alexei Ratmansky, will also see the retirement of Megan Fairchild in spring.
A British satirical comedy, a Tennessee Williams classic, a soundscape of Havana: These are productions worth knowing about.
"The Jonathan Larson Project," a years-in-the-making musical collage of Larson's life, features songs he wrote before he died. Now it's onstage at the Orpheum.
A bare-bones Chekhov, a critically acclaimed revival of "The Wedding Band" and the cult TV series "Smash" are all available for streaming.
The ballerina is leaving the company in February after 25 years. She will dance the lead in "Firebird" in her final program.
This month's picks include "Prima Facie," intimate audio plays and bite-size dramas.
A film adaptation onstage, a Broadway classic, comedy galore: These are the productions worth knowing about this holiday season.
Alongside Colman Domingo and Paul Raci, ex-inmates shot "Sing Sing" in a decommissioned correctional facility. Then came the screening in the actual prison.