A Scots health board has cancelled all home births in new coronavirus measures.
10.03.2020 - 20:29 / nypost.com
Coronavirus is driving one Broadway’s most prolific producers to drastically slash ticket prices for several big shows.
Starting at noon Thursday, March 12, Scott Rudin will reduce tickets to $50 a pop for shows through March 29.
The productions include Broadway newcomers “West Side Story,” director Sam Mendes’ “The Lehman Trilogy” and “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” starring Laurie Metcalf and Rupert Everett, as well as “To Kill a Mockingbird” and long-running Tony-winner “The Book of
A Scots health board has cancelled all home births in new coronavirus measures.
The coronavirus continues to devastate Broadway. Two highly anticipated plays — “Hangmen” and the revival of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” — have been scuttled.
NICOLA Sturgeon has been urged to back the suspension of whisky production to protect staff from Coronavirus.
A federal judge has denied Tekashi 6ix9ine's request to serve out his prison sentence at home amid the coronavirus pandemic. Judge Paul Engelmayer denied the request on Wednesday but said that he would have ordered home confinement instead if he had known about the coronavirus when he issued the sentence in December.
Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar announced Monday that her husband, John Bessler, has tested positive for the coronavirus.
Rapper's sentence is currently due to run until August
Following the announcement earlier in the day on Friday that Martin McDonagh's Hangmen had played its final Broadway performance while still in previews, a similar fate has met the eagerly anticipated revival of Edward Albee's masterwork of interdependent marital warfare, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Lead producers Scott Rudin, Barry Diller and David Geffen confirmed late Friday night that the production, which was shut down March 12 as part of government-mandated safety measures to control
The Broadway revival of the classic play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf has officially closed after playing just nine preview performances.
“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” has ended a truncated run on Broadway, becoming the second major theatrical production to close up shop due to the coronavirus crisis. The Broadway revival of Edward Albee’s classic never even got an opening night. It played 9 preview performances at The Booth Theatre before a public health crisis led to the closure of all theaters on March 12.