High School Cancels Musical And Is Bombarded With Threats

Via Facebook, the students received pictures of themselves with swastikas plastered on their faces. One parent had what was thought to be her home address (it wasn’t) posted online with a comment seeming to encourage harassment: “Do your thing social media.” Another parent received a profane email, assailing her for embracing “anti-white racism,” adding: “I feel sorry for your brainwashed child.”

Theatre Access For All – It’s Coming But Audience Attitudes Need To Change

Many audience members seem increasingly intolerant of any distraction in their theatregoing experience, an attitude likely brought on in part by the steep rise in ticket prices. Will the use of smart phones, even with a non-glare app, inspire some nasty exchanges? Will open captioning continue to be seen as some kind of niche practice that intrudes on the serenity of the “mainstream”? Will autistic audience members always be accommodated through a policy of separate but equal?

Performers In “Sleep No More”, The Immersive Theatre Sensation, Say Audience Members Groped Them

It’s a theatrical phenomenon, attracting celebrities and pop culture cameos. Performers say it is one of the most exciting productions they could list on a resume. But eight former Sleep No More performers and staffers told BuzzFeed News they were groped by audience members during the show. In all, BuzzFeed News confirmed 17 incidents of groping or sexual misconduct by patrons during the show — including of two former performers who were groped multiple times.

Broadway’s Smallest Theater Is Reopening, This Time As A Nonprofit

“The theater was so small, it was named the Little Theater. That was 106 years ago, and since then it has been reincarnated many times – renamed, repurposed, rehabilitated. Now known as the Helen Hayes Theater, … the 589-seat playhouse has a new mission: … to present work by living American playwrights, a form of counterprogramming at a time when Broadway is dominated by musicals, revivals and British imports.”

Portland Theatre That Had Been In Money Trouble Gets $7 Million Gift

Artists Repertory Theatre had plans to sell half of its building, including one of its theatres, to a development group that was going to turn the pricey Portland real estate into a 20-story housing and retail building. That may still happen, but the $7 million – one of the largest arts gifts in Oregon’s history – allows the theatre company to pay off its mortgage and be, the artistic director said, “in control of our own destiny.”

Angels In America Gets Its Own Thorough History

How did a few interviews about the play turn into a book? The authors: “We kept getting so much amazing stuff. Every single person we talked to would tell us the kind of story you tell about the defining artistic and intellectual moment of your life. No one was like, ‘Oh yeah, it was great. I don’t remember much about it.'” Then there was the Robert Altman movie idea.

Making Theatre From, And About, Disaster And Terrorism Drills

“The point is that practice makes perfect – in theatre as in emergency situations. We rehearse for both, and ‘lockdown’ drills preparing children for the threat of active shooters are on the rise in American schools. Breach [Theatre’s] new show, The Drill, questions the effectiveness of such procedures. It asks whether playing out attacks increases rather than diminishes their potency.”