Hub Presents The Boston Premiere of SLOW FOOD
by Stephi Wild
- May 26, 2022
Hub Theatre Company of Boston will return to in-person performances this summer with the Boston premiere of Wendy MacLeod's Slow Food, directed by Daniel Bourque, Saturday, July 16 through Saturday, July 30 at Club Café, 209 Columbus Ave. in Boston's Back Bay.
The Studio Players Announce 2021-2022 Season
by Stephi Wild
- Aug 1, 2021
The Studio Players performs at the Golden Gate Community Center's Joan Jenks Auditorium, 4701 Golden Gate Parkway Naples, Florida 34116. Learn more about the lineup here!
Pittsburgh Public Theater Announces 2021-2022 Season
by Chloe Rabinowitz
- Jun 24, 2021
Pittsburgh Public Theater has announced the organization’s 47th season — ALL ABOARD! — kicking off this October online and in person. The Public recently completed the Classics N’at online benefit reading series, the second iteration of the organization’s Public PlayTime series.
BWW Interview: SLOW FOOD Playwright Wendy MacLeod Writing From Real-Life
by Gil Kaan
- Apr 19, 2021
International City Theatre’s next virtual production Wendy MacLeod’s SLOW FOOD will begin streaming April 29, 2021. Wendy has taken a bad experience at a restaurant that she personally underwent, and turned it into comedy gold. This prolific writer of stage, screen and television took some time from her many scripts to answer a few of my queries.
BWW Interview: Stu James of SLOW FOOD at International City Theatre
by Shari Barrett
- Apr 19, 2021
Stu James answers questions about his virtual theatre appearance in SLOW FOOD, a tender, uproarious comedy by Wendy MacLeod and directed by Marya Mazor for International City Theatre. In this uproarious comedy, a vacationing couple heads to a Greek restaurant in Palm Springs for their anniversary dinner, only to be confronted with the worst service imaginable by a waiter who knows no limits to his meddling.
Merrimack Repertory Theatre Reopens with Two Shows on Film This Spring
by Chloe Rabinowitz
- Mar 11, 2021
MRT will return with two new productions – on film – this spring: Dael Orlandersmith’s Until the Flood, based on a series of interviews after Michael Brown was killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, MO, and Rebecca Gilman’s A Woman of the World, an evening with the adventurous woman who introduced Emily Dickinson to America.
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