Playwright David Harrower’s terse version of Henrik Ibsen’s classic “Enemy of the People” moves swiftly through its tale of morals and politics.
Heaven, hell and what they represent form the crux of the thought-provoking presentation of C.S. Lewis’s “The Great Divorce.”
Playwright David Harrower’s terse version of Henrik Ibsen’s classic “Enemy of the People” moves swiftly through its tale of morals and politics.
Heaven, hell and what they represent form the crux of the thought-provoking presentation of C.S. Lewis’s “The Great Divorce.”