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Pete Simpson Is Everyone Everywhere All at Once
Spotlight Joey Sims 1/20/26 Spotlight Joey Sims 1/20/26

Pete Simpson Is Everyone Everywhere All at Once

At the Exponential Festival, the ubiquitous actor is doing more of what he loves: experimental theater, back-to-back plays, and throwing himself “over the cliff.”

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Inside a Role: Initiative’s Greg Cuellar on Seven Years, 9,000 Words, and That Five-Hour Play
Spotlight Kara Cutruzzula 1/12/26 Spotlight Kara Cutruzzula 1/12/26

Inside a Role: Initiative’s Greg Cuellar on Seven Years, 9,000 Words, and That Five-Hour Play

The actor reflects on endurance, boundaries, and the creative process—plus backstage snacks—required to take on a millennial epic.

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The Show Must Go On . . . at 5. Or 7. Or Midnight
Issue 4 - Feature Tim Teeman 1/5/26 Issue 4 - Feature Tim Teeman 1/5/26

The Show Must Go On . . . at 5. Or 7. Or Midnight

As Sam Pinkleton dreams of late-night Rocky Horror performances, Broadway and Off-Broadway are experimenting with new curtain times — from 11 a.m. matinees to pre-dinner starts. Are we entering a timely revolution?

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On Hiring: One Broadway Director’s View Beyond the Audition Room
Issue 4 - Essay Sammi Cannold 1/5/26 Issue 4 - Essay Sammi Cannold 1/5/26

On Hiring: One Broadway Director’s View Beyond the Audition Room

After making nearly 240 hiring decisions in a single year, Sammi Cannold reflects on how actors are actually cast — and what transparency might offer artists navigating the process.

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No Matter the Play, This Pole Takes Center Stage
Issue 4 - Profile Billy McEntee 1/5/26 Issue 4 - Profile Billy McEntee 1/5/26

No Matter the Play, This Pole Takes Center Stage

Obstacle or opportunity? Five directors explain how they worked with — and around — Theaterlab’s infamous white pillar.

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Ryan J. Haddad on Intimacy, Ensemble Work, and Letting Go of the Plan
Issue 4 - Interview Winter Miller 1/5/26 Issue 4 - Interview Winter Miller 1/5/26

Ryan J. Haddad on Intimacy, Ensemble Work, and Letting Go of the Plan

The actor and playwright talks Tartuffe, his autobiographical solo performances, being a musical theater kid, and what’s next.

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Turning “Picnic at Hanging Rock” into a Musical
Spotlight Shoshana Greenberg 12/22/25 Spotlight Shoshana Greenberg 12/22/25

Turning “Picnic at Hanging Rock” into a Musical

The playwright Hilary Bell discusses collaborating with composer Greta Gertler Gold, developing new work in New York, and honoring the classic Australian story rooted in female struggle and First Nations history.

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Meghan Finn on Taking the Tank to New Heights
Spotlight Jude Cramer 12/8/25 Spotlight Jude Cramer 12/8/25

Meghan Finn on Taking the Tank to New Heights

Eight years into her tenure as artistic director of the Tank, Finn reflects on the nonprofit’s revolutionary production model, sharing the reins with Johnny G. Lloyd, and mounting “Everything Is Here.”

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The Barrow Group’s 40-Year Experiment in Realism
Issue 3 - Feature Jude Cramer 12/1/25 Issue 3 - Feature Jude Cramer 12/1/25

The Barrow Group’s 40-Year Experiment in Realism

The theater company’s classes and productions have shaped artists across the city—and now Scott Organ’s new play Diversion demonstrates why its “non-acting acting” remains so resonant.

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Francis Jue Plays the Voice of Reason in a World That Won’t Listen
Issue 3 - Profile Durra Leung 12/1/25 Issue 3 - Profile Durra Leung 12/1/25

Francis Jue Plays the Voice of Reason in a World That Won’t Listen

Fresh off his Tony win for Yellow Face, the actor discusses why he finally said yes to Tartuffe, finding the comedy in moral frustration, and the lesson he keeps relearning: “I have a right to be there.”

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When Music Becomes Visible
Issue 3 - Essay Jay Alan Zimmerman 12/1/25 Issue 3 - Essay Jay Alan Zimmerman 12/1/25

When Music Becomes Visible

Jay Alan Zimmerman on composing for the eyes, adapting Sarah Ruhl’s poems, and building a new language for Deaf artists and audiences.

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Judy Kuhn on Acting through Song, Taking Risks, and Reviving “The Baker’s Wife”
Issue 3 - Interview Jen Gushue 12/1/25 Issue 3 - Interview Jen Gushue 12/1/25

Judy Kuhn on Acting through Song, Taking Risks, and Reviving “The Baker’s Wife”

From Rags to Pocahontas to Classic Stage Company, the actor reflects on her evolving career, collaborating with Stephen Schwartz, and why an old-fashioned musical comedy feels surprisingly right for this moment.

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Fiasco and the Saunders Collective Shake Up “The Comedy of Errors”
Spotlight Peter Marks 11/24/25 Spotlight Peter Marks 11/24/25

Fiasco and the Saunders Collective Shake Up “The Comedy of Errors”

Through the Without a Net initiative, the theater company and the real-life siblings invite audiences into their workshop of Shakespeare’s fastest farce.

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The Stage Manager Takes the Stage
Spotlight Joey Sims 11/10/25 Spotlight Joey Sims 11/10/25

The Stage Manager Takes the Stage

Ruth Sternberg spent 18 years as the backbone of the Public Theater. Now she's making her acting debut in the same building she helped run, in Ethan Lipton’s The Seat of Our Pants.

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Twenty Years, 65 Plays, and the Man Who Won’t Let Shaw Fade Away
Issue 2 - Feature John DeVore 11/3/25 Issue 2 - Feature John DeVore 11/3/25

Twenty Years, 65 Plays, and the Man Who Won’t Let Shaw Fade Away

For two decades, Gingold Theatrical Group’s David Staller has championed George Bernard Shaw—and he’s convinced the playwright still has something to say in 2025.

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The Art of Collaboration
Issue 2 - Essay Kate Douglas 11/3/25 Issue 2 - Essay Kate Douglas 11/3/25

The Art of Collaboration

What makes a successful writer-director partnership? Writer Kate Douglas explores this essential question through conversations with long-term creative pairs, as well as her own work with director Kate Whoriskey.

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Best Friends Forever?
Issue 2 - Profile Danielle Frimer 11/3/25 Issue 2 - Profile Danielle Frimer 11/3/25

Best Friends Forever?

Playwright Lia Romeo and director Katie Birenboim discuss their collaboration on The Lucky Ones, a play that tests the bonds of female friendship amid life, illness, and desire.

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Douglas Lyons on Boldness, Craft, and Writing the World He Wants to Live In
Issue 2 - Interview Tyrone L. Robinson 11/3/25 Issue 2 - Interview Tyrone L. Robinson 11/3/25

Douglas Lyons on Boldness, Craft, and Writing the World He Wants to Live In

As his new musical Beau launches its uptown run, the multi-hyphenate artist discusses daily habits, building community, and why artists need more than one creative fire burning.

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In “Jewish Plot,” Torrey Townsend Resists a Tidy Narrative
Spotlight Douglas Corzine 10/27/25 Spotlight Douglas Corzine 10/27/25

In “Jewish Plot,” Torrey Townsend Resists a Tidy Narrative

The playwright’s shape-shifting new work uses an invented Victorian melodrama to excavate his grandfather's anti-fascist legacy—and confront his own identity.

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Abby Wambaugh Knows How to Begin Again (and Again and Again)
Spotlight Alexandra Jhamb Burns 10/20/25 Spotlight Alexandra Jhamb Burns 10/20/25

Abby Wambaugh Knows How to Begin Again (and Again and Again)

In The First 3 Minutes of 17 Shows, the comedian experiments with styles, props—and even the audience—to explore what it means to start over after loss.

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