Albee, Seldes To Read COUNTING THE WAYS 3/19 At Lotus Club
by BWW News Desk
- Mar 19, 2009
LongHouse Reserve's Spring Benefit will be held on Thursday, March 19, 2009 at the Lotos Club (New York City) 5 East Sixty-sixth Street from 6:30 pm - Reception and Dinner 8:00 pm - Reading and Dessert.
During this time Edward Albee and Marian Seldes will present a reading of Mr. Albee's play Counting the Ways.
LongHouse's Spring Benefit To Take Place 3/19 At Lotos Club
by BWW News Desk
- Mar 19, 2009
LongHouse Reserve's Spring Benefit will take place Thursday, March 19, 2009 at Lotos Club (New York City) 5 East Sixty-sixth Street
Time: 6:30 pm - Reception and Dinner 8:00 pm - Reading and Dessert
Edward Albee and Marian Seldes will present a reading of
Mr. Albee's play Counting the Ways.
Tickets: $250, $500, and $1,000 - Reception, Dinner and Reading; $150- Reading and Dessert only Tickets can be purchased by calling
Albee, Seldes To Read COUNTING THE WAYS 3/19 At Lotus Club
by Gabrielle Sierra
- Mar 11, 2009
LongHouse Reserve's Spring Benefit will be held on Thursday, March 19, 2009 at the Lotos Club (New York City) 5 East Sixty-sixth Street from 6:30 pm - Reception and Dinner 8:00 pm - Reading and Dessert.
During this time Edward Albee and Marian Seldes will present a reading of Mr. Albee's play Counting the Ways.
LongHouse's Spring Benefit To Take Place 3/19 At Lotos Club
by Gabrielle Sierra
- Feb 10, 2009
LongHouse Reserve's Spring Benefit will take place Thursday, March 19, 2009 at Lotos Club (New York City) 5 East Sixty-sixth Street
Time: 6:30 pm - Reception and Dinner 8:00 pm - Reading and Dessert
Edward Albee and Marian Seldes will present a reading of
Mr. Albee's play Counting the Ways.
Tickets: $250, $500, and $1,000 - Reception, Dinner and Reading; $150- Reading and Dessert only Tickets can be purchased by calling
Tammy Grimes & Marian Seldes Join Author David Sheward to Discuss George C. Scott Feb. 3
by Robert Diamond
- Jan 31, 2009
George C. Scott created some of the 20th century's most memorable performances on stage and screen-the cunning prosecutor in Anatomy of a Murder, the manipulative gambler in The Hustler, the buffoonishly warmongering chief of staff in Dr. Strangelove, and, of course, the brilliant and rebellious Patton. He also played Willy Loman, Richard III, Mussolini, Scrooge, Fagin, and countless others. But his offstage life was as filled with drama and controversy as any of the lives he portrayed with such intensity. He refused the Oscar for Patton, battled with TV networks to include realistic elements in his series 'East Side/West Side,' invested (and lost) his own money on Broadway and in the scandalous film The Savage Is Loose, married five times (twice to Colleen Dewhurst) and had a tempestuous affair with Ava Gardner, traveled to Vietnam at the height of the war to write an article for Esquire, and weathered a damaging sexual harassment suit.
Paper Mill Playhouse Announces 'Little Shop' Casting
by BWW News Desk
- May 8, 2008
Paper Mill Playhouse (Mark S. Hoebee-Artistic Director, Mark W. Jones-Executive Director) announces its mainstage production of Little Shop of Horrors, a musical written by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman. It's a musical comedy to die for - literally! The musical is based on Roger Corman's 1960 sci-fi comedy and includes several show-stopping numbers including 'Skid Row (Downtown),' 'Somewhere That's Green,' and 'Suddenly Seymour,' as well as the title song. Little Shop of Horrors will run at the Millburn theatre from June 4 through July 6, 2008.
Photo Coverage: CTFD Between Show Get Together
by Linda Lenzi
- Mar 27, 2008
Career Transition For Dancers and the Shubert Organization gathered at the Eugenia Room at Sardi's (234 W. 44th St.) on March 26th for an a Between-Show-Get-Together event that featured Broadway dancers.
New Musical 'Mark Twain's Blues' Opens 2/21 at Altered Stages
by BWW News Desk
- Jan 23, 2008
Cinna Productions is pleased to announce the World Premiere of Mark Twain's Blues, a new play with songs by Walt Stepp about a lecture by the famed author that's interrupted by the arrival of two of his most famous characters who accuse Twain of betrayal. Directed by Tom Herman with Music Direction by David Wolfson and Choreography by James Beaudry, the production runs from February 15 through March 8 with an opening scheduled for February 21 at Altered Stages.
'Acts of Love' by Chetkovich Opens Tonight at Theatre Row
by BWW News Desk
- Nov 6, 2007
Dangerous Arrangement, Inc. presents Acts of Love by Kathryn Chetkovich, Off Broadway at The Kirk Theatre. Previews began on Thursday, November 1 and the opening is tonight Tuesday, November 6 at 8PM for the limited Off Broadway engagement.
Geller Directs 'Acts of Love' in Off-Bway Engagement
by BWW News Desk
- Oct 7, 2007
Dangerous Arrangement, Inc. presents Acts of Love by Kathryn Chetkovich, Off Broadway at The Kirk Theatre at Theatre Row (410 West 42nd Street). Previews begin on Thursday, November 1 and the opening is Tuesday, November 6.
Photo Coverage: Career Transition for Dancers at Sardi's
by Linda Lenzi
- Mar 30, 2007
Career Transition For Dancers and the Shubert Organization gathered at the Eugenia Room at Sardi's on March 28th for an a Between-Show-Get-Together event that featured approximately 85 Fellow Broadway Dancers.
The Frankenstein Summer gets World Premiere At The Phil Bosakowski Theatre
by BWW News Desk
- Feb 7, 2005
The Frankenstein Summer' concerns five lovers exploring the heights of passion and the depths of evil. It is the meeting of literary giants George Gordon Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley in the summer of 1816 at Byron's magnificent Swiss villa.
The Frankenstein Summer Opens Off-Bway February 13
by BWW News Desk
- Jan 24, 2005
Red Light District presents the world premiere of 'The Frankenstein Summer' by Catherine Bush directed by Marc Geller Off Broadway at The Phil Bosakowski Theatre, 354 West 45th Street (between 8th and 9th Avenues).
Our boy Bill
by Adrienne Onofri
- Apr 23, 2004
William Shakespeare was born 440 years ago this week. 'He was not of an age, but for all time,' said Ben Jonson. So let's celebrate the man to whom all theater lovers owe a debt.
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