PTP/NYC, celebrating its 35th repertory season, returns to New York with short works by Steven Berkoff and Caryl Churchill. By Maya Phillips A new work by Caryl Churchill, the final installment in ...
On a recent trip to London, I attempted to arrange an interview with Caryl Churchill, who alongside Tom Stoppard is considered the greatest living English playwright. I didn’t expect to get an answer ...
PTP/NYC (Potomac Theatre Project), in association with Middlebury College, continues its 34th repertory season, Virtual(ly) PTP/NYC, with tonight's premiere of Caryl Churchill's Far Away at 7:30pm EDT ...
Adelind Horan, Ayana Workman, Japhet Balaban, and Sathya Sridharan in Glass. Kill. What If If Only. Imp. Joan Marcus Hard to resist dubbing Caryl Churchill England’s greatest living playwright. Yes, a ...
Like a tasty appetizer with a lingering flavor that overshadows the rest of the meal, Caryl Churchill’s “A Number” is a provocative, bite-sized play that seems oddly unfinished. This first-ever ...
Veteran British dramatist Caryl Churchill mixes domestic comedy with dystopian horror in her latest London premiere. By Stephen Dalton A strong contender for the title of Britain’s greatest living ...
In one scene in Caryl Churchill’s brilliant 1976 play, Light Shining in Buckinghamshire, two unnamed women engaged in wartime looting glimpse themselves in a broken mirror. It’s as though they are ...
The cancellation of a lifetime award for eminent British playwright Caryl Churchill because of her support for Palestinian rights is a disgraceful slander and act of censorship. The decision is the ...
You might want to think twice about seeing Drunk Enough to Say I Love You? at the Public Theatre. The You might want to think twice about seeing Drunk Enough to Say I Love You? at the Public Theatre.
The English-speaking theater world doesn’t have that many living saints, but Caryl Churchill is unquestionably one of them. Now 86, Churchill has been writing formally audacious plays since the late ...
With all the ongoing, ever-deepening dismay over the paucity of productions of plays by women, I've been thinking a lot about Caryl Churchill. The great (not a word I use easily) English master, still ...
Our critic picked 10 moments that tapped into a range of emotions, often all at once. By Jesse Green “Glass. Kill. What If If Only. Imp,” a new collection of one-acts by the great British playwright, ...
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