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  • El Credito at Repertorio Espanol

    Both a Borrower and a Lender Be

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 09th, 2018

    In their current repertory season, Repertorio Espagnol is presenting the two hander, El Credito by Jordi Galeran. We meet a loan officer who can’t say yes and a clever borrower with no assets. No one has heard Polonius’ advice: neither a borrower or a lender be. The setup is classic.

  • City Theatre's Summer Shorts

    Popular Play Festival in Miami

    By: Aaron Krause - Jun 09th, 2018

    City Theatre's Summer Shorts is in its 23rd year of entertaining southeast Florida audiences This year's line-up is diverse. A pleasantly surprisingly, unseasonal "Short" opens this year's festival

  • Recalling Sighting John Updike

    The A&P of the Mind

    By: Martin Mugar - Jun 09th, 2018

    Summering in Annisquam Martin Mugar, like the Ipswich based author, John Updike, became aware of distinct difference of class and culture. Thre were the easy, self confident debutantes who shopped at the A&P in their bathing suits. And the townies, like Sam, who unnoticed lusted for them. Recently, Mugar was reminded and inspired by watching the author crossing a street ages ago. Here he spins the yarn of old.

  • Boston Expressionists Rehung at the MFA

    A Major Exhibition of Hyman Bloom is Scheduled

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 06th, 2018

    Until recently the Museum of Fine Arts has neglected artists of Jewish heritage known as The Boston Expressionists. There were a handful of works that were burried in storage. Major works by Hyman Bloom and Karl Zerbe were included in a gift from Saundra B. Lane and William H. Lane. The museum is planning a major exhibition and catalogue for Bloom. It is likely that there will be other projects and publications. There are no current plans for showing or collecting works by Zerbe and Jack Levine.

  • Mies Julie by Yaël Farber

    Adaptation of Strindberg at Victory Gardens Theater

    By: Nancy Bishop - Jun 05th, 2018

    In Mies Julie at Victory Gardens Theater, playwright Yaël Farber translates the relationship between a privileged young woman and a servant from Midsummers Eve in Sweden to the Karoo, South Africa, on Freedom Day in 2012, the day commemorating the end of apartheid.

  • An American Soldier at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis

    Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang are Dynamite

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 04th, 2018

    Huang Ruo in music and David Henry Hwang in words ask: What will you do to become American? What will you endure? In a seamless wrought tale of a first generation Chinese American from Chinatown, we watch the world rect to a young man's wish. It is a horrifying story whose conseuqences we have only begun to grapple with. Huang Ruo and Hwang make great opera out of the story.

  • Kansas Symphony at Helzberg Hall

    Everything's Up to Date

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 04th, 2018

    The Kansas City Symphony is a superb group pf superb artists, who make their home in one the of the performance treasures of America Like Dallas and other smaller cities across the country, Kansas City community leaders decided to spiff up its arts’ presence, A decade ago they dtermined to build a new home for its Symphony Orchestra and somewhat larger hall for events on tour.

  • Christopher Janney's Exploring the Hidden Music

    At Boston University Dance Theater

    By: C. Janney - Jun 04th, 2018

    There is an upcoming concert by Christopher Janney, who will present with fellow dancer and musicians works that will again push boundaries. The event will occur on June 8 at the Boston University Dance Theater.

  • Real Eyes on Adams

    Former Furniture Store Now a Gallery

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 03rd, 2018

    Until a few years ago the vast Simmons Furniture Store anchored the Park Street business area of downtown Adams. The town has improved curbside cosmetics. Now that business has been revitalized as Real Eyes Gallery with two large spaces. One featuers an arts and crafts store while the other displays works by former Met Opera scene painter, Bill Riley. He and his wife Francine Anne Riley are now gallerists as well as continuing as arts activists and community catalysts.

  • Mark Brownell’s Monsieur d’Eon Is a Woman

    Feminine Mystique at Chicago's Trap Door Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Jun 03rd, 2018

    Trap Door Theatre’s production of Mark Brownell’s Monsieur d’Eon Is a Woman, directed by Nicole Wiesner, is a striking example of the company’s highly stylized, choreographed, madcap productions. Eleven performers are in constant motion.

  • Morning After Grace by Carey Crim

    Senior Moments at Shakespeare & Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 02nd, 2018

    Seniors are now living longer, healthier and better lives. Add to that little blue pills and it's not just kids who are hooking up. Morning After Grace by Carey Crim explores what happens when the old lady you wake up is just that.

  • Freaky Friday the Musical

    Book by Bridget Carpenter, Music by Tom Kitt, Lyrics by Brian Yorkey

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 02nd, 2018

    Based on Mary Rogers’ 1972 novel of the same name, Freaky Friday’s popularity is validated by the three film versions that have appeared, with each variant tweeking the storyline. This is the first stage musical effort, and award winning playwright Bridget Carpenter’s adaptation is well suited to the theater with integrated subplots and laugh lines throughout. Tom Kitt’s music is tuneful and bouncy in keeping with the musical theater pop idiom, while Brian Yorkey’s lyrics consistently drive the plot and are full of insight and humor.

  • Oscar Winner Sebastain Lelio Directs Disobedience

    Jewish Life in England

    By: Jack Lyons - Jun 02nd, 2018

    “Disobedience” is a mesmerizing, interior, fascinating, and affecting screenplay that carefully structures the movie to squeeze maximum emotional impact from its two stars, which it does in spades. It’s a bold and daring film even by today’s standards.

  • Brokeback Mountain by Charles Wuorinen

    New York City Opera Finally Presents Its Commission

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 01st, 2018

    Brokeback Mountain finally arrives at New York City Opera. The company originally commissioned the piece over a decade ago. It is a powerul and moving work.

  • Joe Thompson Takes a Plunge

    MASS MoCA Director and Taryn Simon’s A Cold Hole

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 01st, 2018

    Fully clothed in an elegant summer suit, MASS MoCA director, Joe Thompson, during the opening of “A Cold Hole" by the artist Taryn Simon, jumped into her icy installation. That was truly shocking but what happened next is even more of a hoot.

  • Hudson River Museum

    Show by former CAVS Fellow Ellen Kozak

    By: HRM - Jun 01st, 2018

    Former MIT/CAVS Fellow, Ellen Kozak, and composer Scott D. Miller are presenting a 4-Channel Video Installation at the Hudson River Museum until September 9. The summer exhibition also includes monumental abstract drawings by Christine Hiebert as well as museum owned etchings that are titled: Donald Judd: Variations on a Theme.

  • Fed and State Support for Berkshire Arts

    Making $1 Worth $10

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 01st, 2018

    Arts leaders and the media met at Shakespeare & Company to hear good news about state and federal funding. With manufacturing long gone from the region cultural tourism is the major industry. The arts season attracts more than 400,000 visitors and generates 4,000 plus jobs. Congressman Richard Neal announced $348,000 in NEA funding for the Berkshires. The federal funding cycle provides $900,700 to the Massachusetts Cultural Council and $1,092,400 to the New England Foundation for the Arts to benefit cultural groups across the state. He reported that the NEA this year got an increase of $3 million for a total of $152,849,000.

  • Love Never Dies Actually Should Have

    Messy Sequel to Phantom of the Opera at Hartford's Bushnell

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jun 01st, 2018

    Love Never Dies, the sequel written by Andrew Lloyd Webber (music), Glenn Slater (lyrics) and Ben Elton (book) is based on the novel The Phantom in Manhattan. Of these, only Webber was involved in the original Phantom. It runs at the Bushnell, in Hartford, Conn. through Sunday, June 3

  • Exquisita Agonía at Repertorio Español

    De Nilo Cruz Weaves Magic

    By: Rachel de Aragon - May 30th, 2018

    Exquisita Agonía at Repertorio Espanol is a tour de force take on modern science mixed with the age old questions about who we are and what we leave behind when we die. Director Jose Zayas has provided a perfect rhythm to the two-act piece by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Nilo Cruz.

  • New Holocaust Play by Moisés Kaufman

    The Album at Miami New Drama's Colony Theatre

    By: Aaron Krause - May 30th, 2018

    The Album focuses on little-known collection of photographs of Nazis partying near Aushwitz.A play by Moisés Kaufman, of Tectonic Theater Project fame, is in development. South Florida audiences are seeing snippets of this new play, running for four performances.

  • Schön and Schön: From Generation to Generation

    Mother and Daughter Collaborate on Ceramic Sculpture

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 30th, 2018

    For the first time mother and daughter collaborated to create a large, abstract, ceramic vessel emblazoned with evocative faces. With other works by both artists it resulted in a special exhibition Schön and Schön: From Generation to Generation. It remains on view, through June 28, at the North Hill community complex in Needham, Mass. Nancy Schön, now 89, is renowned for her "Make Way for the Ducklings" bronze sculptures in the Boston Public Gardens. Ellen Schön is the Ceramics Studio Supervisor and an adjunct faculty member at Lesley University College of Art and Design.

  • Finger Lakes New Vines Vineyard

    Unique Winegrowing Region

    By: Philip S. Kampe & Maria Revely - May 30th, 2018

    The Finger Lakes are New York states largest wine growing region, with over 150 vineyards crisscrossing the eleven Finger Lakes. One vineyard is home to New Vines B&B and is located within two miles of seven other vineyards. With a resident winemaker on premises and the use of local and homegrown crops for breakfast, it was easy to digest what the Finger Lakes region was about.

  • Hugh Ferriss Delineator of Heroic Modern

    Great Architectural Visionary of the '20s and '30s

    By: Mark Favermann - May 29th, 2018

    Hugh Ferris was a visionary ‘Paper Architect’ who influenced popular culture as well as a generation of architects through his heroic skyscraper renderings and delineation of construction projects. His influence can still be seen in popular culture..

  • David Henry Hwang Musical Soft Power

    World Premiere at The Ahmanson Theatre in LA

    By: Jack Lyons - May 29th, 2018

    Playwright David Henry Hwang’s newest musical play “Soft Power”, now enjoying its world premiere on the stage of The Ahmanson Theatre, Los Angeles, is an excellent example of readdressing the domination of White culture of the West to the rising prominence and influence of Asian societies along the ‘silk roads’ of the East. Hwang is a prolific American-born playwright of Chinese ethnicity.

  • Still Waiting for Godot

    Irish Production at Chicago Shakespeare Theater

    By: Nancy Bishop - May 29th, 2018

    Druid Theatre of Galway, Ireland, has brought its radiant production of Samuel Beckett’s Godot to Chicago Shakespeare Theater for an abbreviated run. Directed by Garry Hynes, Druid’s artistic director, the play stars four renowned Irish actors. The stars are Didi and Gogo (Vladimir played by Marty Rea with Aaron Monaghan as Estragon), the two souls waiting at a country crossroads for someone named Godot.

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