COLUMBUS, Ohio — Fresh off its New York debut last year, "Summer, 1976" is a brand-new play by Pulitzer prize-winning playwright and one-time Columbus resident David Auburn. Now, the play has found ...
Over one fateful summer, an unlikely friendship develops between Diana, a fiercely iconoclastic artist and single mom, and Alice, a free-spirited yet naive young housewife. As the Bicentennial is ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Pick Two mothers make a life-altering connection during a play date in this production for the Manhattan Theater Club. By Laura ...
Broadway can be a loud place, with belters belting and orchestras swelling and actors playing to rafters in the theater across the street, so it’s both comforting and mesmerizing to see a play as ...
Over one fateful summer, an unlikely friendship develops between Diana, a fiercely iconoclastic artist and single mom, and Alice, a free-spirited yet naive young housewife. As the Bicentennial is ...
On its surface, David Auburn’s “Summer, 1976” airs the flimsiest of subjects: Two very different women of approximately the same age strike up a close friendship that endures for only a few months.
"Summer, 1976," a play about a brief but deep friendship between two women brought together by their young children, stars Laura Linney and Jessica Hecht. Hecht's performance recently garnered her the ...
“She muttered something about Paul Klee as we talked about my work… I was surprised that she knew him.” – Diana, Summer, 1976 by David Auburn Every now and then, someone you just met will drop a ...
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