A Streetcar Named Desire review: Hot and bothered in New Orleans
Theatre: Cathal Cleary’s lucid production features a pleasingly young cast, including an impressively fluid Eavan Gaffney as Blanche DuBois
Theatre: Cathal Cleary’s lucid production features a pleasingly young cast, including an impressively fluid Eavan Gaffney as Blanche DuBois
Morgan Steele from Los Angeles, California, first moved to Ireland in 2017
Theatre: It is impossible not to try to guess what director Emma Jordan was aiming in terms of vocal style and script
Theatre: The harder this drama works to make Williams’ play accessible, the more ridiculous it seems
An inspired new production of The Rose Tattoo moves the setting of Tennessee Williams’s play from Italian America to an Irish halting site
America Letter: Outgoing Washington Correspondent Suzanne Lynch reflects on the US
‘I felt like his story hadn’t been told,’ Ebs Burnough says about his Truman Capote documentary
London Letter: David Cameron has been embarrassed by a book about his inner circle
It should not take something as terrible as this to awake us to life’s inherent fragility
Mia Gallagher’s speech to launch Alan McMonagle’s new novel at Hodges Figges
Debates over whether innovation could thrive under Bernie Sanders presidency are a distraction
Corn Exchange’s new and final play is a grim look at an alternative 1970s Ireland
Actor known for celebrated films like Spartacus and Paths of Glory died aged 103
Star was nominated for six Emmys for his role as Artie on The Larry Sanders Show
British writer Emma Forrest on her marriage break up and making her directorial debut with her film Untogether, which stars her ex husband
Artist was best known for work with opera singers and on Shakespeare plays
London Letter: ‘Powerful and obnoxious odour of mendacity’ surrounds Boris Johnson
The revival of Tennessee Williams’s 1944 family drama The Glass Menagerie seems smaller than life, but Abbie Spallen’s 2006 monologue play Pumpgirl has a full tank of wit
The Gate’s staging tones down the wilder curlicues of Tennessee Williams’s play
Some think she’s ‘a bit frightening’, including in Neil Jordan’s Greta, but the star couldn’t be nicer
It’s almost impossible to function without an electronic device. They have left us powerless
Dublin Theatre Festival: An acerbic, postmodern riff on Edward Albee’s classic
Hunter embodied the clean-cut image but was forced to deny his gay sexuality for years
The actor, who made his breakthrough in The Hateful Eight, puts the same thought into his Tomb Raider character that another actor might reserve for Richard III
Although Givenchy never lacked wealthy customers, he was uncomfortable with the extravagant showmanship of couture from the mid-1970s
Obituary: RSC founder introduced audiences to Beckett with first ‘Waiting for Godot’
The star of ‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’ on Jim Sheridan's ‘The Secret Scripture’ and how her friend Cate Blanchett helped her get cast in sexual abuse drama ‘Una’
Relying entirely on tax incentivised market solutions has not provided the pensions coverage or adequacy citizens need
Ahead of a visit to Galway, the Belgian director reveals his vision for theatre, his admiration for Ronan and why he insists that actors tell him they love him
The frustration is almost tantric in this new production of Tennessee Williams' play
Journalist decided ‘he could wait no longer for government to be formed’, mourners told
Director Seán Holmes had never seen The Plough and the Stars staged – until his current version went up at the Abbey Theatre
Friel established himself as an heir to the silences of Beckett and father to the tradition of monologue drama
‘Itinerant director’ Ethan McSweeny is bringing his outsider’s eye to Brian Friel’s translation of A Month in the Country at the Gate
As an actor you may have only a few lines – or none at all – but you can still make the most of a role, as Dee Burke, who’s appearing in ‘Hedda Gabler’ at the Abbey, and John Doran, who features in Shakespeare’s tragedy at the Gate, are proving
Brought to Book Q&A: Author of The Judas Kiss and City of Dis on what he reads and how he writes
From the Gleesons’ ‘Walworth Farce’ to a 3D pen, there’s a perfect present for the artist in your life
Review: John Lahr’s huge biography of Tennessee Williams absorbs from start to finish
With the Dublin Theatre Festival kicking off this week, here are ten playwrights who have also penned novels
Review: The deterioration of Behan’s health and talent during his three-year love affair with the US is the subject of a fascinating book
Tomorrow, this year’s Irish Times Irish Theatre Awards will be presented. The nominees for best actor and best actress talk about the roles they play
Adrian Dunbar, who takes the lead role in a play about the twilight of Brendan Behan’s life, thinks the time is right to resuscitate his legacy
Woody Allen descends to his version of slumming, with toxically witty results, writes Donald Clarke
Cate Blanchett's latest performance in Woody Allen’s ’Blue Jasmine’ – as a vodka-and-Xanax-swilling woman on the brink of breaking point – must have been quite a stretch for the immaculately casual mother-of-three
Lia Williams tackled her role in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ by researching Tennessee Williams – ‘because he is Blanche’
The Appalachian writer Ron Rash brings his dark southern tales to the Kilkenny Arts Festival
Louise McSharry’s exploration of light topics makes her an engaging stand-in for Ryan Tubridy on 2fm
What makes the lead performances so compelling in this version of ‘Streetcar’ is that each actor subtly plays their character against type
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices