Austin studied English language and literature at Fordham University in the Bronx, and realized her passion for theatre as a student abroad in London. She has worked as journalist at the Newtown Bee (Newtown, CT) and as a researcher for NBC News (New York, NY). She harbors an avid love for William Shakespeare and likes to carry a book with her wherever she goes. Usually found in or around New York City.
What happens when you mix über wealthy yoga clients, the MTA, the city’s homeless, crappy auditions, and breast cancer? asks Christine Renee Miller’s ...
The mission of the festival is “to build a community of artists and theatre-goers who treasure the intimate form of art, in which an individual human ...
A good play is one that may be set in ancient Rome (and I mean really ancient Rome, centuries before Julius Caesar); may have been written 400 years a...
Sex, power struggles, political intrigue, the tyranny of the patriarchy: these themes were as familiar three and a half thousand years ago as they are...
Origin Theatre’s 1st Irish Theatre Festival continues through the end of September, with last performances on October 2nd. But though September winds ...
Irish culture has been a major tributary of New York City’s makeup at least since the mid-nineteenth century potato famine--witness the prominence of ...
Bryant Park Presents Shakespeare is topping off its summer season with The Drilling Company’s production of Measure for Measure. But this version of S...
Nostalgia and grief spill from each expertly-crafted line of Toni Press-Coffman’s Touch. Against a backdrop of cardboard boxes, packing tape, and make...
In Brooklyn, Matthew Freeman’s new play That Which Isn’t sets itself up to delve into the intricacies of human relationships. Set during the course of...