Visit our social channels!
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Items Tagged Location: Manhattan

Have you ever dreamed of escaping to France and dining on divine French cuisine all while sipping a glass of fine wine on the Champs-Elysées? We have too. Unfortunately, this post won’t take you there, but we’ll get you close enough! Balthazar, which …Read more


A portrait of the artist as a grieving mother comes to The Pershing Square Signature Center in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. The show, written by Ensemble for the Romantic Century (ERC) Artistic Director Eve Wolf and directed by Donald T. Sanders, is …Read more


“Almost no one loves Liza as much as I do.” Such is the bold and ballsy statement made by longtime superfan Rick Skye. He’s probably right, though. Considering the “Liza” in question is none other than Ms. Minnelli herself, whom he’s been lovingly im …Read more


Join cabaret sensations Kim David Smith and Molly Pope as they ring in 2018 with No Thrill from Champagne at Pangea. The dazzling duo will pay tribute to Noel Coward, Cole Porter and Marlene Dietrich during a night full of glamour, laughs, and two of …Read more


The SITI Company’s production of Yukio Mishima’s Hanjo completely concerns itself with the nuances and understanding of time and, critically, with the experience of time in the theater. Translated and directed by Leon Ingulsrud, the work makes time r …Read more


The wonder years of teendom are possibly the most potent of our lives, as we feel deeper, think different, see ourselves and others in new lights. Bert V. Royal’s Dog Sees God, the Peanuts play, is a wonderful coming of age high school drama with a n …Read more


The King is having a bad day; he can’t catch a goldfish in a glass bowl.  King Philippe V of Spain has a “brain inflammation” and appears to be going mad.  In Farinelli and The King, the new drama at the Belasco Theatre, the superb Mark Rylance portr …Read more


What could be more festive than a Christmas feast among the dead? In “The Dead,” the concluding tale in James Joyce’s 1914 short story collection, Dubliners, the seminal modernist paints the attendees of the Morkan sisters’ annual Feast of the Epipha …Read more


It takes effort to make a marriage work — sometimes even self-help tapes, movies and therapy sessions.  Corky (Amy Schumer) and Norm (Jeremy Shamos) have been at it for years. Yet they are ill-equipped to handle the challenges of their visitors, Lau …Read more


Lucy Kirkwood’s award-winning play The Children, a disturbing tale about nuclear power that mirrors real events, is troubling from the onset. The frame around the stage is tilted and Rose, the lone character standing mid-stage, has blood streaming fr …Read more


Scroll for more

Or instantly Log In with Facebook

f

Your browser is blocking some features of this website. Please follow the instructions at http://support.heateor.com/browser-blocking-social-features/ to unblock these.