The Huntington announces the cast and creative team of its second production of its 40th anniversary season, the dark comedy Witch by Jen Silverman, directed by Rebecca Bradshaw, running from October 15 to November 14, 2021 at The Huntington's Calderwood Pavilion at the BCA. Running time of the show is 90 minutes with no intermission.
ITHACA, NY The Kitchen Theatre has seen some changes in two of its most influential offices since the last season. Namely, Rebecca Bradshaw and Cary Bland Simpson have joined
Public Domain
Following a digital debut at London s Southwark Playhouse, the new musical
Public Domain, composed entirely from the real-life words of YouTube vloggers, Instagram influencers, Facebook’s tech giants and everyday internet users, is set to have a live world premiere in the West End this spring. Written and performed by the Francesca Forristal and Jordan Paul Clarke, this dark musical comedy follows two teenage influencers Millie and Z and features exclusive footage from inside Mark Zuckerberg and wife Priscilla Chan’s family home. The show will run from May 27 through May 30 at the Vaudeville Theatre with COVID-19 safety guidelines in place. Take a look at the music video for the number TikTok below.
Huntington Theatre announces a full 2021-22 season of indoor productions that includes âCommon Groundâ
Kirsten Greenidge will have two dramas staged by the Huntington, including her adaptation of Anthony Lukasâs Pulitzer Prize-winning book about Bostonâs busing crisis.
By Don Aucoin Globe Staff,Updated April 15, 2021, 2 hours ago
Email to a Friend
Kirsten Greenidge (top left), Mike Lew (top right), Lydia R. Diamond (bottom right), and Heidi Schreck (bottom left)Huntington Theatre
In a high-profile expression of confidence that the Boston theater industry can spring back to life this fall after more than a year of darkened playhouses, the Huntington Theatre Company will announce Thursday a slate of seven indoor productions for a 2021/2022 season that will begin in late August.
SHARE
On January 17, Egypt’s tourism and antiquities ministry announced that a team of archaeologists had discovered an astonishing number of decorated coffins at the Unesco World Heritage site of Saqqara, near Cairo. Displayed proudly, the 50 wooden coffins looked magnificent: rendered in human form and with bright, colourful and sharp depictions of the mortuary gods of the ancient Egyptian pantheon.
For the Egypt-obsessed, such a discovery was exactly what was needed to distract from an endlessly Covid-19-filled news cycle. Ironically, despite their deep age, the coffins heralded progress, newness – the passage of time when life for so many during this pandemic is tired and repetitive.