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  • Martha Graham Dance Company at Jacob’s Pillow

    The Oldest American Dance Group

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Aug 22nd, 2023

    The venerable and totally contemporary Martha Graham Dance Company was in residence from August 16 to August 20 at Jacob's Pillow. The dancers gave memorable and also frenzied performances.....

  • Williamstown artist Jane Hudson

    Major Arcana Paintings and 22-card Tarot Deck

    By: Hudson - Aug 24th, 2023

    These paintings, inspired by the Major Arcana cards in the traditional Rider-Waite tarot deck, are also the inspiration for a Major Arcana-specific 22-card tarot deck released by Jane Hudson this summer with WIld Soul River.  

  • Beauty and the Beast

    A Big Show Presented Small

    By: Karen Isaacs - Aug 26th, 2023

    The desire to produce shows that are well-known is understandable, but it is also important for theaters to focus on what they do best.

  • Boca Stage Moves

    Relocates to Larger Space

    By: Aaron Krause - Aug 30th, 2023

    The Delray Beach Playhouse is the new home for Boca Stage in Southeast Florida. Up until recently, Boca Stage mounted its productions in Boca Raton's intimate Sol Theatre. In its new space, Boca Stage will be able to seat more than 140 patrons, compared to 70 at the Sol.

  • Two Friends: A Tragedy In Gloucester

    Demise of the Fishing Fleet

    By: Steve Nelson - Aug 31st, 2023

    In a photo essay Steve Nelson documented the destruction and salvage of a torched fishing vessel "Two Friends." It's a poignant signifier of the demise of Gloucester's once vibrant fishing fleet and industry.

  • Gerry Bergstein Dithering Machines

    Gallery Naga

    By: NAGA - Aug 31st, 2023

    September at Gallery Naga opens with a bang--prepare to be transported into the frenetic universe that is Gerry Bergstein’s brain.   

  • Oppenheimer, the Film

    No Answers for Creative Impulses of Great Scientists

    By: Viktor Raykin - Sep 04th, 2023

    Oppenheimer, the film. Prepare your rotten tomatoes. The movie is loud, gray and one-dimensional.

  • Ballet Hispánico

    Launches Tour in Connecticut

    By: Ballet - Sep 05th, 2023

    Ballet Hispánico, the nation’s largest Latinx cultural organization and one of America’s Cultural Treasures, announces a 2023-24 Season tour stop at Garde Arts Center on Friday, October 6, 2023 at 8pm.

  • Lenox Jazz Stroll

    Schedule Updates

    By: Jazz - Sep 05th, 2023

    The Mill Town Foundation has announced an updated schedule for the Lenox Jazz Stroll. The timeframe will be the same as always, on the third weekend in September, but the times and some of the details have changed.  

  • Pause at Eclipe Mill Gallery

    Debi Pendel and Melanie Mowinski

    By: Eclipse - Sep 05th, 2023

    Melanie and I have wanted to collaborate for years, and finally decided to pause our other work to make it happen. Within the exhibit, we asked ourselves and now our viewers to pause time and consider something larger than our day-to-day selves and to ponder the deeper ideas of our existence.

  • Belonging and Stillness

    By: Cheng Tong - Sep 06th, 2023

    In the morning, we play qigong for about 90 minutes to circulate the qi we had gathered the previous evening throughout our entire body.  The Heavenly Horse Qigong routine is designed to work various areas of the body, and to prepare the body for whatever the day has in store for us.

  • Hippest Trip: The Soul Train Musical

    Dominique Morisseau's Second Musical About Black Song In The Late 20th Century at San Francisco's ACT

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 08th, 2023

    After her Broadway success with "Ain't Too Proud," which also premiered in the Bay Area, Morisseau pays homage to "Soul Train," the syndicated TV show that became the Black community's "American Bandstand." The playwright also successfully integrates a warts-and-all biography of creator and longtime host, Don Cornelius.

  • New Federal Theatre Opens Fall Season

    Gala and Micki Grant Premiere Directed by Woodie King Jr.

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 09th, 2023

    For over five decades, the New Federal Theatre has presented undiscovered talent like Denzel Washington, Debbie Allen, Phylicia Rashad, S. Epatha Merkerson, Issa Rae, La Tanya Richardson Jackson, Samuel L. Jackson, Chadwick Boseman, and Morgan Freeman in their first stage appearances. They premiered For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide. Led. by Woodie King Jr. and now Elizabeth Van Dyke, the New Federal Theatre is a national treasure.

  • Romeo and Juliet - Gounod's Opera

    Fine Voices and Acting of Young Opera San Jose Cast Carry Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 11th, 2023

    "Romeo and Juliet" reigns as the touchstone of love stories centuries after its creation. But the play offers depth of meaning and cautions in many other social realms which contribute to its greatness. Adapted in many genres, Gounod's opera remains perhaps the most compelling and enduring realization. Its lush music and tight adherence to the Bard's work yield a timeless masterpiece.

  • The Happiest Man on Earth by Mark St. Germain Returns

    Back by Popular Demand at Barrington Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 16th, 2023

    By popular demand Barrington Stage Company brings back a world premiere by Mark St Germain on the stage that bears his name. The Happiest Man on Earth is a one-man show based on the holocaust memoir The Happiest Man on Earth published by Eddie Jaku when he was one hundred years old. It is profoundly performed by Kenneth Tigar.

  • Il Trovatore

    One of Verdi's Most Challenging and Emotional Operas

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 19th, 2023

    The title character is Manrico, a troubadour and leader of a Roma troupe.  Unbeknownst to anyone but his adoptive mother, he is of noble blood and the brother of his arch enemy, Count di Luna.  They contest not only in the communal and political world but for the love of a woman, Leonora.

  • American Tenor Stephen Gould Dies at 61

    His Performances Were Always A Treat

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 20th, 2023

    Berkshire Fine Arts was fortunate to hear Stephen Gould sing Parsifal in Bayreuth two years ago. He retired from Bayreuth this summer when he was diagnosed with incurable cancer.

  • The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd

    Theatre Lab in Boca Raton

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 21st, 2023

    The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd is about a 12-year-old computer genius who convinces her uncle to travel back in time to repair her parents' relationship. A strong Florida Premiere production is running through Oct. 8 at Theatre Lab on Florida Atlantic University's campus in Boca Raton. The play won the 2022 Alliance/Kendeda National Graduate Playwrighting Competition at Alliance Theatre, where the world premiere production took place.

  • POTUS: Or Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive

    A President's Improprieties Trigger a Zany Cavalcade of Events

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 22nd, 2023

    The subtitle of the play suggests where it’s going.  But if you think that it may simply be misandristic, that wouldn’t be correct.  Given the crazy antics of these females who are close to the president, you could just as easily add the word dumbass in front of the word women.  In any case, the result is “POTUS,” a farce that had Berkeley Rep’s opening night audience laughing with glee from start to finish. But it's not for everyone.

  • Opera Philadelphia Presents 10 Days in a Madhouse

    World Premiere by Rene Orth

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 24th, 2023

    Rene Orth’s opera 10 Days in a Madhouse enjoyed a World Premiere at the Opera Philadelphia Festival. A tip off to where the weight lies in the opera was the stage set, immediately apparent when we enter the Wilma Theatre. The set is dominated by a Richard Serra-like sculpture. Our eyes and then our ears are fixed up where the orchestra tops the sculpture.

  • Blue: The Celebration of a Color

    Berkshire Artist Sarah Sutro Pariticapates at Somerville Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 25th, 2023

    Berkshire artist, Sarah Sutro, is participating in Blue: The Celebration of a Color at the Somerville Museum. In Sutro's case the blue is from the saturated sky of her watercolor, "Blue Landscape. The group show has been curated by Martha Friend.

  • The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs

    Technology Scores Big in the Storyline and the Score

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 26th, 2023

    Composer Mason Bates and librettist Mark Campbell strike gold with this focused bio that should find a place on the opera circuit. San Francisco Opera's stunning production along with superb performances make it even better. The title character is portrayed with all of his positive and negative complexity, and even operagoers who learn nothing new about Jobs will find the opera highly involving and entertaining.

  • Fall for Jazz in the Berkshires

    Grace Kelly at Stationary Factory

    By: Jazz - Sep 26th, 2023

    If you’re a follower of the regional jazz scene (and, the fact that you are on our mailing list suggests that you are), you may have already noticed that it is shaping up to be a busy autumn in the Berkshires. Starting with saxophone titan Grace Kelly this Friday at the Stationery Factory, something is going on every week…and often weekdays. Here’s a look at the first half of the season.  

  • Verdi's Simon Boccanegra at Opera Philadelphia

    Stellar Cast, Moving Production

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 02nd, 2023

    Opera Philadelphia knows how to produce opera. They recognize its multiple forms and multiple historic periods. No company in this country has spearheaded the development of new opera with such an effective program. Yet Philadelphia also continues to produce the tried and true with great style.

  • Roger Daltrey Brings Tommy to Tanglewood

    See Me, Feel Me, Touch Me

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 16th, 2018

    After nearly a half century lapse Tanglewood has doubled down on the vintage British rock group The Who. Last summer we heard Pete Townshend leading Quadrophenia with the Pops. Last night lead singer Roger Daltrey performed the entire 75-minute Tommy as well as three encores minus the orchestra.

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