Jimmy Durante, James Cagney, Loretta Young, Clark Gable, Joan Crawford and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. were just some of the stars who walked across a special bridge over L.
This is a scene that happens here day after day: The young executive comes home and turns on his answering machine.
Impossible Dreams are a piece of cake. It's the dream that comes true that tests your character.
President Reagan on Wednesday signed a bill giving more power to military theater commanders and
Abram Hill, a prominent figure in the development and growth of black theater who helped performers
Top honors for this year's outstanding achievements in theater arts were given to eight groups
The sensibilities are a bit dated, but Enid Bagnold's "The Chalk Garden" overcomes some tentative acting at the Mission Playhouse to spin its web of psychological mystery.
Latino theater was much in the limelight this summer.
Displacing 17th-Century French comedy to the languid South of a century past seems to be in fashion this year.
Last week's financial report on the 1985-86 Broadway season wasn't too encouraging.
More than 1,200 Brea students were shown some of the art opportunities that their city offers during the three-day "Arty Party" held last week at the Brea Civic Cultural Center.
At first glance, Robert Wilson would not appear to be the one of the leading avant-garde figures on the American cultural scene.
"I was interviewed by a panel recently," Scott Kelman began, "and they wanted to know what their assurance was that I wouldn't become commercial.
Festival Enterprises, a 91-screen circuit headquartered in Walnut Creek, was sold by San Francisco Bay Area businessmen Richard Jeha, William Kartozian and Stanley Sperling for undisclosed terms.
What's new at Disneyland?
The great choreographer George Balanchine believed that the correlation between dance designs and musical motifs should be so complete that audiences would see the music and hear the dancing.
make a bookie have heart seizure--this time in the risky realm of commercial dinner theater.
A Canadian-based multinational has given London's Sadler's Wells Theater a lease on life with a gift of $70,000, its director Stephen Remington said.
More than a dozen theater companies, including the National Theater of Great Britain and the Suzuki
While members of the City Council have reacted coolly to the Nederlander theater chain's sudden