Describing a Blue Man Group show after just leaving one to a person who has never seen them may feel like sticking jelly to a wall: messy, futile and you might be feeling a bit sticky. Now, that's not ...
The stage is bare, the drums silent, the video screens blank. Three figures stand in the glare of the stage lights. They couldn’t look less alike — one gaunt, another stocky with dark stubble, the ...
Workers and technicians are hammering away in preparation for the return of Blue Man Group to Orlando, right down to the placement and pounding of PVC pipes, one of the ensemble’s distinctive musical ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by A commercial producer active on Broadway and in the West End has signed a long-term lease for Astor Place Theater with plans for shows there. By ...
A strange thing happens when you talk to the Blue Man Group organization about their namesake men: If they can help it, no one uses the pronouns “I” or “we.” They artfully eschew them. Byron Estep, ...