Author:
Patricia Furnish
This family’s disintegration looks disturbingly contemporary. Gender wars that date back more than a century continue.

Actor and playwright Mike Wiley, as Galloway, delivers a rousing one-man show on the life of the slave, spy, and

A pop icon upends small-town sensibilities and stirs up some latent sexual tension in 1958.

Outdoor theater remains the best way to experience the Robin Hood stories, and the amphitheater’s setting, full of the sounds

All things are possible when a public figure can articulate the dissatisfaction of a group and rally them to a

David Mamet wrote this play in 1992, and the topics appear even more vivid and relevant now.

UNCA students will stage a Black Mountain College-inspired theatrical production in April, then take it to the Edinburgh Fringe Festive

What makes this production stand out among the offerings in Asheville is the choice to tackle the absurdists. These playwrights

Jeeves, the competent valet, and his blundering employer Bertie are back for more British farce among the bumbling aristocracy.

Every time she has a date, she turns it into humor. Her way of dealing with love’s disappointments makes hope
