środa, 19 sierpnia 2015

Fwd: Theater Update: Cirque du Soleil Is Coming to Broadway

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From: NYTimes.com <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
Date: Wed, Aug 19, 2015 at 7:56 PM
Subject: Theater Update: Cirque du Soleil Is Coming to Broadway
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Wednesday, August 19, 2015

The New York Times

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The New York Times

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

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Cirque du Soleil rehearsing at Radio City Music Hall in 2011.
Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
Cirque du Soleil Show Is Broadway Bound
By MICHAEL PAULSON
The Canadian circus behemoth is planning to take over the Lyric Theater for a long-running production that combines musical theater and acrobatics.
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Charles Isherwood in Oregon
Sweat  Stephen Michael Spencer, left, and Tramell Tillman, right, with Jack Willis, play ex-convicts in Lynn Nottage's new drama, at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland.
Jenny Graham
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD
Lynn Nottage's new drama, produced at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, examines two generations of factory workers and the decline of industry in the United States.
From left, Tala Ashe, John Tufts and Britney Simpson in
Jenny Graham/Oregon Shakespeare Festival
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD
At the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Jeff Whitty's merry new work combines a 16th-century poetic tale with the music of the Go-Go's.
News and Reviews
"Informed Consent," at the Duke on 42nd Street, stars Tina Benko, left, as a scientist, and Myra Lucretia Taylor as a dean.
Paula Lobo for The New York Times
Review: 'Informed Consent' Tests the Ethics of Genetic Research
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

This play at the Duke on 42nd Street is about an anthropologist whose deeply personal reasons for pursuing her work lead her into questionable moral territory.

Grey Gardens  Betty Buckley, left, and Rachel York in this show, directed by Michael Wilson, at Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor, N.Y.
Lenny Strucker
Review: 'Grey Gardens' Is Revived in Its Real Setting, the Hamptons
By LAURA COLLINS-HUGHES

This musical about two relatives of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis is playing in Sag Harbor, N.Y.

Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times
For 'Mercury Fur' Writer Philip Ridley, a Macabre Vision Takes Many Forms
By ALEXIS SOLOSKI

Mr. Ridley, whose controversial play, "Mercury Fur," opens this week Off Broadway, follows his art across many forms: photography, film and children's novels among them.

Unity 1918  Alexandra Perlwitz in this play about the Spanish flu, at the Gene Frankel Theater.
Russ Rowland
Review: In 'Unity (1918),' a Town Blindsided by Spanish Influenza
By ANITA GATES

With flashes of humor, Kevin Kerr's play evokes the horrors of a 1918 pandemic that gave people no time to mourn.

Steve: A Docu-Musical  Colin Summers stars in this one-man show at the Fourth Street Theater, in which he performs songs with lyrics from an Internet correspondent he has never met.
Hunter Canning
Review: In 'Steve: A Docu-Musical,' Colin Summers Honors an Online Mystery Lyricist
By LAURA COLLINS-HUGHES

Mr. Summers's one-man show details his online correspondence with the title's inspiration: a man, possibly Australian, who submitted lyrics to him over seven years.

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Reports From the Fringe
Critic's Notebook
Mirrored: Ryan Walter, left, and Bobby Goodrich in
Garrett Matthew
A Double Dose of Divine, and Other Reports From the Fringe Festival
By ALEXIS SOLOSKI

The New York International Fringe Festival, now in full swing, features glimmers of talent and skill amid the amateurism and malfunctioning air-conditioners.

A scene from "Smashed: The Carrie Nation Story" with, from left, Christiana Cole, Krista Wozniak, Kayleigh Butcher and Cameron Russell.
Isabelle Selby
One Year Later, Fringe Festival Shows Measure Their Success
By STEVEN McELROY

Playwrights and producers discuss whether having been in the 2014 New York International Fringe Festival was worth all the time, effort and money.

A scene from
Daren Scott
10 Shows to Watch for at This Year's New York Fringe Festival
By STEVEN McELROY, ERIK PIEPENBURG and SCOTT HELLER

"Elaine Stritch: Still Here," "Exact Change" and "Naked Hamilton" are among the shows in this year's FringeNYC, which opens on Friday.

Critics' Picks
John  From left, Georgia Engel, Christopher Abbott and Lois Smith in this Annie Baker drama set at a bed-and-breakfast near the Gettysburg battlefield, playing at the Pershing Square Signature Center.
Review: In 'John,' Pondering Life's Mysteries From Gettysburg
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

Review: Colin Quinn, Full of Nostalgia for Gritty Old New York
By JASON ZINOMAN

Review: 'Hamilton,' Young Rebels Changing History and Theater
By BEN BRANTLEY

From left, Amanda Quaid, Tim Ruddy, Sean Gormley and Paul O'Brien in
Review: In 'The Weir,' Things Go Bump in the Night, at the Pub
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

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