Front Page
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Arms and the Man
G. B. Shaw's Classic Comedy
By: - Mar 13th, 2026During the Serbo-Bulgarian War, a Swiss mercenary fighting for Serbia sneaks into the home of a Bulgarian military leader and establishes a relationship with his daughter. Shaw's anti-war tract also skewers issues of social class and traditional notions of honor.
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Tristan and Isolde at the Met Opera
A Musical and Visual Treat
By: - Mar 10th, 2026The Metropolitan Opera is proposing a future with its new production of Tristan und Isolde. Directed by the now middle-aged enfant terrible Yuval Sharon, it is in part a test of his suitability for the Der Ring des Nibelungen, which will follow in 2027. Do we imbibe Richard Wagner’s musical potion in Sharon’s new take on the mythic love story?
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Spirit And The Dust, Deutsches Theater, Berlin
Playwright: Noah Haidle, Director: Anna Bergmann
By: - Mar 08th, 2026This is how the Deutsches Theater in Berlin announced Noah Haidle's most recent play, 'Spirit And The Dust,' which was produced as a World Premiere: "Noah Haidle, an award-winning playwright and screenwriter whose works have been performed on Broadway, in the US, and worldwide, has created a great play about what we call life: about friendship, late love, and deep pain. After The Homemaker and Birthday Candle at the Deutsches Theater, director Anna Bergmann is staging a world premiere by Noah Haidle for the third time."
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Asolo Luminary Award
Tony-winners Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty
By: - Mar 13th, 2026Since they first met at a musical theater workshop in 1982, Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty have become two of the most important contributors to musical theater. They won Tony Awards in 1998 for their score to “Ragtime,” were nominated for Academy Awards and Golden Globes Awards for the animated film “Anastasia” and have enjoyed success with such shows as “Seussical,” “Once On This Island” and the Broadway version of “Anastasia.”
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Dishwasher Dialogues, Art and Love in Paris
A Fabulous Bubble
By: - Mar 11th, 2026I think I returned to Europe because I felt less of an exile here. It has nothing to do with passports. I think, at times, that exiles don’t exist. They’re a useful concept for people who exist in places between places. They don’t have any coordinates, no national longitudes, and latitudes.
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Hell's Kitchen
Equity Touring Production in Ft. Lauderdale
By: - Mar 12th, 2026Hell's Kitchen is an inspiring and invigorating Broadway musical inspired by musical artist Alicia Keys' youth. The jukebox musical features songs composed by Keys.
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Christian Petzold at Lincoln Center
FLC Presents Iconic Filmmaker's Signatre Works
By: - Mar 12th, 2026Film at Lincoln Center announces “Christian Petzold In Person,” a seven-film showcase of the German director’s signature works, with most films presented on 35mm. Christian Petzold has said that he always wants to work in Kodak color, the only film stock that can convey his concepts. March 16-19 in advance of the US premiere of Petzhold's Miroirs No. 3.
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The Mount and NY's Grace Church Collaborate
Wharton's Roman Fever a New Opera
By: - Mar 10th, 2026The Mount and Grace Church Celebrate Edith Wharton with a One-Night-Only Event on April 9th in NYC – Adapting Wharton: The Operatic Reimagining of Roman Fever
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Sarasota's Asolo Repertory Theatre
Promises Greatest Season on Earth
By: - Mar 10th, 2026Boasting in the promotional style of P.T. Barnum and the Ringling Brothers, Asolo Repertory Theatre promises “The Greatest Season on Earth” for 2026-27 with two world premieres, including one about Sarasota’s rich circus history.
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Jason Berger at Childs Gallery
A Founder of Boston's Direct Vision
By: - Mar 10th, 2026Jason Berger created a gestural style of landscape painting that he promoted as Direct Vision. It relates to French art, where Berger worked with a Traveling Fellowship upon graduation from the Museum School. He and his wife, Marilyn Powers, were active in Newbury Street galleries. The best works were brushy and expressive with saturated color. The white of canvas gave the sense of sketches and watercolors.
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Tanglewood Adds Popular Artists
Snap Crackle and Pop
By: - Mar 09th, 2026The Tanglewood Popular Artist Series adds three blockbuster shows to this summer’s lineup: Hugh Jackman with Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops (August 11, 7 p.m.), Brandi Carlile (August 18, 7 p.m.), and John Fogerty and Steve Winwood (September 6, 7 p.m.).
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The Counter by Meghan Kennedy
TheatreWorks Hartford
By: - Mar 03rd, 2026Kennedy has written some almost poetic lines. She displays a deep understanding of how bruised people persuade themselves of their own reality. The issues she brings up about love, death, caring and more are done subtlety and in character. No preaching or hitting the audience over the head with a “moral.”
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The Dishwasher Dialogues, Death and Taxes
Art and Immortality at the Customs Depot
By: - Mar 05th, 2026From the very beginning, I wanted to leave my stamp on the cultural matrix of my time. A word to the wise guy: if, as a painter, immortality isn’t high on your list, then you should do something else.
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Centenary of Martha Graham Company
The Sarasota Ballet
By: - Mar 01st, 2026Graham’s death in 1991 led to a protracted legal battle over her work that bankrupted the company and shuttered it for several years; Janet Eilber is credited with turning things around by showcasing masterpieces by Graham alongside newly commissioned works and providing an historical perspective to make them all more accessible.
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Berlinale 2026 In Berlin
From February 12 to 22
By: - Feb 23rd, 2026One of the biggest international film festivals world wide, the Berlinale in Berlin, Germany is history for this year again. From February 12 to 22, around 200 films from all over the globe were shown in Berlin at the Potsdamer Platz film headquarters and around town.
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A New Sound for Sarasota Opera
Under New General Director Richard Russell
By: - Mar 02nd, 2026Audiences should not expect drastic changes, but subtle shifts, like introducing Gilbert and Sullivan for the first time. “I have many guilty pleasures in my life. One of them is ice cream and one of them is Gilbert and Sullivan,” Russell said in the announcement.
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Everyone Digs Bill Evans in Berlin
Grant Gee Wins Silver Bear for Best Direction
By: - Feb 25th, 2026Bill Evans, as portrayed in the film Everybody Digs Bill Evans—which earned Grant Gee a Silver Bear for Best Director at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2026—is inarguably one of the greatest jazz pianists of the last century.
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The Dishwasher Dialogues, I Have Seen Four People Die
Running with the Bulls
By: - Feb 26th, 2026I have seen four people die in my life so far, that’s it. I want to recount this. The first man I saw die drowned off a beach in Mallorca. When they hauled him out, he was still alive and foaming at the mouth, as if he’d swallowed soap and not seawater. He died a few minutes later. I was eight years old.
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A Case for the Existence of God
New City Players in Wilton Manors
By: - Feb 26th, 2026New City Players has mounted a moving professional production of Samuel D. Hunter's tense but hopeful drama, "A Case for the Existence of God." Hunter's tense yet hopeful drama feels healing in today's divisive world.
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Andy Moerlein at Boston Sculptors
Storyteller's Doubt
By: - Feb 27th, 2026Boston Sculptors Gallery presents A Storyteller’s Doubt, a selection of Andy Moerlein’s newest work on view April 2 – May 3, 2026. Offering larger than life woodcarvings as well as paintings, photographic collage and an immersive installation, the show also features collaborations with two esteemed colleagues.
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The Recipe at La Jolla Playhouse
The Magic of Julia Child
By: - Feb 23rd, 2026Julia Child was one of America’s most beloved chefs. Her cooking show, The French Chef, which aired originally on PBS can still be found on the internet. Who was Juia Child? How did she come to be this exalted personality?
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Yo, or Love Is a Rebellious Bird, by Anna Fitch and Banker White
Silver Bear for Documentary In Berlin International Film Festuval
By: - Feb 21st, 2026Yo, the only documentary in the main competition at the Berlin International Film Festival, was shown at the Berlin Palast with "the team" in attendance. Banker White, co-director, cradled a puppet rendition of Yo, the film’s lead character, in his arms as he helped her “sign” a poster hung above the red carpet. Winner Silver Bear for Artistic Achievement
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10 x 10 at Barrington Stage
Brightening Winter Gloom
By: - Feb 16th, 2026With a cast of Barrington Stage Company favorites, BSC presents 10 fast-paced plays full of drama, comedy, wit, and irreverence, in its annual 10x10 New Play Festival, the cornerstone of Pittsfield’s Upstreet Winter Arts Festival. Now in its fifteenth year, 10x10 will run for five weeks, from February 12 through March 15, on the St. Germain Stage at the Sydelle and Lee Blatt Performing Arts Center in Downtown Pittsfield. Get tickets now as this usually sells out.
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The Dishwasher Dialogues, Groping for Light
Secrets of the Cave
By: - Feb 18th, 2026The men tried to impress the ladies. We on the staff just raised our eyes and said ‘oh, oh, another major bullshitter’. Few simply said, ‘ahh, c’est un excellent vin’. Oh no, most of them had to embellish with comments about le bouquet, la robe, les larmes, la belle attaque, la couleur, and tra-la-la.
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My Fair Lady
The Wick Theatre in Boca Raton, Fla.
By: - Feb 19th, 2026The Wick Theatre in Boca Raton presents an engaging, yet imperfect professional production of "My Fair Lady" through Sunday. The 1950's musical's basis is George Bernard Shaw's 191 witty and satiric play, Pygmalion.
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