The Stage Door
Content for Fans, By Fans
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: Bring Back Overtures
It’s time to bring overtures back to musical theatre. Not just for nostalgia’s sake, but for the magic of anticipation itself.
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: If You Audition Non-Union, You’re the Villain
It’s not always a choice between Equity and non-union. Sometimes it’s a choice between working and walking away.
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: Trans-Inclusive Casting Requires Musical Flexibility
Theatre is flexible when it wants to be. The question is: will we use that flexibility to make space for trans and nonbinary performers?
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: Stories Miss the Adult Version of Toxic Femininity
We talk endlessly about toxic masculinity, but toxic femininity usually gets stuck in high school storylines. What about when those same behaviors show up in the office, in friendships, in adult relationships?
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: You Don’t Always Have to Be Besties With Your Castmates
Not every cast becomes a family — and that’s okay. Whether it’s Broadway or high school, cast mates are coworkers first. You don’t have to be best friends, but you do have to show respect and professionalism.
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: Queer Tragedy, Queer Joy, and the Space Between
Are we overproducing queer tragedy on stage? In 2025, with politics charged and audiences hungry for more, the question lingers: where’s the balance between grief and joy, between history and celebration?
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: Let Middle-Aged Women Take Center Stage
Middle-aged women are the lifeblood of theater. They buy the tickets, fill the seats, and keep the lights on. Yet their stories are sidelined. It’s time to stop handing them only the grandmother roles and finally give them center stage.
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: Give Us an Intermission, Please
I’ll always respect author intent, but if your show runs longer than 90 minutes, give us an intermission.
Exploring Theatre Hot Takes: Fat Characters & Actors Deserve Better
Fat actors deserve more than the handful of roles written around fatphobia. Too many shows restrict who can play what, leaving fat performers boxed in.