Ever since America’s theaters shut down in March, I’ve been reviewing streaming webcasts of theater productions. Not only have I been consistently impressed by the artistic and technical quality of these performances, but I quickly realized that they were and are good for theater in all sorts of ways: putting a company back in touch with its patrons; putting unemployed actors back to work; and providing theaters with an income stream that is small but potentially significant (San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theatre brought in $60,000 with its first two webcasts). It can also give a regional theater a national profile…

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Scientists identify ‘trigger molecule’ for Covid-related changes to smell

Molecule found in coffee typically described by people with parosmia as disgusting…

Telegraph quickly deletes pro-Boris Johnson article after he quits Tory race

Paper published Nadhim Zahawi article online just as news came through of…

Sam Haskell, son of top Hollywood agent, pleads not guilty to killing family

Haskell is accused of murdering and dismembering his wife and parents-in-law in…