‘Middletown’ is an affecting evening of theater.
Review
Book review: Psychological abuse in childhood leads a young woman down some dark paths
Gina Troisi’s painful, wrenching memoir, ‘The Angle of Flickering Light,’ ultimately veers toward the light.
Art review: Listen as you look at the works on display in ‘REverb’
The show at Zero Station in Portland is a reminder of how our senses are connected.
Art review: Listen as you look at the works on display in ‘REverb’
The show at Zero Station in Portland is a reminder of how our senses are connected.
A long and winding road through the hopes and failures of mid-century America
In ‘The Lincoln Highway,’ Amor Towles tells the story of a motley crew on a cross-country journey, reveling in the junkyards of broken dreams and the optimism of the postwar era.
Theater review: ‘Young Frankenstein’ ends Ogunquit season with a spirited treat
The show runs through Halloween.
Theater review: In ‘You Got Older,’ a woman’s return home is full of wackiness and warmth
Pay what you decide to see the play at Mad Horse Theatre through Oct. 31.
Art review: Natural and human worlds collide in ‘Witchgrass’
The show at Speedwell Projects in Portland features multimedia works by four artists.
In the pandemic stories of everyday Americans, fear and grief feel fresh again
A heart-wrenching collection by Eli Saslow arrives as numbness to the crisis sets in.
‘No Time to Die’ is a satisfying send-off to Daniel Craig, in his final outing as James Bond
“No Time to Die” is a bit too long and a bit too complicated, with a villain in the form of Rami Malek’s Lyutsifer Safin, whose motivation in seeking a genetically programmable bioweapon that microtargets its victims by DNA is murky, to say the least. It does come in handy, however, as a plot device, […]