
Reviews
Director Elizabeth Lucas has tried to turn Adam Guettel's 1998 song cycle into a musical by adding a narrative, but ... More »
You'll get more laughs by watching clips from classic TV sitcoms on YouTube than you will from 90 minutes of misery ... More »
Stephanie Vlahos directs Jon Marans' two-hander about a pianist and his professor, a 1996 Pulitzer Prize nominee, wi... More »

Movie / TV Reviews
Return
"Return" undoubtedly has a lot going for it, not least its unusual subject and treatment. Marking writer-director Liza Johnson's feature debut, the film recounts the troubling experiences of a returning female war vet. More »

Declaration of War
What really gives this film—the official French entry for Oscar's foreign-language competition—its power is that both stars, Jeremie Elkaim and Valerie Donzelli (who also directed), lived a version of it. More »

NY Theatre Reviews
Chekhovek
This dramatization of nine short stories by Anton Chekhov has fluid staging, aptly defined performances, handsome period costumes, and evocative music, but soul is in short supply. More »

Holy Child
Joe Lauinger's perfectly fine realistic one-act play is undercut by tacking on a slapdash absurdist second act, which seems as if it was written by a different playwright. More »

Inadmissible
A spoof of the shady side of college admissions, D.B. Gilles' new play offers moments of fun that unfortunately often stretch into periods of tedium. More »

LA Theatre Reviews
Yours, Isabel
Based on real-life letters written by a pair of young lovers during World War II, Christy Hall's two-hander is best described as unremarkable, unable to make its epistolary form sufficiently dramatic. More »

Madame Butterfly
Director Aramazd Stepanian's production of David Belasco's 1900 Broadway melodrama is stylistically precise but moves at a glacial pace and offers a mixed bag of performances. More »

Sidetracked
Billed as a "dramedy" but more closely resembling a zany film-noir spoof, Sharon Michaels' new play never commits to a cohesive style, and Ray A. Rochelle's flaccid direction doesn't help. More »

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Industry Grosses

| Rank | Title | Gross |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | WICKED | $1,534,111 |
| 2. | THE LION KING | $1,445,999 |
| 3. | SPIDER-MAN TURN OFF THE DARK | $1,433,241 |
| 4. | THE BOOK OF MORMON | $1,425,488 |
| 5. | HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING | $1,319,824 |
| 6. | WAR HORSE | $960,191 |
| 7. | JERSEY BOYS | $915,982 |
| 8. | PORGY AND BESS | $878,884 |
| 9. | FOLLIES | $878,880 |
| 10. | THE MOUNTAINTOP | $693,128 |
Week ending Feb 06, 2012.
Credit: The Broadway League
| Rank | Title | Gross |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | CHRONICLE | $22,004,098 |
| 2. | WOMAN IN BLACK, THE | $20,874,072 |
| 3. | GREY, THE | $9,300,999 |
| 4. | BIG MIRACLE | $7,760,205 |
| 5. | UNDERWORLD AWAKENING | $5,500,744 |
| 6. | ONE FOR THE MONEY | $5,206,279 |
| 7. | RED TAILS | $4,735,595 |
| 8. | DESCENDANTS, THE | $4,552,943 |
| 9. | MAN ON A LEDGE | $4,351,036 |
| 10. | EXTREMELY LOUD & INCREDIBLY CLOSE | $3,802,367 |
Week ending Feb 06, 2012.























