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‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’ remains one of the rawest depictions of a married couple on stage or screen
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‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’ remains one of the rawest depictions of a married couple on stage or screen
But this year, Toronto’s annual Shakespeare in High Park has injected an energetic newness into two well-worn staples – Romeo, which opened on Thursday,...
It’s one of two Bard plays alternating in Canadian Stage‘s Shakespeare in High Park this year, the other being Romeo and Juliet. Whereas Jacobs...
Not that anyone seemed to mind, in the relatively casual atmosphere at the Winter Garden Theatre. The audience was instructed early on to hold...
Stephens’ eighty-minute Broadway hit from 2015, making its Canadian debut, borrows a premise at least as old as 1930s screwball-comedy movies: wacky, eccentric woman...
Alternating evenings this summer with King Lear during Shakespeare in High Park‘s thirty-fifth season, this Twelfth Night aims to please, setting the action at...
As directed by Alistair Newton, this Lear works well enough that you’ll lament that this type of gender-swapping hasn’t always been done in Shakespeare...
Canadian Stage has brought 887 back to Toronto “by popular demand” after its highly praised runs in New York, Edinburgh and other cities and...
And like Soulpepper’s The Last Wife, which also opened in Toronto this week, Georgian playwright Nino Haratischwili’s unnerving 2008 drama is perfectly suited for...
Making its Toronto debut with Canadian Stage under the vision of director Peter Hinton, Constellations follows the ups and downs of a couple, outgoing...