Every week, HuffPost Teen editors round up 5 things they're excited about -- from new video games, to books, to viral videos, to entertainment news. C...
SUMMER SHORTS SERIES B ** out of ****
BULLET FOR ADOLF * out of ****
SUMMER SHORTS SERIES B ** out of ****
59 E 59
Theatrical shorts are a very forg...
FRAGMENTS *** out of ****
BARYSHNIKOV ARTS CENTRE
STANDING ON CEREMONY: THE GAY MARRIAGE PLAYS ** out of ****
MINETTA LANE THEATRE
Samuel Beckett se...
The battle for marriage equality is about to spill out of the political arena and into the dramatic one, thanks to a group of prominent playwrights an...
Crayton Robey's ambitious new documentary Making the Boys, about The Boys in the Band, chronicles the life, times and resonance of a cultural phenomenon.
Crayton Robey's documentary Making 'The Boys' chronicles changes in both gay culture and its acceptance by mainstream America, reminding us that 40 years ago, gays and lesbians had fewer civil rights than black people or women.
Making 'The Boys' blends several storylines, including the history of Mart Crowley's ground-breaking 1969 play The Boys in the Band, and the rise of the gay-rights movement in its wake.
I was intrigued by Symmetry Theatre's claim that fewer good roles are written for women, I found myself wondering if people might not be aware of the variety of plays that do indeed have meaty roles for female characters.
Two plays opened recently in Manhattan in which gay love affairs are observed with keen and perceptive eyes and ears -- Geoffrey Nauffts's Next Fall and Daniel Talbott's Slipping.