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  • Renoir: the Body, the Senses

    Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 23rd, 2019

    On the occasion of the 100th anniversary since his death the Clark Art Institute has organized a scholarly exhibition Renoir: the Body, the Senses. At his best few 19th century masters can match his charm and popular appeal. His greatest works were included in the 1985-1986 blockbuster exhibition Renoir, which was shown in London and Paris before it came to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. It broke MFA records with 500,000 plus visitors. The Clark show by comparison is small and uneven.

  • Kian Soltani and Julio Elizalde at Mostly Mozart

    A Little Night Music at the Kaplan Penthouse

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 24th, 2019

    Cellist Kian Soltani partnered with pianist Julio Elizalde in a late evening concert in Lincoln Center's nightclub in the sky, the Stanley Kaplan Penthouse. Mostly Mozart presented Soltani, who like Mozart, was born in Austria.

  • International Contemporary Ensemble

    12th Annual Appearance at Mostly Mozart

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 27th, 2019

    The International Contemporary Ensemble started off its 12th annual Mostly Mozart season at the David Rubenstein Atrium in Lincoln Center. The first concert was free and attracted an overflow crowd. Bringing the audience up to date and beyond, Mostly Mozart has offered free concerts of contemporary music in an act of generosity. People appreciate the chance to listen to a new landscape of composers.

  • Murder For Two

    Popular Comic Murder Mystery

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 27th, 2019

    Murder for Two is a zany treat at Suburban Miami's Actors' Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre. Martin Landry gives a tour-de-force performance, playing more than a dozen murder suspects in hit musical comedy mystery. The two cast members prove multi-threats, as they not only act but play the piano like pros.

  • Escaped Alone and Here We Go by Caryl Churchill

    Anton’s Well Theater Company

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 28th, 2019

    Anton’s Well’s Artistic Director Robert Estes scored a coup by securing the Bay Area premieres of two one-act plays – Escaped Alone and Here We Go – by Caryl Churchill, who some consider Britain’s finest living playwright.

  • Orfeo & Euridice

    At The Bridge Yard

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 07th, 2019

    The spare nature of Orfeo & Euridice is well suited to a smaller opera company. Requiring only three principals, casting is simplified. This small entourage and extensive use of dance by nymphs also make it conducive to the barest of staging. Mikiko Uesugi’s set design of gauzy hanging sheets certainly qualifies.

  • Carl Chiarenza on Boston Photography

    Harvard Dissertation on Aaron Siskind First on Photography in US

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 07th, 2019

    During graduate study at Boston University photographer Carl Chiarenza was a professor, mentor and friend. We spoke at length about how JFK and the Vietnam War nudged him into studying art history. At Harvard he was the first American to write a dissertation on photography. It was a biography and critical study of then living American icon Aaron Siskind. Now retired from the University of Rochester he continues to create new work.

  • The Rolling Stone at Lincoln Center

    Deadly Plight of Gays in Uganda

    By: Edward Rubin - Aug 08th, 2019

    New York’s Lincoln Center Theater is presenting the American premiere of playwright Chris Urch’s The Rolling Stone. Sensitively directed by Saheem Ali – the play an import from London – is scheduled to run through Sunday, August 25th.

  • Emanuel Ax, Yo-Yo Ma and Leonidas Kavados

    Perform at Tanglewood's Ozawa Hall

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Aug 08th, 2019

    Three great musicians, one small music hall and an overflow lawn crowd made this special concert, a night to remember. Emanuel Ax, Leonidas Kavados and Yo-Yo Ma turned this marvelous summer night into magical music. It was an all Beethoven programp of three Piano trios.

  • Uma Thurman Stars in Ibsen's Ghosts

    Wrapping Another Diva Season for Williamstown Theatre Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 09th, 2019

    Another diva season wraps on the main stage of Williamstown Theatre Festival through August 18. A new translation of Henrick Ibsen’s Ghosts by Paul Walsh features Uma Thurman as Mrs. Helene Alving. In 2018 there were mixed reviews for her Broadway debut in Parisian Woman. It was a Beau Willimon rewrite of an 1888 play by Henri Becque.

  • Moulin Rouge! The Musical on Broadway

    Easy on the Eyes but a Mishmash

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 10th, 2019

    While easy on the eyes Moulin Rouge! The Musical a pastiche of some 70 songs slogs along at two and a half hours. It is a mongrel cut and paste of other and better material. If you liked the movie than this one's for you.

  • Little Gem at the Irish Repertory Theater

    Marsha Mason Stars in Elaine Murphy's Play

    By: Rachel de Aragon - Aug 09th, 2019

    Irish Repertory Theatre Presents the award-winning Little Gem by Elaine Murphy. This piece about three Irish women won the Fishamble New Writing Award in 2008 and the Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award in 2009. The density of her language and the poignant humor of her vision captivates.

  • Before the Meeting By Adam Bock

    Astonishing World Premiere at Williamstown Theatre Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 11th, 2019

    Last night, attending the world premiere of Before the Meeting by Adam Bock at Williamstown Thatre Festival, felt like an historic occasion in contemporary American theatre. This new play will surely make the rounds of regional theatres after a likely New York run. The success of future productions will entail finding a greal actress like Deidre O'Connell to perform the soon to be classic monlogue of Gail a recovering alcoholic.

  • National Black Theatre Festival, 2019

    Winston-Salem, North Carolina,7/29-8/3

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Aug 12th, 2019

    It was our first visit and participation at the National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. During the four days we experienced eight performances. The Festival attracts thousands of visitors every other year. It was a complex production, where a series of buses would transport audiences to a many theater and auditoriums all over two towns. The Marriott Hotel in downtown Winston served as the focal point and it was buzzing!

  • Yang Liping's Under Seige at Mostly Mozart

    Stunning Dance at the David Koch Theater

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 11th, 2019

    Yang Liping has created a dance drama in such startling colors and designs that the audience is swept into the single Ancient Pipa melody of the same title. The tapping of swords, soldiers cries and horses whinnying and snorting are all suggested as the song portrays the end battle of the war for control of China in 205 B.C. The armies of the Chu and the Han face off in dance. Blood has never been so beautifully suggested, as a mass of red feathers fly through the air, some streaking the bodies of soldiers.

  • Fall Springs at Barrington Stage Company

    Fracking a World Premiere Musical

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 15th, 2019

    Juke box musicals with butkis for plots have become the norm. Kudos to Barrington Stage for its world premiere Fall Springs which actually has a compelling book. But fracking, the musical, oh my goodness! While it has entertaining moments this creation by Peter Sinn Nachtrieb and Niko Tsakalakos is a whacky long shot. It's more than just a town that sinks in the sludge.

  • Bill Riley at Real Eyes Gallery in Adams

    Interrupted Landscapes

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 18th, 2019

    Bill Riley wears a number of hats. He is showing this month at Real Eyes the top notch gallery he runs in Adams. Mass, Now retired his day gig for many years was as a scene painter for the Metrpolitan Opera. Recently he has been free lancing for the hit Amazon comedy series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. He has the skill set to be a master forger to create works and sets in any medium or style. Many of these technical skills are applied to the works in the exhibition Interrupted Landscapes.

  • Jenufa by Leoš Janácek

    Produced by Santa Fe Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 19th, 2019

    With the exception of a little light relief in the wedding preparation, Jenufa is tense and emotionally charged from beginning to end. Janácek endows his lead characters with complexity and with demanding vocals. In keeping with the tone of the action, much of the vocalization is harsh, yet particularly in the orchestra, appealing passages emerge. Overall, the score fulfills many demands with great success.

  • The Pearl Fishers at Santa Fe Opera

    Georges Bizet with Libretto by Eugène Carmon and Michel Carré

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 20th, 2019

    Many operas have suffered a rocky road to recognition and appreciation, The Pearl Fishers, among them. Yet when one considers its virtues, it is hard to understand why. Santa Fe Opera presented a rare and much appreciated production.

  • Shakepeare's Macbeth

    A Production by Ft. Lauderdale's New City Players

    By: Aaron Krause - Aug 19th, 2019

    New City Players' dark and creepy Macbeth taps into the zeitgeist. This production in South Florida isn't perfect, but features admirable acting and vivid, foreboding sound effects. Ft. Lauderdale-based company's mounting runs through Sept. 1 in that city's downtown. For the most part, darkness shrouds the extremely intimate playing space, which offers a visceral theatrical experience.

  • All Quiet on the Western Front in Chicago

    At the Red Tape Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Aug 20th, 2019

    The Erich Maria Remarque novel All Quiet on the Western Front is a literary masterpiece. Perhaps yuu have read it or seen the classic 1930 film. One likely comes to this stunning stage production with many preconceptions. This galvanic production at Red Tape Theatre more than adequately meets out expectations.

  • The Thirteenth Child at Opera Santa Fe

    By Poul Ruders with Libretto by Becky and David Starobin

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 21st, 2019

    In an age of sweeping movement toward gender equity, Danish composer Poul Ruders has surprisingly drawn on a Grimm fairytale as a source for female heroics and female enabling. The result is a fable for adults – a taut and riveting opera, yet one that begs for more. Santa Fe Opera’s world premiere of The Thirteenth Child offers stunning production values that enhance the score and yield an engaging musical drama.

  • Ladies Night at Dell'Arte Opera Ensemble

    Bond, Musgrave and Viardot Intrigue and Engage

    By: Susan Hall - Aug 22nd, 2019

    Dell’Arte Opera Ensemble, always venturesome, presented an evening in which three female composers were featured Franz Liszt had said that in Pauline Viardot the world had finally found a woman composer of genius. Her short opera Cendrillon was performed in full.

  • Gladys Knight and The Spinners

    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.

  • Little Shop of Horrors at Lyric Stage

    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.

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