Tag Archives: American/General
The Beginning of August and Other Plays
by Tom Donaghy“Mr. Donaghy…is a dramatist of inventive eloquence, finding the poetry of longing in the empty mantras and sound bites of contemporary pop culture.” –The…
Beautiful False Things
by Irving Feldman“In a time terrible for poetry, when poets refuse the old sybelline role of Explainer and stick only to what lies frozen on the…
Aunt Dan and Lemon
by Wallace Shawn“A compulsive, mesmerizing and thoroughly uncomfortable experience.” –Time Out
Archeology of the Circle
by Bruce Weigl“Few poets of any generation have written so searingly into of the trauma of war, inscribing its wound while refusing the fragile suture of…
Arcade
by Marc Woodworth“The burden . . . of this poet’s responsibility . . . rests on his eloquence, his way of making us see. For him,…
American Buffalo
by David Mamet“A gripping and exciting play which provides the richest and best qualities of the theater experience.” –New York Post
The American Clock & The Archbishop’s Ceiling
by Arthur MillerThese two plays, first produced in the United States in the 1970s, have recently been revived here and abroad to great critical and popular…
America Hurrah and Other Plays
by Jean-Claude van Itallie“Van Itallie conveys an especially timely sensation, that of a world of fragmented experience so speeded up past human endurance that a man must…
All the Way
by Robert Schenkkan“A magnificent work. . . . a brilliant portrayal no less epic than the great tragedies of classic literature.” —Roma Torre, NY1