
Dan Hoyle's solo show, now in D.C., has channeled U.S. frictions since 2010.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 09:54AM[SHARE]The holiday slate fattens up.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 04:18PM[SHARE]The fit's amiss, even with a cast featuring Broadway vet Donna McKechnie.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 02:06PM[SHARE]Fantasy gets real as the 1982 play distills a millennium of discontent.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 02:54PM[SHARE]Days before opening, the cult favorite's first U.S. project outside New York remained a mystery.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 02:36PM[SHARE]'Mean Girls' primps during previews; 'Annie' & 'Crazy for You' begin holiday stands.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 04:36PM[SHARE]"Isn't high school funny, once you're out of it?"
SOURCE: Washington Post at 07:48AM[SHARE]It's now in Baltimore, and the big surprise is . . . just kidding, no surprises.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 02:18PM[SHARE]"I was totally idolizing these guys."
SOURCE: Washington Post at 01:54PM[SHARE]Tony Award winner Donna McKechnie is still kicking her way through musicals.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 01:54PM[SHARE]'Pajama Game' also says hello.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 03:42PM[SHARE]The Welders forge another fresh experience with "Hello, My Name Is . . ."
SOURCE: Washington Post at 03:04PM[SHARE]Last chance for 'Salesman,' 'Skeleton Crew,' 'Native Gardens,' 'Love & Information'
SOURCE: Washington Post at 04:54PM[SHARE]Shakespeare's tragedy gets a close-up in this scaled down staging.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 03:04PM[SHARE]His new commandment: chillax.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 11:33AM[SHARE]The Arthur Miller drama boils with emotion, while Linden plays it cool.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 07:36PM[SHARE]Last chance for 'A Little Night Music' as two 'Assassins' take the stage
SOURCE: Washington Post at 04:18PM[SHARE]The Nilo Cruz play cleverly weaves border issues across decades and hemispheres.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 12:33PM[SHARE]History gets musical treatment in Carlyle Brown's drama and in "Mistress Cycle."
SOURCE: Washington Post at 11:54AM[SHARE]Silver Spring native Rachel Chavkin makes hometown debut at Round House.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 07:54AM[SHARE]Harold Pinter, Caryl Churchill and George Bernard Shaw headline the week.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 03:36PM[SHARE]Rich and poor square off in "Widowers' Houses" and "Stones in His Pockets."
SOURCE: Washington Post at 02:18PM[SHARE]Amelia Roper's absurdist comedy gets smart laughs in tight quarters.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 03:33PM[SHARE]Two leaders steam toward their final acts at Woolly and the Shakespeare Theatre.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 01:06PM[SHARE]This week's hits: 'Night Music,' 'Arsonists,' 'Jesus Hopped the A Train,' 'In the Heights'
SOURCE: Washington Post at 03:12PM[SHARE]The writer has created stories from financial calamity to a "chemical romance."
SOURCE: Washington Post at 02:06PM[SHARE]The epic, familiar staging stars Craig Wallace, raising an angle of race.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 11:42AM[SHARE]'In the Heights' rolls on, and Kelli O'Hara stops by.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 05:12PM[SHARE]Singer-actress will be in concert at George Mason before heading back to Broadway.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 03:42AM[SHARE]Guirgis drama gets divine treatment, but Next Stop's "Disgraced" gets Purgatory.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 01:33PM[SHARE]The 1958 'The Arsonists' becomes a Trump era parable.
SOURCE: Washington Post at 04:04PM[SHARE]

