Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Expectations are high, but Snook more than rises to the occasion. A measured start ...
Oscar Wilde himself sat in the Royal Box in the West End’s beautifully gilded Theatre Royal Haymarket in the 1890s for the premieres of his comedies “A Woman of No Importance” and “An Ideal Husband.” ...
A better title would be “The Parody of Dorian Gray.” Sarah Snook plays all the characters from Oscar Wilde’s 1891 novel about a young man who doesn’t grow old but whose portrait reflects both his real ...
A quiet, under-reported revolution has taken place on Broadway. Live streaming, massive video screens and technology that creates digital reproductions so intense that you see every pore and pimple ...
Want to make a deal with the devil? A new adaptation of The Picture of Dorian Gray is coming to Broadway starring Emmy Award winner Sarah Snook, star of HBO’s smash-hit “Succession." She reprises her ...
Sarah Snook looks dandy in a smashing production. And now comes The Picture of Dorian Gray — a stage version of the ultimate sell-your-soul-for-longevity tale, by Oscar Wilde. Dorian is a wealthy ...
Sarah Snook is the only person onstage — besides some cloaked-in-black camera operators — in a whopping 26 roles for Broadway’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray.” Director Kip Williams, the former director ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The “Succession” actress plays all 26 roles in this Oscar Wilde classic reimagined as a video spectacle. If only there were less screen time and more ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Sarah Snook, camera operators and other crew members bring to life multitudes on Broadway via an elaborate synthesis of live action, live video and recorded video. Sarah Snook ...
UPDATE, OCT. 21: The previously announced The Picture of Dorian Gray starring Succession actor Sarah Snook will open Thursday, March 27, 2025 on Broadway at the Music Box Theatre. Previews will begin ...
Williams’ staging of his own adaptation opens with a fierce close-up of Snook’s exuberant face on a large, portrait-style screen — the first of many — hanging down at the center of the proscenium arch ...