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MOST RECENT ARTICLES BY:
Helen Shaw
Theater Critic
See all their articles from across New York Magazine
Follow
@helen_e_shaw
on Twitter
Helen Shaw has written about theater in New York since 2005, and for
New York
since 2019.
Read More
theater review
Feb. 18, 2022
Dirtbag Dramaturgy in
Dimes Square
So are folks really doing this much coke? (Allegedly!)
theater review
Feb. 17, 2022
Paul Lazar’s
Cage Shuffle Marathon
Is a Chance Chance Revelation
The anecdotalist avant-gardist.
theater review
Feb. 15, 2022
A Frustrating
Merchant of Venice
With a Shylock to Remember
The quality of John Douglas Thompson is not strained.
theater review
Feb. 11, 2022
The Music Man
Finally Marches In, Looking Backward
It’s $699 per premium seat, which comes out to $9.19 per trombone.
theater review
Feb. 7, 2022
Tambo & Bones
Shows the Skull Beneath the Skin
Dave Harris’s comedy makes it progressively harder to laugh.
theater review
Feb. 1, 2022
MJ
Exists in a Hyperbaric Chamber of Denial
The King of Pop’s posthumous handlers, like the man himself, keep their distance from reality.
theater review
Jan. 31, 2022
Intimate Apparel
and
Shhhh
Peek Into the Unmentionables
Lynn Nottage’s 2003 play becomes an opera; Clare Barron’s new one operates in murmurs and ASMR.
theater review
Jan. 26, 2022
Skeleton Crew
, Transferred Uptown, Loses Some Muscle
Phylicia Rashad and company try to make a small show fill up a big stage.
theater review
Jan. 25, 2022
A Speed Date With
Long Day’s Journey Into Night
Cut from three and a half hours to two, and TB traded for COVID.
theater review
Jan. 23, 2022
Taylor Mac’s
The Hang
Is Incomprehensible in the Best Way
Baroque and soulful and sonically delicious.
theater review
Jan. 20, 2022
Whisper House
Is an Atmospheric Musical Without an Atmosphere
Chill-less and thrill-less, despite a killer creative team.
theater review
Jan. 19, 2022
The Little Shows Must Go On:
This Beautiful Future
and
Ectoplasm
Small, imperfect, lovely — tales of love in last century’s wreckage.
theater review
Jan. 11, 2022
The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe
No Longer Finds It
Tomlin and Wagner’s innovations have been replicated to exhaustion, and the material defeats Cecily Strong.
theater preview
Jan. 10, 2022
January’s Theater Festivals Are Mostly Postponed — But Here’s What You
Can
See
Some productions are streaming, others are open-air, and a couple are hoping to get onstage later in the month.
extremely deep dive
Dec. 28, 2021
How
West Side Story
Reset Itself
Vulture’s theater desk considers Tony Kushner’s song reordering as a deep reenvisioning that changes the musical’s core qualities.
advent calendar
Dec. 21, 2021
Baby, It’s Cold Outside: Warm Up With James McAvoy’s Cyrano de Bergerac
For fans of poetry, X-Men, or swooning.
best of 2021
Dec. 17, 2021
The Best Theater of 2021
Against all odds, there was astonishing work everywhere you looked this year.
theater review
Dec. 13, 2021
When Lincoln Center Comes Down From This Trip, They’re Going to Feel Weird
Flying Over Sunset
is a bad one.
theater review
Dec. 9, 2021
In Comes
Company,
and Whaddaya Get?
An awkward reinvention with some of the brilliance intact.
theater review
Dec. 8, 2021
Kimberly Akimbo
Never Gets Old
A musical adaptation that wins you over for life.
theater review
Dec. 6, 2021
Selling Kabul
is a Claustrophobic, Effective Thriller
“America, their word is good, okay?”
theater review
Dec. 5, 2021
Mrs. Doubtfire
Skirts the Problem
A musical full of cross-dressing tries to meet the moment without sacrificing blockbuster appeal.
theater review
Dec. 1, 2021
The Wildly Different Altered States of
The Mood Room
and
Candlelight
If
The Mood Room
is some extremely mellow weed, then
Candlelight
is a tab of acid, given to you
right
before a job interview.
theater review
Nov. 23, 2021
Clyde’s
and
In the Southern Breeze
: Two Journeys Into Limbo
One achieves what the other only describes — namely, the process of reawakening from paralysis.
theater review
Nov. 22, 2021
Goofing Around With
The Alchemist
The play brings one of the last ingredients for a true return to theater: pure nonsense.
theater review
Nov. 18, 2021
Trouble In Mind
Deserved Better All Along
It takes the American theater to task.
theater review
Nov. 17, 2021
Diana: The Musical
Is Almost as Bad as Her Marriage
A misbegotten match from the start.
comedy review
Nov. 16, 2021
Michael Che Is Better Than This
For much of
Shame the Devil
,
he’s offering apologies and taking them back, giving explanations then rolling his eyes.
theater review
Nov. 15, 2021
Theater Review:
Assassins
Takes Aim at the Here and Now
The Sondheim-Weidman musical is about desperate, damaged people turning their aggression on America itself. Remind you of anything?
theater review
Nov. 11, 2021
Lagos Soaps and Superstitious Hopes:
Nollywood Dreams
and “The Pool Plays”
Light and funny and weird on these dark days.
theater review
Nov. 10, 2021
The Sharp-Edged Sword of
while you were partying
How dark can dark humor get?
theater review
Nov. 7, 2021
Ibsen’s
Peer Gynt
Becomes Eno’s
Gnit,
and Turns Gnomic, Gnostic and Gnostalgic
Will Eno keeps his distance from Ibsen, though.
theater review
Nov. 4, 2021
The Risks and Rewards of Theater About Right Now
The Visitor
rips itself apart, and
Kristina Wong, Sweatshop Overlord
will sew you back together.
theater review
Nov. 3, 2021
Three Generations’ Inner Lives Come Out in
Morning Sun
And you really ought to see Edie Falco, Blair Brown, and Marin Ireland as they do.
theater review
Nov. 1, 2021
Back at the Scene of the Crimes: Revisiting
Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992
Anna Deavere Smith’s Rodney King testimonies return, restaged for this moment.
theater review
Oct. 27, 2021
The Time Is Now, Finally, for
Caroline, or Change
Tony Kushner and Jeanine Tesori’s musical was ahead of its audience in 2003.
theater review
Oct. 26, 2021
The Mother
Just Wants What’s Best For You
Have some Brecht, with Wooster sauce.
theater review
Oct. 24, 2021
Fairycakes
Never Takes Flight
A play employing every theatrical sprite is pinned down by its leaden meter.
theater review
Oct. 17, 2021
Dana H.
Is Harrowing and Unmissable
A big Broadway house doesn’t diminish any of its power.
theater review
Oct. 14, 2021
The Lehman Trilogy (Almost) Delivers on Its Investment
Peerless stagecraft and a once-in-a-lifetime cast.
theater review
Oct. 13, 2021
Multidimensional Blackness in
Thoughts of a Colored Man
It’s “explicitly about making visible what’s usually kept private.”
theater review
Oct. 11, 2021
Is This a Room
Asks Questions America Can’t Answer
The play about Reality Winner moves uptown.
theater review
Oct. 10, 2021
Chicken & Biscuits
Serves Up Sustenance at a Church Funeral
With a side of syrup.
theater review
Oct. 8, 2021
The Many Voices of a One-Man Show:
Lackawanna Blues
Ruben Santiago-Hudson’s evocation of his steel-town youth.
theater review
Oct. 3, 2021
Pop Renaissance!
Six: The Musical
Fans Lose Their Heads Over Broadway Opening
Deferred, beleaguered, survived.
theater reviews
Oct. 1, 2021
Figuring Out Failure in the First Person:
The Nosebleed
and
Hindsight
In these two plays, things aren’t going great.
dance review
Sept. 29, 2021
Bill T. Jones’s
Deep Blue Sea
Includes Everything
and
the Kitchen Sink
A piece of art that’s awash in its own ideas.
tony awards 2021
Sept. 27, 2021
The Tonys That Had to Do Everything
After 2020, Broadway vowed to do better. Last night’s telecast revealed the divisions that remain.
tony awards 2021
Sept. 27, 2021
The Highs and Lows of the 2021 But Actually 2019–2020 Tony Awards
And I am telling you I don’t know how to use Paramount+.
theater review
Sept. 24, 2021
Bond and Costanzo, Emotions Laid Bare, in
Only an Octave Apart
If you clap hard enough — and you’d better — you’ll hear their encore, a mash-up of “Walk Like an Egyptian” and Philip Glass’s
Akhnaten.
More Articles