NEW YORK ‒ One woman, two hours and 26 wildly eccentric characters. If your head is already spinning, then buckle up. In director Kip Williams’ audacious, gender-bent adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s 1890 ...
Two hours with no intermission. At the Music Box Theatre, 239 W. 45th Street. What could be more vain than a 15-foot-tall image of an actor’s face onstage glaring at you? How about a high-definition ...
This is the rare revival that is worse for those familiar with the source material, who are bound to be disappointed. Williams seems to have fundamentally misunderstood the novel, or at the very least ...
In a stage adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray,” Snook plays all the characters — with the help of screens. By Houman Barekat The critic Houman Barekat saw the show in London. A ...
For almost fifteen minutes, we sit looking at a vertical screen on a seemingly empty stage. In the projection, the Australian actress Sarah Snook, in tight closeup, speaks the rapid, bantering prose ...
Camera Operators: clew, Luka Kain, Natalie Rich, Benjamin Sheen, Dara Woo Running time: 2 hrs (no intermission) Deadline’s takeaway: If only Oscar Wilde were alive to offer up a pithy description of ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The “Succession” actress plays all 26 roles in this Oscar Wilde classic reimagined as a video spectacle. If only there were less screen time and more ...
The personal life and writings of Oscar Wilde have been so inextricably linked that the new play DORIAN has woven Wilde's journey into that of one of his best known characters, Dorian Gray. In an ...