All of Shakespeare’s Plays Are About Race
A new book argues that the playwright’s work was central to defining whiteness as a racial category—one that has persisted ever since.
A new book argues that the playwright’s work was central to defining whiteness as a racial category—one that has persisted ever since.
How the late composer’s preoccupation with outsiders has endeared him to a new generation
The subversive intent of the playwright’s art and activism has long been underestimated.
An ironic film about a Jewish prayer for the fraudulent investor smartly reimagines rituals of human connection at a time when closeness isn’t possible.
Two new Netflix films, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and Giving Voice, honor the late playwright’s rejection of white commercial restrictions.
Luis Miranda, the father of Lin-Manuel, on the best way to amass political power in the lead-up to the presidential election
The intimate camerawork of its web broadcasts gives everyone the best seat in the house.
The qualities for which live theater is celebrated—audiences responding with laughter, tears, gasps, and coughs—accelerate its danger. But the Broadway shutdown could be good for plays.
A new revival shows that the musical is still bound by ethnic stereotypes, and that it would work best by returning to its origins.
Political discord coupled with the lingering effects of 2017’s Hurricane Maria challenged the arrival of the famed musical.