Right now on Broadway, there’s no sharper, sassier, or more laugh-packed 80 minutes than Oh, Mary!—where Mary Todd Lincoln and her exasperated husband, Abraham, tear history to shreds in a gloriously ...
Theater has always been political. Some of the biggest Broadway hits of the last few decades have explored political issues, ...
And recently, it was Oh, Mary!, Cole Escola’s hilarious, utterly deranged, and undeniably genius fever dream of a show, for ...
Being one of the hottest tickets on Broadway right now, James Scully opens up about the success that "Oh, Mary!" has had, its ongoing journey and its possible future.
Conrad Ricamora and Cole Escola in Oh, Mary! Emilio Madrid Escola’s splendidly nasty queer romp has hiked up its petticoats and staggered uptown from a sold-out run at the Lucille Lortel Theatre ...
This year Broadway’s Lyceum Theatre resurrected a laugh-off version of President Abraham Lincoln’s long-suffering and well-oiled wife Mary Todd Lincoln. The short dark comedy, “Oh ...
If a Broadway play about Mary Todd Lincoln doesn't sound enticing to you, it's only because you haven't seen the character through the eyes of comedian Cole Escola in Oh, Mary! yet. In the play ...
Oh, Mary! is a zany and unconventional comedy set in the weeks before Abraham Lincoln’s assassination, focusing on a miserable, suffocated Mary Todd Lincoln. The fast-paced one-act play clicks ...
Oh, Mary! is a dark comedy starring Cole Escola as a miserable, suffocated Mary Todd Lincoln in the weeks leading up to Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. Unrequited yearning, alcoholism and ...
In 1995, the entire world turned upside down for the Edwards family as 31-year-old beloved school teacher Mary Catherine ...
The investigation into the 1995 murder of Texas teacher Mary Catherine Edwards went cold for years. Advances in forensic science and tireless work by investigators would reveal the startling ...
If a Broadway play about Mary Todd Lincoln doesn’t sound enticing to you, it’s only because you haven’t seen the character through the eyes of comedian Cole Escola in Oh, Mary! yet.