Author: Lindsey Walko
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Where Colors Have Meaning and Theatre Isn’t A Play: Julio Torres’ COLOR THEORIES
Color Theories by Julio Torres is not an Off Broadway Play. It may look like a play, sound like a play, smell like a play, but Julio assures us, it’s […]
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Transcending A Gimmick: Pocket Ghost and As We Were Production’s OFFICE PARTY PLAY
“Why are you being so weird?” My fiancé leaned over and whispered in my ear. We had just been introduced to the Director of Communications for a book launch held […]
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Heloise Wilson’s ASTRONAUTS WANTED: An Approachable Story Written Deftly
Do I want to go to Mars? Not really, no. I was never one of those kids who looked up at the night sky and pointed to the stars […]
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Conjuring a World of Complex Williamsian Women: A Conversation with Co-Artistic Director of The Fire Weeds, Jaclyn Bethany
As a playwright, there’s something very special about an early draft – unedited and raw, a jumble of ideas that tumble out in the most honest and immediate way. There’s […]
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The Whales are Missing: In Abe Koogler’s DEEP BLUE SOUND, Politics Linger While Characters Humanize and The Audience is Drawn Near
Every American town has some marker that sets it apart from every other American town. I’m not talking about geography, population, values, or even baseball teams, but rather, those […]
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In Dan Blick’s LAKE GEORGE, Hell is the Liminality of A Holiday and A Rented Lake House
Sartre was right when he said that “hell is other people”. Nothing can encapsulate the feeling of purgatory like a family vacation at a rented lake house. Sartre’s full quote […]
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![Matthew Gasda’s “Dimes Square [manhattan edition]” is the Party You Maybe Want to Attend](https://www.culturebot.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Screenshot-2024-12-24-at-10.02.11 AM-600x400.png)
Matthew Gasda’s “Dimes Square [manhattan edition]” is the Party You Maybe Want to Attend
Dimes Square, technically a microneighborhood of Manhattan between Chinatown and the Lower East Side, is renowned for its particular cultural attributes: an overpopulation of twenty-one-year-old recent graduates of liberal arts […]
