Not too many novels weigh the merits of imagination against observation, myth against reality, or fiction against truth: the author’s bias in favor of fabrication is implicit from the first word in ...
Performances are now underway for the US tour of LIFE OF PI, Lolita Chakrabarti’s stage adaptation of Yann Martel’s best-selling novel. The tour opened at the Hippodrome Theatre at the France Merrick ...
The North American touring production of “Life of Pi” is a magical piece of theater, but please don’t expect a break from reality. Nor should you bring young children along to Minneapolis’ Orpheum ...
At a recent performance at Playhouse Square in Cleveland of the U.S. tour of the stage production of “Life of Pi,” an adaptation of Yann Martel’s 2001 novel, a woman near us remarked to someone that ...
“I’ve had a terrible trip,” says Pi Patel, the lead character in the play “Life of Pi.” He’s likely the only person at Segerstrom Hall that night who felt that way about it after experiencing his ...
For Pi Patel, hero of “Life of Pi,” survival is an act of storytelling. Or is it the other way around? While the story may be everything to Pi, it is not the star of this nationally touring play, ...
Original and visually stunning, the stage production of “Life of Pi,” at the Hobby Center through Sunday, weaves an extraordinary and imaginative tale of a teenage boy traveling from India to Canada ...
Wait, is this a perfect play? “Life of Pi” — now at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts in Fort Lauderdale through Sunday, Oct. 26 — is a dazzling display of theatrical visuals and coruscant ...
“Life of Pi,” Yann Martel’s Booker Prize-winning, mega-selling 2001 novel, has already been adapted into an immersive 3D film that won Academy Awards for its direction, cinematography and dazzlingly ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Beneath the technical wizardry and versatile performances of “Life of Pi,” there are tragic realities that confront our current national moment with ...
That classic icon from vaudeville and film, the great curmudgeon W.C. Fields said it best, “Never work with kids and animals.” But he never worked with Richard Parker (the tiger). Fields would have ...