“Here was my first time seeing “Poor Things” with a crowd, and I still felt like I wasn’t really seeing it with a crowd.”— Justin Chang, latimes.com
“Harris’s latest, A Boy’s Company Presents: “Tell Me If I’m Hurting You,” was meant to premiere at Playwrights Horizons’s Mainstage Theater in May; but, like so many other productions this spring, it was postponed by the coronavirus pandemic.”— Marley Marius, vogue.com
“Check the staff page, bro. You’ll see my pronoun throbbing away in my bio, nestled in the digital universe that is the company website.”— Allison Page, medium.com
“There is a place where the malformed find grace, where the hideous can be beautiful, where strangeness is not shunned but celebrated. This place is the theater.”— John Logan, Vincent Brand, Alun Armstrong, imdb.com
“I would rather be sitting in the most claustrophobia-inducing Broadway theater than be sprawled out comfortably most anywhere else in the world”— Natalie Walker, vulture.com
“By last count, over 180 million copies of J.K. Rowling’s seven Harry Potter novels have been sold in the United States. Not a single one was bought by me.”— Elisabeth Vincentelli, nytimes.com
“Now why should the cinema follow the forms of theater and painting rather than the methodology of language, which allows wholly new concepts of ideas to arise from the combination of two concrete denotations of two concrete objects? Language is much closer to film than painting is.”— Sergei Eisenstein, books.google.com
“An understudy, it's like a fancy word for disappointment.”— Julie Klausner, Julie Kessler, Julie Klausner, imdb.com
“Through theatre, we can find empathy with those who are struggling with all kinds of mental and physical health obstacles. We can bring a voice to those who are silenced or stigmatized.”— Amy Oestreicher, amyoes.com
“Like Cooper and James Dean — and let’s throw Beckett in there, too, with the beautiful hair and the minimalist outfits — Mr. Shepard had something in short supply in this time of public figures crying out for likes. And that something was coolness, a mode of presentation and expression that may have…”— Jim Windolf, nytimes.com