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  • The English Concert at Carnegie Hall

    Watching a Female Leader Triumph

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 17th, 2023

    The English Concert led by Harry Bickett performs an annual Baroque opera, semi-staged at Carnegie Hall.  These performances are highly anticipated, for good reason.  This year's was no exception.

  • Dreamgirls at Goodspeed

    Musical Inspired by The Supremes

    By: Karen Isaacs - Dec 14th, 2023

    Dreamgirls features a predictable show biz story about the career of a successful entertainer, in this case, a girl singing group, first called the Dreamettes.  It is also the story of a ruthless young man (Curtis) who will control, lie, manipulate, and cheat to achieve his aims. When he hurts or destroys someone, his response “It’s business.”

  • Shakespeare & Company News

    Four for Next Summer

    By: S&Co - Dec 14th, 2023

    Shakespeare & Company announces the first four titles of the 2024 season, including a World Premiere and a musical exploration of Shakespeare’s language and music.  In addition to titles yet to be announced, Shakespeare & Company's 47th Season includes: 

  • Two for the Holidays

    Favorites Are Back

    By: Karen Isaacs - Dec 15th, 2023

    Not only is A Christmas Carol: A Ghost Story of Christmas back at Hartford Stage, but it is better than ever. It’s been missing due to the pandemic and its aftermath.

  • Jenny Holzer: Light Line

    Installation for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

    By: Guggenheim - Dec 11th, 2023

    From May 17 to September 29, 2024, the Guggenheim Museum will present the solo exhibition Jenny Holzer: Light Line, a reimagining of Holzer’s 1989 landmark installation.

  • Einstein at Princeton

    Opera Seen Through Domestic Prism

    By: Victor Cordell - Dec 08th, 2023

    In a compact manner, the libretto demonstrates the idealism of Einstein contrasted with the pragmatism of the women around him, while the story line covers political and social commentary; God and existence; the enormity of the creation of the atomic bomb; and more. Light touches and excerpts from other composers brighten the proceedings.

  • Victoria Bond's Illuminations

    Byzantine Chants at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 11th, 2023

    Victoria Bond is a composer who has experimented with many styles.  Over the years she has worked with Dr. Paul Barnes, a pianist and Greek Orthodox chanter, developing Illuminations on Byzantine Chant. Barnes had hoped to capture the wide emotional range and spiritual message of Orthodox Christianity,  Bond is captivated by this mystical world.

  • Jimmy Carter and The Cairo

    Looking at Old Snapshots

    By: Steve Nelson - Dec 05th, 2023

    Now a Berkshire resident Steve Nelson and his wife Jan resided high above D.C. when Jimmy Carter became president. This piece was inspired by looking at vintage snapshots.

  • Cross-Pollination by Deborah Kamy Hull.

    HallSpace Dorchester

    By: HallSpace - Dec 07th, 2023

    HallSpace presents Cross-Pollination, a collection of new work by Deborah Kamy Hull. Many of the cut, sewn, and painted textile works completed from 2020 to 2023 are constructed from old, used drop cloths and other repurposed materials. Deborah Kamy Hull has developed a vocabulary of graphic symbols using botanical and geometric forms. The garden as metaphor is a theme that flows through the work. Like memories, coded histories and other stories lie below the surface.

  • Opera at the Lyric in Chicago

    Daughter of the Regiment, Perfect. Jenufa, Not So

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 06th, 2023

    In the lobby of the Lyric Opera House in Chicago, you hear griping about management. Yet it is hard to imagine what people are talking about when you watch and hear the fall production of Gaetano Donizetti’s "Daughter of the Regiment. " A perfect production. 

  • The Salvagers by Harrison David Rivers

    Yale Rep

    By: Karen Isaacs - Dec 07th, 2023

    The Salvagers takes place in a Chicago winter, as a father and son (Boseman Salvage Senior and Junior) must break down the barriers between them, explore the secrets that have created these, and start to find peace with each other and romance in their lives.

  • Clark Makes Offer You Cannot Refuse

    Free Admission January Through March

    By: Clark - Dec 05th, 2023

    The Clark Art Institute will offer free admission for all visitors from January through March 2024. In its second year, the “Free for Three” program is part of the Institute’s ongoing effort to expand awareness of its programming and to welcome new visitors.  

  • 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. 

  • Unsilent Night by Phil Kline

    North Adams and New York are Both Treated to His Special Holiday Event

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 04th, 2023

    Phil Kline created a magical holiday event thirty years ago. This year, Unsilent Night in North Adams, MA was presented by MCLA Gallery 51/MOSAIC, nbCC, North Adams Chamber, Anna Farrington, Andrew Fitch, Isabelle Holmes & Todd Reynolds In collaboration with LumiNAMA Holiday Lights Walk.

  • The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

    A Lighthearted Look at the Obsessiveness of Middle School Geeks

    By: Victor Cordell - Dec 04th, 2023

    We meet a diverse group of young teens bound by a common skill – spelling - and a common goal – winning.  Spelling excellence is a grinding and lonely pursuit.  All who compete in this Bee are nerds, but each in their own way, and each is motivated by a different set of circumstances.  The audience will recall kids they’ve known and enjoy a light-hearted and entertaining look at growing up.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Dragon Lady

    Enrapturing Tales About a Philippine Family Unlike Yours

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 30th, 2023

    Who would have thought that a solo performance about a family on the seedy edge of society as told by one of its descendants would captivate a theater audience? Sara Porkalob writes, tells, and sings stories of surviving entertainingly and with consummate magnetism and conviction.

  • Barrington Stage Anounces 2024 Programming

    La Cage aux Folles and Next to Normal

    By: BSC - Nov 29th, 2023

    BSC will produce the Tony Award-winning musical La Cage aux Folles, and the Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning musical, Next to Normal, which will be directed by Alan Paul, in a co-production with Round House Theatre, Bethesda, MD.

  • 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.

  • Rhiannon Giidens Broadends the Silk Road

    In San Diego The Trancontinental Railroad arrive

    By: Sharon Eubanks - Nov 28th, 2023

    The Transcontinental Railroad connected the Eastern and Western United States the same way that the Silk Road of Asia connected the Orient to Europe. Upon completion of the railroad, goods that would take six months to travel by boat around the Horn from the West to East Coast now were transported across the country in days. Most importantly, ideas and culture were transported. This crisscrossing changed the United States and made it the superpower it is today.

  • Above the Fold at Cape Ann Museum

    A Million Images Donated by Owners of Gloucester Daily Times

    By: CAM - Nov 30th, 2023

    The captivating photographs in the exhibition draw on an important archive of an estimated one million photographs, a recent acquisition donated to the Museum by the North of Boston Media Group, owners of the Gloucester Daily Times. Through the photographs and personal accounts of more than one dozen GDT photographers, the exhibition reflects the people and stories of Cape Ann and shares the integral role that local photojournalism plays in documenting the community.

  • 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.

  • Holiday Theatre in Connecticut

    A Christmas Carol – A Ghost Story of Christmas

    By: Karen Isaacs - Nov 26th, 2023

    More versions of A Christmas Carol are throughout the area. The Downtown Cabaret Theater in Bridgeport has a child-oriented, musical version through Sunday, Dec. 30. Remember you sit at tables and can bring or purchase food. Stony Creek’s Legacy Theatre returns with a musical version through Sunday, Dec. 10. Another musical, Christmas Carol is at New Haven’s Shubert Theater on Friday, Dec. 22, and Saturday, Dec. 23.

  • Guys and Dolls

    World of Damon Runyon, Music and Lyrics of Frank Loesser

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 25th, 2023

    The musical gives a peek into the marginalized world of gamblers and performers around Broadway during the Depression. While running floating craps games as a profession, Nathan Detroit has eluded marriage to nightclub singer, Adelaide, for 14 years. Out-of-towner Sky Masterson is an occasional participant in Nathan's games. Needing $1,000, Nathan bets the bet-on-anything Sky that he can't induce a certain woman to go to Havana (Cuba!) with him for dinner. That woman happens to be Sarah, a uniformed member of the Times Square Save-a-Soul Mission, so Nathan feels comfortable with his bet. Well.....

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