Early on in The Doctor, Robert Icke’s new drama at New York’s Park Avenue Armory, two surgeons get into a heated debate about a promotion. The first doctor, a white man, likes the optics of choosing a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Since Aeschylus’ trilogy “Oresteia” isn’t long enough, Robert Icke’s new update gives it a prequel. What is merely talked about in ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Two Robert Icke productions have endured illnesses and last-minute casting changes. Now they have finally settled into a repertory groove. By Juan A.
A new play by Robert Icke about a real-life police chase takes the form of an imagined trial. By Houman Barekat Reviewing from London One of the largest manhunts in British police history took place ...
A Park Avenue Armory and Almeida Theatre Production with Alex Lawther as Hamlet. ©Stephanie Berger. Instead we sit through a sensitive but finally underwhelming turn by young British TV star Alex ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Robert Icke wrote “The Doctor” because Tom Stoppard didn’t. As with the old grand master of British theater who just picked up his ...
When I look down the theatrical treats in store in February, one stands out: Andrew Scott as Hamlet at the Almeida, directed by Robert Icke. One of the brightest and most charismatic actors working ...
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