Auteur director Rebecca Holderness is no stranger to Burning Coal Theatre audiences.
Byron Woods
Bio: Byron Woods is the INDY's theater and dance critic.Email: [email protected]: http://twitter.com/byronwoods
A Showcase of a Small-Town Tap Ensemble That’s Gone Big, and a Transgressive Production of “Emma”
A preview and a review of two local productions.
Save a Few Squeaky Wheels, “A Doll’s House, Part Two” Is Thought-Provoking and Robust
Can RedBird successfully play dramatic dodgeball, timing shows and intermissions against trains that don’t always run on time?
A Preview of “The Garbologists” and a Review of Theatre Raleigh’s Dazzling “Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812”
See them before they close.
Reviews of Four Significant Local October Productions
Productions from the Justice Theater Project, Burning Coal Theatre, Sweet Tea Shakespeare, and Theatre in the Park.
New Triangle Venues Help Fill In the Gaps for Performing Arts Companies
Any stage manager will tell you: the real drama’s always offstage.
Amid an Uptick in Local Theater Companies, a Venue Shortage Is Causing Concern
Over two-thirds of the region’s 90-odd theater and dance companies are itinerant, with no permanent rehearsal or performance spaces of their own.
Fall Arts Preview: Six Theatrical Productions to See
Plays by Playmakers, Burning Coal Theatre, Theater Raleigh, and more.
New Theater Companies Give Durham a Groundswell of New Growth
Five new groups join Switchyard Theatre Company in mounting productions running through November.
Tap Dance Star Luke Hickey Returns to the Triangle to Headline ADF’s Fall Weekend Season
“A Little Old, A Little New”—which local audiences will see next weekend at the NC Museum of Art—is an unabashed love letter to the dance form’s deep roots in jazz clubs.

