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April 2, 2025 
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Dear Theater Fans,
Scott Rudin, the powerful producer, retreated from show business four years ago amid allegations that he had bullied assistants. In an exclusive interview with Michael Paulson, he said that he wanted to make theater again — and has several projects in the works — after what he called “a decent amount of therapy.” As the reader comments on the piece attest, not all are ready to welcome him back with open arms — though some acknowledge his “excellent taste” as a producer of quality Broadway shows.
A couple of Broadway productions with starry casts just opened, and Jesse Green has weighed in with reviews. He called the production of David Mamet’s “Glengarry Glen Ross” a “weirdly limp revival.” As the supposed alpha among losers (a sales team featuring Bob Odenkirk, Bill Burr and Michael McKean), Kieran Culkin as Richard Roma “is no longer the master of everyone else’s neuroses; he’s neurotic himself.” As for “The Picture of Dorian Gray,” Jesse found Sarah Snook, who plays 26 roles, to be among the show’s “many wonders.” But, he added, “What you won’t find is ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray.’”
We also have Julia Jacobs’s look at a new play called “Becoming Eve,” about a transgender rabbi who leaves the Hasidic community in which she was raised; Alexis Soloski’s interview with Andrew Scott, star of another solo work, “Vanya”; Ben Brantley on the Wooster Group’s 50th anniversary and the contest between the actors playing Othello and Iago (one that has never been that easy to call).
Speaking of Othellos, here’s James Earl Jones’s beautiful performance of a monologue from the play at the Obama White House in 2009.
Please reach out to me at theaterfeedback@nytimes.com with suggestions for stories or to offer your thoughts about our coverage. And urge your friends to subscribe to this newsletter.
Have a wonderful week,
Nicole Herrington
Theater Editor
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JESSE GREEN’S BROADWAY REVIEWS |
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ADVICE FROM THE CULTURE DESK |
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