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Theater Reviews
EDITOR’S NOTE
Gotham Storytelling fest sets schedule of performers
The 14th annual Gotham Storytelling Festival will be presented from Nov. 4 to 16 by FRIGID New York at Under St. Marks (94 St. Marks Place) and at the wild project (195 E. 3rd St.). Among many productions are ones from writer-performers: The Big Picture by Gabe Mollica, Paris Syndrome by Brad Lawrence, Ballet Flats for Dinner by Bridget McGuire, and Resistance by Mike Daisey. For tickets and a full list of storytellers who’ll be participating, visit frigid.nyc/festivals/gotham. —Edward Karam
The AMT theater will host Predictor, a new play about the woman who invented the home pregnancy test, beginning Dec. 6. Written by Jennifer Blackmer (winner of a 2015 PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theatre Award) and directed by Alex Keegan (Dilaria at DR2; Maiden Voyage at the Flea), Predictor will run through Jan. 18 at the AMT Theater (354 W. 45th St). The play’s subject is the real-life inventor Meg Crane, who, in 1968, created one of the most revolutionary inventions of the 20th century—the home pregnancy test. For tickets and more information, visit predictorplay.com. —Edward Karam

“You’re on earth, there’s no cure for that!” The sentiment, bellowed by Hamm to his servant Clov in the Druid Theatre’s revival of Samuel Beckett’s postapocalyptic Endgame, is freshly relatable to a U.S. audience. Under Garry Hynes’s direction, this Endgame is full of laughs—both she and the ensemble fully grasp the idea expressed by Hamm’s trash-bin-residing mother, Nell, that “nothing is funnier than unhappiness”—but it achieves this tone by leaning into, rather than shying away from, the play’s relentless bleakness.