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  • Compagnie Käfig at Jacob’s Pillow

    Final Company in Residence, 2023 Season

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Aug 29th, 2023

    For PIXEL, by Compagnie Käfig, today based near Lyon, France, ten male Hip Hop dancers, French style, a woman contortionist, a roller-skater, small robots carrying tiny lights, and a huge metal hoop shared and interacted on stage with highly sophisticated projections, music, and sounds.

  • Adam Tendler and Cage at the Crypt

    Andrew Ousley's Death Defying Death of Classical

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 08th, 2023

    Leave it to the brilliant impresario Andrew Ousley and his music series, Death of Classical,  to bring us an incredible and surprising evening of John Cage music. Before Cage moved on to the concepts of indeterminacy and chance, he composed more conventionally arced works for the prepared piano, in which screws were systematically and specifically applied to some strings in a grand piano, Cage clearly began in one place and ended up in another.  Sonatas and Interludes for prepared piano is a deliberate whole. 

  • Crowns

    An Uplifting Celebration of African-American Women and Hats They Wear To Church

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 14th, 2023

    Hats are an integral part of the African-American woman's church attendance. Playwright Regina Taylor celebrates not only hats but the women that wear them - their fortitude, their triumphs, and their tragedies. Animated vignettes and a gospel dominated song book provide for a rousing entertainment.

  • Ellen Shattuck Pierce Taking Place

    Boston's Hall Space

    By: Hall Space - Sep 15th, 2023

    Hall Space presents Ellen Shattuck PIerce "Taking Place." It's a lively exhibition of relief and hand colored laser prints.

  • The Addams Family

    A Fun Look At The Ghoulish Family

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 16th, 2023

    Horrors! Guess who's coming to dinner. Gomez and Morticia's daughter Wednesday has fallen in love and wants to marry a "normal" young man. She has even invited him and his family over for a meal. What can be done to stop such a fearsome turn of events?

  • Bald Sisters

    A Clash of Cultural and Family Values.

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 19th, 2023

    One Cambodian-American sister has married a Christian pastor and has remained in Dallas, where the mother had resettled the family. The younger sister had moved to New York City, rejecting some of the family's values, but reconnecting with Buddhism. When their mother dies, the sisters face conflicts that extend well beyond dealing with death rites.

  • Dopplegangers at the Park Avenue Armory

    Jonas Kaufman and Helmut Deutsch Double Our Pleasure

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 28th, 2023

    I like to attend an event without reading the build-up. This gives me a chance to respond viscerally. Every event at the Park Avenue Armory is tasteful. Pierre Audi, the artistic director, provides this. He is unique in New York.

  • Nollywood Dreams

    A Riotous Look at Making It in the Nigerian Film Industry

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 06th, 2023

    Set in Lagos in the ‘90s, the story centers on a young woman who hopes to break into show business by responding to an open audition for the lead in a movie. Many universal issues arise, but with the addition of West African context and characters.

  • Vermont Symphony Orchestra

    Made in Vermont Series

    By: VSO - Oct 10th, 2023

    The Vermont Symphony Orchestra is returning to Bellows Falls on Sunday, November 5, with a special matinee at the Bellows Falls Opera House. The performance is part of the VSO’s 2023 “Made in Vermont Series;” shows highlighting guest artists from the Green Mountain State’s vibrant indie, folk, and rock scene. 

  • Annie on Tour

    Non-equity tour plays Ft. Lauderdale

    By: Aaron Krause - Oct 13th, 2023

    In a new, non-equity national tour of Annie, the titular character shines bright. Cast is comprised of performers at the top of their game. The Ft. Lauderdale run continues through Oct. 22, before the show heads to Orlando.

  • Wim Wenders at Lincoln Center

    Film Festival Premieres The Tokyo Toilet

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 13th, 2023

    Wim Wenders new film, "The Tokyo Toilet," had its New York premiere at the New York Film Festival in Lincoln Center in New York. A Tokyo toilet cleaner, Hirayama, is played brilliantly and subtly by Yakusho Koji. Hirayama steps out of his small Tokyo home and looks up at the sky.  Another perfect day begins. Now. Not Next. These phrases pepper the film often. 

  • The Defiant Requiem Foundation Explores Survival

    Verdi Requirm Was Performed at Terezin

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 13th, 2023

    The Defiant Requiem Foundation, has a signature concert performance of the Verdi Requiem, as it was performed in the Terezin concentration camp over and over again. The original chorus changed constantly as members were transferred to Auschwitz.

  • Inama Releases I Palchi

    Wine from Terraces of Monte Foscarino

    By: Inama - Oct 19th, 2023

    On its third release, I Palchi 2021 follows the path of research created by the Inama family: constantly improving in order to pursue ever more ambitious goals, in search of the highest purity of fruit.

  • Lizzie – a rock concert in forty whacks

    Hartford Theatre Works

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 19th, 2023

    Historians and biographers do not agree that Lizzie, in fact, did commit the murders. They point to her uncle as having motive and opportunity, plus the fact that her father was not well-loved in the town.

  • Joyce Di Donato Teaches at Carnegie Hall

    Master Classes for Artists and Listeners Too

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 26th, 2023

    Joyce Di Donato offered three master classes at Carnegie Hall. Di Donato discussed something she learned during that long-ago City Opera performance of "Dead Man Walking." You have to leave space for the listeners to enter the music. This space is created by not answering all the questions the listening ear may have. That is something for all of us to think about – particularly people committed to the long-range success of classical music.

  • Theatre Struggles in Connecticut

    Rebound from Pandemic

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 27th, 2023

    In Connecticut, we have seen Long Wharf Theatre vacate its longtime home in New Haven; with no home, it is presenting what shows it does in a variety of mostly smaller venues.

  • Pride and Prejudice at Hartford Stage

    Disappointing Burlesque version

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 31st, 2023

    If Jane Austen is a favorite author and you have watched and enjoyed every film and TV production of Pride and Prejudice, you might think the current production at Hartford Stage would be a delight. BUT for many of you, me included, it isn’t.

  • Museum of Art and Design Burke Prize

    Selva Aparicio 2023 Winner

    By: MAD - Nov 02nd, 2023

    The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) announces Selva Aparicio as the winner of the 2023 Burke Prize. Established in 2018, the Museum’s biennial prize honoring excellence in contemporary craft is named for craft collectors Marian and Russell Burke. It awards an unrestricted $50,000 to an artist aged 45 or under working in the United States.

  • Artist Carol K. Brown is Something Else

    At Nohra Haime Gallery in New York

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 03rd, 2023

    Carol K. Brown’s latest work "Someplace Else" consists of watercolor paintings and a series of drawings titled "Modified Husband." This exhibition is a culmination of Brown’s desire for detail, layered with humorous subject matter.

  • The Elixir of Love

    Donizetti's Frothy Comedy at San Francisco Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 21st, 2023

    Poor Nemorino is in love with his employer, Adina, but she has other things in mind. Along comes Dr. Dulcamara, an itinerant snake oil salesman, who has just the love potion that will make Nemorino irresistible to Adina. Of course, it's really red wine. Frivolity ensues and all live happily ever after.

  • I Can Get It for You Wholesale

    Classy Revival by Classic Stage Company.

    By: Karen Isaacs - Nov 27th, 2023

    You can see why this show had a respectable run on Broadway in 1962; you can also understand why it didn’t run longer.

  • The Berlin Diaries

    Rolling World Premiere at South Florida's Theatre Lab

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 29th, 2023

    As part of the National New Play Network Rolling World Premiere program, The Berlin Diaries is experiencing its stage debut as an impressive fully-staged production at Theatre Lab, the professional resident company of Florida Atlantic University (FAU) in Boca Raton. "The Berlin Diaries," by Andrea Stolowitz, is not just another Holocaust play. Instead, it has an unorthodox structure and seems almost like a detective story.

  • Cuisine of the Gilded Age

    Eating Well Is the Best Revenge

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 04th, 2023

    Americans are fascinated by the filthy rich. Audiences lapped up five seasons of Downton Abbey. Now Julian Fellowes has moved the franchise from PBS to HBO. We follow the robber barons and their social climbing wives on the sumptuous but smarmy Gilded Age. This grand but shallow soap opera is lavish and entertaining. It is worth watching for costumes and spectacle. We are enthralled by a sit down dinner for 60 set in a Newport Cottage. We recommend Becky Libourel Diamond's cook book with recipes to emulate the fine dining seen in the series.

  • In Our Hands: Native Photography, 1890 to Now

    Minneapolis Museum of Art

    By: MIA - Dec 04th, 2023

    Presenting over 150 photographs of, by, and for Indigenous people, “In Our Hands” welcomes all to see through the lens held by Native photographers.

  • Cape Ann Museum Promised 300 Modern Works

    Commitment by Janet and William Ellery “Wilber” James

    By: CAM - Dec 04th, 2023

    This landmark donation of over 300 exemplary pieces of American art brings new genres and masterworks to the Museum’s holdings, including pivotal pieces by Winslow Homer, George Aarons, Cecilia Beaux, Stuart Davis, Adolph Gottlieb, Marsden Hartley, Eric Hudson, Anna Hyatt Huntington, Paul Manship and Jane Peterson amongst numerous others. 

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