Threading the needle between Cronenbergian body horror and Miyazaki-esque fantasy, Thomas Cailley's film questions what society might do without the otherness that holds it in place. People are ...
Clockwise from left: Tasha Lawrence, Uly Schlesinger, David Cromer, Calvin Leon Smith and Lily McInerny in The Animal Kingdom Emilio Madrid Theater critics and therapists have things in common. Both ...
The U.S. premiere of The Animal Kingdom, a new play by British playwright Ruby Thomas, produced and directed by Jack Serio, just opened at the Connelly Theater Upstairs (220 E 4th St, Manhattan), ...
People are acting like animals these days. If that thought has ever occurred to you, you might be in the target audience for “The Animal Kingdom,” a French sci-fi parable about a world in which people ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Conflicting ideas of guilt, identity and genetics do battle in this quietly galvanizing play by Ruby Thomas. By Rhoda Feng An unexamined life may not ...
People are animals. Literally. Biologically. Much as our species has always tried to separate ourselves from the rest of God’s creations and reign above the “lesser creatures” who lack the curse of ...