Neil LaBute
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4 out of 5 stars.Neil LaBute and Caryl Churchill contribute to an evening of plays that make every effort to empathise with Trump voters
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3 out of 5 stars.MCC Theater, New York
Judith Light elevates Neil Labute’s mildly sensational material about a transgressive relationship into a reasonably compelling character study
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3 out of 5 stars.The American playwright edges away from his usual bilious comic antagonism with this drama about romantic crises
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The American dramatist on three-minute plays, meeting Pinter and the boyish looks of Aaron Eckhart
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2 out of 5 stars.Amanda Seyfried and Thomas Sadoski star in a morning-after drama where they talk endlessly without saying anything of substance
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2 out of 5 stars.Alice Eve and Matthew Broderick raise a few laughs, but never shake the artifice in this secrets-and-lies comedy about colleagues stuck in Albuquerque
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Short-play series Walking the Tightrope, opening in London this month, will also feature works by Caryl Churchill, Mark Ravenhill and April De Angelis
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3 out of 5 stars.This evening of unrelated scenes, all staged in the front seat of a car, is watchable though a little samey and stop-start, writes Lyn Gardner
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His first work Bash got him excluded from the Mormon church. Now, as its three plays are revived in London with a modified script, Neil LaBute talks religion and R-rated movies
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Imelda Staunton is whip-sharp in a great new US play about class, writes Susannah Clapp
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Mark Lawson: Audiences know the action kicks off on stage when the curtain goes up – so why are so many directors dispensing with the idea?
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A terrific cast brings Neil LaBute's unflinching trilogy to a powerful close, writes Susannah Clapp
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4 out of 5 stars.Billie Piper impresses in Neil LaBute's latest work – another intelligent attack on our obsession with physical beauty
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Andrew Haydon: Theatre bloggers are in uproar about suggested plotlines for Neil LaBute and Theresa Rebeck's live playwriting promotion – and they're none too happy about West End ticket prices, either
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Biographical dictionary of film Catherine Keener
David ThomsonDavid Thomson: Catherine Keener has been a supporting actor for years, with a reputation for being interesting in valuable, offbeat pictures
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American director promises 'a good romp and a cracking yarn' in film version of The Crooked House
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Anna Waterhouse: As I discovered by producing Neil LaBute's In a Forest Dark and Deep, new plays are risky – but the West End needs fresh voices for fresh audiences
'I challenge them to leave but force them to stay': playwrights on their audiences