Like an insect crawling on your skin, or pretty much anything in today’s backbiting America, Tracy Letts’ wild black comedy “Bug” has always been open to interpretation. Maybe this skin-crawler is a ...
NEW YORK — Like an insect crawling on your skin, or pretty much anything in today’s back-biting America, playwright Tracy Letts’ wild black comedy “Bug” has always been open to interpretation. Maybe ...
Thirty years after it initially debuted in London, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tracy Letts’ “Bug” is finally getting its Broadway bow. Directed by Obie Award winner David Cormer, the disturbing ...
NEW YORK – Whatever you do, don’t read this review. We’re kidding, of course. Even still, we’d like to help preserve some of the squirmy sensations of “Bug,” a jaw-dropping, skin-crawling thrill ride ...
One hour and 55 minutes, with one intermission. At the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, 261 W. 47th Street. Typically in a theater, crickets mean calmness. Here’s our cue to settle in for a meaningful ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Pick Tracy Letts’s eerily topical, decades-old play about a woman’s descent into a world of conspiracy theories makes its nerve-rattling ...
Carrie Coon is unleashed from her corsets—and every other stitch of clothing—in the blistering Broadway revival of her husband Tracy Letts’s macabre thriller “Bug,” being presented by Manhattan ...
The Manhattan Theatre Club revival of Tracy Letts’s funny, ultimately heartbreaking psychological thriller “Bug” opens with Carrie Coon—who plays Agnes White, a lonely waitress holed up in an Oklahoma ...
Things were different—for the world and for Carrie Coon—in 2012, when she made her Broadway debut in a Tony-winning revival of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. The actor was only four years out of ...
The play opens on Thursday, Jan. 8 at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre in New York City Dave Quinn is the Deputy News Director at PEOPLE. He has been working at the brand since 2016, and is the author ...
NEW YORK — The distinction between truth and delusion has taken some tough blows in the digital age — from lying politicians, the internet, politicians lying on the internet — and that was before AI.
Manhattan Theatre Club is presenting the first Broadway production of Tracy Letts' acclaimed play Bug. The Broadway premiere of sci-fi thriller is directed by Tony Award winner David Cromer. Read ...