Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure icons Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter recently reunited to continue being excellent to each other and delve into Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot on Broadway. But as ...
Alex Winter and Keanu Reeves, currently starring in the Broadway production of Waiting for Godot, recently visited The Late Show with Stephen Colbert to talk about the famed Samuel Beckett play. For ...
NEW YORK − Strange things are afoot at the Hudson Theatre. It’s been 36 years since Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter first brought “Party on, dudes” and “historical babes” into the pop-culture lexicon ...
This New York revival is driven by the star power of Keanu Reeves (of the “The Matrix” and “John Wick” film series), who is making a respectable Broadway bow. Joining him in this earnest project as ...
Alex Winter and Keanu Reeves deliver a tender, rhythmically precise take on Didi and Gogo. Photo by Andy Henderson Jamie Lloyd’s staging of the 1955 avant-garde classic feels daringly fresh yet ...
What’s most surprising about the excellent Geffen Playhouse production of Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot,” starring Rainn Wilson (“The Office” and Aasif Mandvi (“The Daily Show,” “This Way Up”), ...
There may never be a play more obscure, conceptually, than "Waiting for Godot." And there may never be actors less obscure than the ones who have clamored, for over 50 years, to be in it. Bert Lahr, ...
Directed by Jamie Lloyd, the latest Broadway revival of the 1952 play that marries bleak existentialism with broken-down vaudeville also features Brandon J. Dirden and Michael Patrick Thornton. By ...
Running time: Two hours and 15 minutes with one intermission. At the Hudson Theatre, 141 W. 44th Street. Over at the Hudson Theatre on 44th Street, the crowd is waiting for Neo. And John Wick. And, of ...
Famously, nothing happens, twice. Two men in bowler hats wait near a tree on a country road for the mysterious Godot, and they are eventually met by a third man and his enslaved companion, and later a ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The latest starry revival of Samuel Beckett’s play is on Broadway, and one thing is certain: Whatever you call its elusive character, he doesn’t come.
Of course it works. Two old friends known for their clownish escapades, always wanting to get back to somewhere they were – anywhere but here, really – all the while using ever so odd verbiage to ...