Not So Long Ago
Not So Long Ago - 1920 Broadway History , Info & More
by Stephi Wild - May 28, 2026
Headlong announced the cast and creatives for ROBOTA, written by Ella Road and directed by Roy Alexander Weise, set to be the first full-scale production at Oxford's new Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities.
by R. Scott Reedy - Mar 22, 2026
What did our critic think of SUFFS at Emerson Colonial Theatre?
by Shari Barrett - Oct 7, 2025
Director MacQueen keeps the action moving along at a steady pace, a much-needed component of a 2.5 hour play offering so much information to absorb about the history of women's suffrage. Highly recommended.
by Jennifer Ashley Tepper - Sep 28, 2025
Multiple lost Broadway theaters intersect with the Hammerstein family. This follows since Oscar Hammerstein I was a theater owner and builder. In addition to Hammerstein’s which was named after him and is now the Ed Sullivan, and the New Victory which he originally built, there is also the Hammerstein Ballroom. Read more here!
by Chloe Rabinowitz - Jun 28, 2025
Birdland Jazz Club and Birdland Theater are open this July with a full slate of nightly performances! See the full lineup here and learn how to purchase tickets!
by Drew Eberhard - May 12, 2025
The Butterfly’s Evil Spell was the first play written by twentieth-century playwright and poet Federico Garcia Lorca. Drawing much of its inspiration from the works of Yeats and Maeterlinck, the plot of Lorca’s play deals with the journey of an injured butterfly who is temporarily stranded amongst other insects, but does indeed fly away despite the love of a cockroach.
by Mary Lincer - Mar 7, 2025
Edith Wharton's novel The Age of Innocence was published about a week before she was able to vote for the first time in 1920. The following year, she became the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize. Now, playwright Karen Zacarías has adapted Wharton's complex tragedy of manners into Arena's elegant, 3 hour production ably directed by Hana S. Sharif. Set mostly in New York in the 1870s, Wharton, Zacarías, and Sharif recognize the ways in which the old fashioned social constructs of a still-young country could entrap individuals and crush their inner lives in contrast to the apparent success and prosperity of their day to day. Wharton's title, ironic a century ago, remains that way today. If this sounds dour, be reassured that it's often lightened by SNL-worthy Staten Island barbs and hoot-inducing stabs at Washington, DC, where a character briefly resides to avoid a husband in Europe and a clan in New York.
by Sharon Ellman - Feb 28, 2025
Songstress Onalea, known for her masterful performance in SLEEP NO MORE, took the audience on a sultry musical journey at her 54 Below show on 2/26. What a voice, what a performer, what a night!
by Shari Barrett - Oct 3, 2024
On October 19, Theatre 40 in Beverly Hills is presenting a reading of All These Women, written and directed by Melanie MacQueen. Centering on the newly elected president Woodrow Wilson, the story delves into how the Women’s Suffrage Parade pushed him to finally agree to Voting Rights for All. I decided to speak with Melanie about how the play came into being, her plans to present it as a reading, and how she plans to keep presenting it in the future.
by Blair Ingenthron - Jul 27, 2024
Birdland Jazz Club and Birdland Theater will operate this August with a full slate of nightly performances.
by Donna Marie Nowak - Jun 24, 2024
Radio show whodunnit blends murder mystery parlor game and old-time radio for old-fashioned family fun.
by Sidney Paterra - Jun 6, 2024
Looking for all the info on one of the hottest tours? Here's everything that you need to know about Suffs from how long the musical is to its history.
by Nicole Rosky - May 22, 2024
We continue with the creatives from the six-time Tony-nominated Suffs- Scenic Designer Riccardo Hernández, Lighting Designer Lap Chi Chu, Sound Designer Jason Crystal, and Costume Designer Paul Tazewell.
by Chloe Rabinowitz - May 15, 2024
Experience captivating works by renowned composers at the 2024 American Music Festival: Water Music NY More Voices, celebrating 30 years of Dogs of Desire. Learn how to purchase tickets.
by Chloe Rabinowitz - Apr 4, 2024
Boston Symphony Orchestra has revealed its 2024-25 season.
by A.A. Cristi - Nov 13, 2023
The new Barry Manilow and Bruce Sussman musical Harmony opens on Broadway tonight. Read the reviews!
by Marina Kennedy - Sep 3, 2023
Are you bound for the Philadelphia area this fall. There’s so much to see and do that our readers will like to know about.
by Jennifer Ashley Tepper - Aug 6, 2023
This time, the reader question was: Which Broadway Theatres Have Undergone the Most Dramatic Transformations?
by Stephi Wild - Jul 6, 2023
MUSE/IQUE continues its yearlong concert series, MUSIC = POWER with CENTRAL AVENUE: OPEN HOUSE -- The Extraordinary Story of the South LA Music Legends Who Changed the World.
by Chris Struck - Jun 29, 2023
A rotating cast of Broadway talent shares some of the classics that have made the artform infamous for pulling at the heartstrings
by A.A. Cristi - Mar 8, 2023
New York City Mayor Eric Adams has displayed artist Elena del Rivero's participatory public artwork, “Home Address,” in the New York City Hall Rotunda in honor of International Women's Day. After today, components of the work will remain on view in the Governors Room through the end of March.
by Steve Callahan - Mar 7, 2023
A stellar cast brightens a Romberg favorite. Operetta, as a genre, arose in the 1850's and swelled into a widely beloved form of entertainment. In America its chief luminaries were Sigmund Romberg, Victor Herbert, and Rudolf Friml. From the 1920's to the '40's the modern musical gradually drove operettas from the stage (except for the happily undying works of Gilbert & Sullivan). And I miss them! So I greatly approve of Winter Opera's offering us this old piece.
by Colin Fleming-Stumpf - Jan 25, 2023
What did our critic think of AIN'T MISBEHAVIN' at Geva Theatre? It's curious that 'Ain't Misbehavin'' feels like such a perfect show for a Rochester audience, given that Fats Waller has no apparent Rochester connection; he was born in New York City, died in Kansas City, and spent the bulk of his short life entertaining audiences across the U.S and abroad.
by Jennifer Ashley Tepper - Dec 26, 2022
In the latest edition of Jennifer Ashley Tepper's Broadway Deep Dive, we find out which shows have had the most Broadway debuts. Find out what made the list!
by Lauren Gienow - Oct 11, 2022
After a fully cancelled 2020 season and an out-door-under-a-tent 2021 season, the main stages at the Stratford Festival have finally seen some action this year. Over at the Festival Theatre, the Donna Feore choreographed and directed production of CHICAGO is a huge hit! Two major reasons for this are the phenomenal performances by the two leads. BWW had the opportunity to chat with Roxie and Velma themselves - Chelsea Preston and Jennifer Rider-Shaw, to find out what it has been like to finally do the show they had been waiting two years to mount.
Not So Long Ago History
Other Productions of Not So Long Ago
| 1920 | Broadway |
Broadway |
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