Front Page
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Christine Goerke Unleashes Elektra
Hezet-Seguin Leads the Metropolitan Opera Production
By: - Mar 03rd, 2018There comes a time in the career of an opera singer when they are the artist of the moment. For Christine Goerke, the American dramatic soprano who sang the title role of Elektra at the Metropolitan Opera, that time is now. Goerke has sung the role on other stages to great acclaim, both here and elsewhere. However Thursday night was a watershed: the dramatic soprano's long-awaited return to singing major Strauss roles on America's largest operatic stage.
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Steinberg/ATCA Finalists Announced
Award Honors Promising New Plays
By: - Mar 03rd, 2018A panel of critics has narrow down a list of new plays to receive the Harold and Mimi Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award Annual honor singles out most promising works which premiered professionally outside NYC during 2017. This year's crop of plays tackle topics from preserving Shakespeare's words to refugees fleeing wars
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Sense and Sensibility by Kate Hamill
Produced by Oregon Shakespeare Festiva
By: - Mar 02nd, 2018In the Jane Austen catalogue, Sense and Sensibility has always played poor sister to Pride and Prejudice. Perhaps it’s a marketing issue with the latter having the more powerful packaging (i.e.: its title). At the core of this story is a searing indictment of 19th century British laws, mores, and practices that contemporary feminists should cleave to in remembrance of the bad old days.
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Henry V by William Shakespeare
Produced by Oregon Shakespeare Festival
By: - Mar 02nd, 2018Oregon Shakespeare Festival has cleverly organized the productions of the three plays which involve King Henry V. Two were offered last summer – Henry IV – Part 1 and Henry IV – Part 2. In those plays, one of the main characters is Prince Harry, also known as Hal, who would become King Henry V. Despite being heir to the throne, Hal was a dissolute wastrel who consorted with Falstaff and his derelict followers.
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68th Berlinale, 2018
February 15-25, Germany
By: - Mar 01st, 2018In general, the 68th Berlinale may be defined as a quest of women attempting to be heard and seen. Seven of twelve prizes went to women, an astounding conclusion, especially since most of the contributions were more on the quiet side and not on the ‘#me too’ loudness. 385 films were screened and 300,000 moviegoers were counted, cold weather or not.
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Whiskey: Why It Is Preferred
Do You Like Ice Cubes?
By: - Feb 28th, 2018Recently, the medical journal, Springer, published an article dealing with the various types of bacteria found in bar ice. This article shares the results with you.
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In The Body Of The World by Eve Ensler
Diane Paulus Directs New Post Vagina Monologue
By: - Feb 28th, 2018Eve Ensler is best known for The Vagina Monologues. In The Body of The World, a theatricalization of her 2013 book by the same name at the Manhattan Theatre Club’s New York City Center currently running through March 25, Ensler returns to the stage with a vengeance.
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Live Streaming a Chamber Music Master Class
Associated Chamber Music Players Spearheads the Drive
By: - Feb 26th, 2018The Associated Chamber Music Players (ACMP) live streamed a master class from the Opera Center in New York. Aspiring chamber music performers across the globe were invited to watch, learn and participate by asking questions.
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Dudamel Conducts the Vienna Philharmonic
Carnegie Hall Hosts
By: - Feb 26th, 2018Sunday's matinee concert, the third of three this weekend at Carnegie Hall, the great Vienna Philharmonic eschewed the Mozart and Beethoven for a refreshing focus elsewhere. For this concert, the orchestra and current guest conductor Gustavo Dudamel agreed to play symphonies by Charles Ives and Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, whose only common thread was the unconventional and innovative nature of their work.
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Lynn Nottage’s Intimate Apparel
At Conn's Playhouse on Park
By: - Feb 25th, 2018In Intimate Apparel we see four women, three of whom have learned to abandon their fantasies and make choices based on the reality of the world. Each has made a “bargain” and each longs for what she has sacrificed.
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The Look of PyeongChang Winter Olympics
Branding Is Colorful But Not Visually Overwhelming
By: - Feb 25th, 2018The Olympic Look of the Games is the visual and environmental expression of a particular Olympic Games. At the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Games, the designers not only created a Korean signature, but a more elegant statement of the Winter celebration of athletic achievement.
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Dudamel Leads Vienna at Carnegie
Circumstance Without Pomp
By: - Feb 24th, 2018The Vienna Orchestra's horns and low brass displayed their customary control in the opening phrases before the strings took the lyric theme. They were answered by the horns, which, true to their conservative manifesto, still play the narrow-bore instruments in F with the antique pumpenvalve system, invented (like the Vienna Philharmonic itself) in the 1840s. Gustavo Dudamel led the piece dutifully, knowing full well that the Vienna players are the masters of this music.
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NYCity Opera's Anna Caterina Antonacci
A Rare Appearance in New York
By: - Feb 23rd, 2018Anna Caterina Antonacci is a chanteuse supreme who rarely performs in New York. Michael Capasso, the General Director of the New York City Opera, induced Antonacci to give two concerts at Carnegie Hall. Perhaps she will come here to perform in an opera soon.
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Jerry Springer, the Opera at The New Group
Smash London Hit Transfers to New York
By: - Feb 22nd, 2018An obsession with the Jerry Springer show grew into Jerry Springer, the Opera. The show was a smash hit on London’s West End over a decade go. Tentative stabs at transfer across the pond are now fixed in a production by The New Group. Scott Elliott, artistic director of The New Group sensed that the time was now. After all, we have a reality show host in the White House.
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Breach by Antoinette Nwandu
At Victory Gardens Theater in LIncoln, Illiinois
By: - Feb 22nd, 2018Breach: a manifesto on race in america through the eyes of a black girl recovering from self-hate is a world premiere at Victory Gardens Theater. The play’s long title might mislead you into thinking you’re going to see a different sort of play. Lisa Portes directs a solid cast of five in this funny, moving, but somewhat predictable play by Antoinette Nwandu.
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The Flying Dutchman
Produced by Opera San José
By: - Feb 21st, 2018Suffering on a tumultuous ocean voyage, Wagner conceived of an opera based on a man eternally condemned to the sea. Eternal punishment as a literary theme is broadly established, but the libretto for The Flying Dutchman drew largely on Memoirs of Mr. von Schnabelwopski, by Heinrich Heine, who in turn had adapted folk tales of the Wandering Jew.
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Uncle Vanya
San Diego’s The Old Globe Theatre
By: - Feb 21st, 2018Check it out. , San Diego’s The Old Globe Theatre is presenting a new translation and a new way of staging Anton Chekhov’s masterpiece dramedy “Uncle Vanya”.
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Philip Dawkins’ The Burn
Steppenwolf for Young Adults
By: - Feb 21st, 2018The Burn by terrific Chicago playwright Philip Dawkins. I think you'll be hearing that name again. It is a tense and smoothly choreographed play, directed by Devon de Mayo. All five characters are on stage at all times in the 90-minute production.
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VinNatur: Pesticide-Free Wines
Angiolino Maule's Concept Is Reality
By: - Feb 21st, 2018Imagine over 170 wineries from nine different countries following stringent rules to achieve their goal of pesticide-free wines. The project was spearheaded by Angiolino Maule and has grown to a movement throughout the world.
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Lawrence Brownlee at Opera Philadelphia
World Premiere of Cycles of My Being
By: - Feb 21st, 2018What is it like to be a black man in America? Lawrence Brownlee was haunted by this question. He wanted to answer it in his art form, the classical song and aria. Joining forces with two MacArthur fellows, composer Tyshawn Sorey and poet Terrance Hayes, Brownlee, the artistic advisor to Opera Philadelphia, developed six songs, "Cycles of My Being." Its stunning world premiere was on stage at the Kimmel Center this week.
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Lucia Berlin: Stories
Produced by Word for Word in San Francisco
By: - Feb 20th, 2018As stories not written with each other or the stage in mind, Lucia Berlin: Stories lacks the cohesiveness and unswerving trajectory that you would expect in a good play. But this production delivers the sharp-eyed insights of an empathetic and accomplished story teller in a well-crafted, entertaining manner.
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Philip Glass at Carnegie Hall
Music with Changing Parts
By: - Feb 20th, 2018Is there a point, in the creation of art for the entertainment of others, where the value of that creative act has to be weighed against the limitations that the human body can endure? That question applies to both the audience and performers attending Friday night's concert at Carnegie Hall featuring the first New York concert performance in 38 years of Philip Glass' 1970 composition Music With Changing Parts.
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If I Forget in Suburban Miami
Meaty Comic Drama by Steven Levenson
By: - Feb 19th, 2018Thought-provoking themes will keep If I Forget in your mind. A relateable Steven Levenson play will make you laugh and cry at suburban Miami's GableStage.
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Recalling Carol Channing at Lulu White’s
Boston’s Golden Era of Jazz and Cabaret
By: - Feb 19th, 2018Printing four decades of images for, Heads and Tales, an exhibit at Gallery 51 in North Adams this summer has kicked up a treasure trove of memories. A series of photos of Carol Channing with Craig Russel who impersonated her evoked the ambiance of a fabulous night at Boston's jazz club Lulu White's.
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Celebrating 50 Years Of Valpolicella
Education About Producing Sustainable Italian Wine
By: - Feb 19th, 2018Sustainability, with the goal of 60% of the wine region following safe environmental practices is the two year goal of the Consorzio Tutelage Vini Valpolicella, the unified body of the appellation.
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