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Charles Giuliano

Bio:

Publisher & Editor. Charles was the director of exhibitions for the New England School of Art & Design at Suffolk University where he taught art history and the humanities. He taugh tModern Art and the Avant-garde for Metropolitan College of Boston University. After many years as a contributor, columnist and editor for a range of print publications from Art New England, Art News, the Boston Phoenix, the Boston Herald Traveler and Patriot Ledger, to mention a few, he went on line with Maverick Arts which evolved into a website.

Recent Articles:

  • Romeo and Juliet by Charles Gounod Front Page

    Produced by San Francisco Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 17th, 2019

    Charles Gounod’s Romeo and Juliet faithfully follows Shakespeare’s dramatic narrative and adds a score of great beauty that has graced the repertory since its spectacular debut in 1867. San Francisco Opera’s faithful production possesses sterling artistry and striking staging that honor this compelling opera.

  • Die Fledermaus by Johann Strauss Front Page

    Produced by Opera San Jose

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 17th, 2019

    The intersection of the world of grand opera and musical confection rarely occurs. An exception to that rule would be Johann Strauss’s operetta Die Fledermaus. Maestro Michael Morgan maintains brisk pace throughout the musical sections, resulting in a spirited rendering of the score.

  • Time Stands Still By Donald Marguiles Front Page

    Ends Season for Shakespeare & Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 16th, 2019

    Instead of a brief essay from the director the Shakespeare & Company playbill uses that space to list journalists killed "on assignment in 2019." Ten years ago Time Stands Still by Donald Margulies earned two Tony nominations. Four fine performances, and superb direction, were squandered on a play that is not aging well. Taking on an important subject, the bravery and sacrifice of journalists covering war zones, the play is contrived and reaches for cheap tricks entailing reversal and deception.

  • Boston Rocker Ric Ocasek at 75 Front Page

    With Ben Orr Founded The Cars

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 16th, 2019

    The counterculture in Boston geared up in the summer of 1968. The music scene, WBCN, and alternative media were well established when The Cars emerged with a self titled album in 1978. They went on to record a string of hits breaking up a decade later. After kicking around with a variety of folk/ rock configurations Ric Ocasek and Ben Orr established a mega group that was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last year. Orr died in 2000 and Ocasek died yesterday at 75. They were an integral part of a golden age of Boston rock.

  • Amadeus at North Coast Repertory Theatre Front Page

    Sir Peter Schaffer’s Musical Still Rocks Mozart

    By: Jack Lyons - Sep 15th, 2019

    Director Baird’s bold vision required him to strip-down the script to 10 performing characters without sacrificing any of the drama and/or light comedy moments that run throughout Shaffer’s illuminating, potent, tragic story concerning the early death, at 35 years of age, of musical genius Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (an astonishing Rafael Goldstein).

  • Ensemble: An Oral History of Chicago Theater Front Page

    Interviews by Mark Larson

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 14th, 2019

    Ensemble: An Oral History of Chicago Theater is a book you can enjoy in two ways. You can read it from beginning to end, as you would any narrative of fiction or nonfiction. Or you can dip in and out and read Mark Larson’s marvelous interviews with Chicago theater people in any order—and to any stage of completion—that you like.

  • Don’t Give a Crap Front Page

    Solid Gold Commode Gone Missing

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 14th, 2019

    The rich are different from us. As a symbol of ultimate decadence Maurizio Cattelan created "America" a sold gold toilet. I lined up to take a pee in it at the Guggenheim Museum. Now it has gone missing.

  • Reggae Band Steel Pulse Front Page

    The Cabot Theater, Beverly, Mass.

    By: Doug Hall - Sep 14th, 2019

    Performing at the Cabot Theater in Beverly, to a packed and “on your feet” audience, David Hinds (vocals, guitarist) and longtime bandmate Selwyn Brown (keyboardist) kept an edge to their message of social and political outrage. The evening featured the first release by Steel Pulse in over a decade "Mass Manipulation" (2019, Rootfire Cooperative / Wiseman Doctrine).

  • Marjorie Kaye Synaptic Tides Front Page

    Boston's Galatea Fine Arts

    By: Marjorie Kaye - Sep 10th, 2019

    I have been working on sculptural surfaces for my paintings for 6 months. In addition to the resulting surface tension, the work has become more lyrical, sprinkled with recognizable imagery. Vines, galaxies, probes, suns, microbial animals and plants divide the surface and define the space.

  • Howards End at Remy Bumppo Theatre Front Page

    A Stunning New Production

    By: Nancy Bishop - Sep 10th, 2019

    Howards End, the stunning new production by Remy Bumppo Theatre, weaves together strands of three families. The wealthy and elite Wilcoxes—father, sons and daughter—the Schlegel sisters, who belong to the intellectual gentry, and poverty-stricken Leonard Bast and his wife. The script by Douglas Post, adapted from E.M. Forster’s 1910 novel, is directed by Nick Sandys.

  • Britten's Billy Budd Based on Melville Front Page

    At San Francisco Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 09th, 2019

    Michael Grandage’s production has been revived several times since its inauguration almost a decade ago, and it’s easy to see why. The staging is sensational, dominated by the depiction of the innards of the man o’ war. Although Billy Budd underwent revisions after its debut in 1951, it is surprising that the American premiere didn’t occur until 1970.

  • Murder for Two Front Page

    Musical on Stage in Walnut Creek, California

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 08th, 2019

    While this is a well-crafted production of a well-designed and recognized work, it is not for everyone. For theater goers seeking fast-paced, forget-your-troubles entertainment, it will probably fill the bill. For those looking for meaning, social commentary, complexity of character, and the like, it may not fill much of anything.

  • Connecticut Theatre Front Page

    Highliighting the Fall Season

    By: Karen Isaacs - Sep 08th, 2019

    Karen Isaacs previews what's on tap for fall theater in Connecticut.

  • Garden of Earthly Delights Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 07th, 2019

    garden

  • Eclipse Mill Artists Annual Exhibition Front Page

    North Adams Events in September and October

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 06th, 2019

    The Eclipse Mill Artists Annual Exhibition will be held September 6 to September 29 at 243 Union Street in North Adams, Mass. 01247. This serves as a preview for Open Studios on Saturday and Sunday, October 19 and 20. The complex, which houses forty live/ work lofts, is the epicenter of an ever growing community of artists in Northern Berkshire County.

  • Wall Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 05th, 2019

    egg

  • Clark Will Screen Live at the Met Front Page

    Opera Featured at Williamstown Museum

    By: Clark - Sep 05th, 2019

    The Clark Art Institute will air the complete 2019–20 season of ten live performances from The Metropolitan Opera, held on select Saturdays beginning in October 12 and concluding in May 2020, in high definition from the Clark’s state-of-the-art auditorium. A special holiday encore presentation of The Magic Flute will be held on Sunday, December 8.

  • The ’62 Center for Theatre and Dance Front Page

    Season Announced at Williams College

    By: Randal Fippinger - Sep 05th, 2019

    The visiting artist CenterSeries brings professional artists to campus for residencies at Williams College that culminate in performances at the ’62 Center. The Series kicks off with the return of Dancers from New York City Ballet on Friday, October 18th. Also returning to Williams is the SITI Company. Founded in 1992 by Anne Bogart and Tadashi Suzuki, SITI will perform a “spellbinding modern update” of The Bacchae by Aaron Poochigian, on Saturday, November 2nd. (Los Angeles Times).

  • White on White Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 03rd, 2019

    white

  • Reba McEntire at Tanglewood Front Page

    Packed Shed Ends 2019 Season

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 02nd, 2019

    From 4:20 PM to an exit at 5:45 PM country music star Reba McEntire laid down a vapor trail of a jet charged fifteen tunes. It was the final performance of a record setting 2019 Tanglewood season.

  • Labah Day Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 01st, 2019

    Labah

  • The Flick by Annie Baker Front Page

    Shotgun Players in Berkeley, California

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 01st, 2019

    One weakness in the storyline of Annie Baker's The Flick is the playwright’s inability to edit down from a three-hour running time to a length reasonable for the topic matter. Like many contemporary movie directors, she seems unable to abandon story elements that may stand well on their own but dilute the overall effect. One tract that is an unnecessary waste of 10 or 15 minutes is the opening scene. Not only does it bore to tears, but it takes some time for the audience to put that experience behind them and hope that things will get better. Fortunately, they do.

  • Little Shop of Horrors at Lyric Stage Front Page

    Plant Makes Lunch Meat of Actors

    By: Matt Robinson - Aug 30th, 2019

    Where can you see the story of a barely-sentient being that promises everyone whatever they want but ends up eating them alive? No! Not on the nightly news- It’s The Lyric Stage Company of Boston’s revival of “Little Shop of Horrors” which is being staged through October 6 at 140 Clarendon Street in Boston’s Back Bay.

  • Gladys Knight and The Spinners Front Page

    Soulful Nostalgia at Tanglewood

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 29th, 2019

    It was a soulful night of nostalgia at Tanglewood. The Spinners went on at 7 and cooked. We needed the heat on a cool wet night. In ever sense they warmed up the audience for Gladys Knight. There was a long intermission before she went on at ten of nine and by 10:25 after some 20 songs we made our way home.

  • Sea Wall/A Life at Hudson Theater in NYC Front Page

    Tom Sturridge and Jake Gyllenhaal

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 27th, 2019

    Sea Wall/A Life, two-one act plays now at the Hudson Theater in New York City through Sept. 29 takes you on an emotional roller coaster. In part, this is due to the spectacular performances by Tom Sturridge and Jake Gyllenhaal.

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