Your resource for New York City theater Off- and Off-Off-Broadway.
Theater Reviews
EDITOR’S NOTE
Puppetopia 2026 features three shows at HERE
HERE will present Puppetopia 2026, a two-week puppetry festival from Feb. 17 to March 1 at its space (145 Sixth Ave., entrance on Dominick). Among the shows schedule are Parched, a play by Official Public Business about water scarcity, set in the future; Ruby & Charlie, a 1950s romance set to live music by Ray Charles; and The Magnificent Ms. Pham, a Vietnamese-American water puppet show and country-western musical by Tommy Nguyen that tells the true story of a boatperson fleeing Saigon for Houston. For a schedule, tickets and more information, click here. —Edward Karam
The Chain Winter One-act Festival will run from Feb. 5 through March 1 and feature work by theater heavyweights Jesse Eisenberg, Jose Rivera and Carol Kane. Eisenberg will direct Ralph Macchio (of Karate Kid fame) and his daughter Julia Macchio (Cobra Kai) in a new play, Sweet Tart, by Jeryl Brunner. Academy Award nominee Carol Kane will star in Sh*t Kickers by Orphans author Lyle Kessler. The festival has also lined up the world premiere of Look What Crashed Through the Portal and Ended Up in Brooklyn by Obie Award-winner José Rivera. Performances will be at the Chain Theatre (312 West 36th St.). For ticket information and a complete schedule, visit chaintheatre.org/winter-oneact-fest-2026. —Edward Karam

Gatz, the signature creation of downtown theater troupe Elevator Repair Service (ERS), included every sentence of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s 1924 novel The Great Gatsby, with each performance running a whopping eight hours (including intermissions and dinner break). At the Public Theater these days (16 years after Gatz premiered there), ERS is offering its take on Ulysses, the ravishingly innovative novel—serialized in 1918, published in book form in 1922—that secured James Joyce’s position as preeminent pioneer of stream-of-consciousness narrative in English. As with Gatz, the script of Ulysses consists entirely of the novelist’s original prose; this time, though, there are numerous elisions, permitting each performance to clock in at a mere two hours and 40 minutes.