Share

  • Mass MoCA Free to Berkshire Folks

    No Charge for Admission Dec. 1 to 21

    By: MOCA - Nov 26th, 2016

    The holiday season comes early this year. From December 1 through 21, MASS MoCA opens its doors and waives admission to all Berkshire County residents. MASS MoCA hopes to welcome as many friends and neighbors as possible with its first-ever Free Berkshire County program.

  • Holiday Leftovers

    The New Agit-Prop

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 26th, 2016

    A friend wrote of spending Thanksgiving in the kitchen and concern that I had passed mine contemplating the pending decline and fall of an American empire. The response set forth some concerns for the new era of social and political commentary. The end is near and starts now.

  • Legendary Art Dealer Dick Bellamy

    Judith E. Stein's Biography Eye of the Sixties

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 24th, 2016

    "Eye of the Sixties: Richard Bellamy and the Transformation of Art" by author Judith E. Stein has fleshed out an essential and enigmatic chapter in contemporary art. While entirely absorbed with the artists he discovered and exhibited Bellamy had an oddly contrarian indifference to making sales. When the artists he championed soared in the red hot art market he was nowhere to be seen. Reflecting his Eurasian heritage Bellamy was more a monk with a begging bowl than an aggressive gallerist.

  • Acybourn's Bedroom Farce At Huntington Theatre

    A Comedy of Manners, Wit and Whimsey

    By: Mark Favermann - Nov 24th, 2016

    When you put 4 couples and 3 bedrooms on one witty night, Alan Ayckbourn creates marital mishegoss with a British accent. Trevor and Susannah, with their marriage on the rocks, invade the bedrooms of their family and friends over the course of an evening, spreading chaos in their wake. Director Maria Aitken (The 39 Steps, Private Lives) returns to the Huntington Theatre for this light comedy of marital misunderstandings.

  • Boston Lyric Opera Does Turnage's Greek

    Retelling of Oedipus Rex OK's Incest

    By: David Bonetti - Nov 23rd, 2016

    Mark-Anthony Turnage created the kind of scandal the arts love when in 1988 he premiered his first opera "Greek." A punkish provocation, it set the hoary myth of Oedipus, he who killed his father and married his mother, in a declining Thatcherite Britain. In choosing it, the BLO, in a dynamic production, asks whether it is still relevant.

  • Photographer Eric Myrvaagnes' Stunning Book

    Captured by Light: Black and White Photographs- Fifty Years

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 22nd, 2016

    The elegant, exquisitely designed and printed book "Captured by Light: Black and White Photographs-Fifty Years" summarizes a lifetime of work by Eric Myrvaagnes.

  • Topher Payne’s Perfect Arrangement

    At Florida's Island City Stage

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 22nd, 2016

    The leadership of the multi-award winning Island City Stage, a bold and daring Wilton company near Ft. Lauderdale is dedicated to “producing theatrical experiences that positively impact the LGBT and general community,." “Perfect Arrangement” by Topher Payne centers on an effort to track down and fire homosexuals who worked for the U.S. government in the 1950s. .

  • Jonathan Dove's Flight at Juilliard

    Operatic Enchantments Fly

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 21st, 2016

    Jonathan Dove's Flight is given a near perfect mounting this fall at the Juilliard School. Juilliard's neighbor across the way could take a page on opera production from the young artists whose talent and sensibility bodes well for the future of the opera form.

  • King Charles III At Chicago Shakespeare

    After the Queen Dies

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 21st, 2016

    This is a thoughtful drama (with comic lines) about the nature of law and constitutionality and father-son relationships. Director Gary Griffin takes Mike Bartlett’s carefully shaped story and brings out its drama, compassion and relevance to the day’s events.

  • The Servant of Two Masters

    At Brooklyn's Theatre for a New Audience

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 20th, 2016

    The Polonsky Shakespeare Center mounts a charming production of Carlo Goldoni's famous play. Improvisation abounds. You'll hear about Flatbush and election night mares.

  • 2017 Whitney Biennial

    Sixty Three Artists to be Shown from March 17 to June 1

    By: Whitney - Nov 19th, 2016

    The Whitney Museum of American Art was founded in 1931 and opened its first of several venues in 1931. Initially American art was viewed as inferior to the School of Paris. That shifted after WWII with the ascent of the New York School. Early on the museum mounted Annuals which eventually evolved into Biennials. They have long been regarded as reflecting the latest developments in the field. With 63 participating artists the 2017 Whitney Biennial (March 17 to June 1) continues that tradition.

  • Mike Grgich Celebrates His Career In America

    93 Years Old and Still a Winemaker

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Nov 19th, 2016

    Mike Grgich emigrated to America after World War II. He moved to California following an American Dream. Today, he is a legendary winemaker who just turned 93.

  • Remembering Edward Albee

    A Critic Recalls Interactions with the Playwright

    By: Herbert Simpson - Nov 18th, 2016

    When Edward Albee died, the social networks were inundated with spontaneous comments. One admirer reminisced about the exquisite instructions on preparing the perfect crème brulee in Counting the Ways and made me realize how many such excerpts have stayed in my mind over the years. I’ve been thinking about them like memorializing snapshots – all those stimulating tricks with words, like Agnes wondering whether she can say “I dropped upstairs” and Jerry asking about saying “A dog I knew.”

  • Winter at The Mount

    Events Through February

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 18th, 2016

    Now that it is assured of ongoing financial stability The Mount, a landmark in the Berkshires, is moving toward increased winter programming., Here is a schedule of upcoming events.

  • Tony Winning Play on the Road

    The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 18th, 2016

    The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time closed on Broadway in September after 800 performances (including 23 previews) and won five Tony Awards, including Best Play and garnering a host of other honors. Our correspondent reports on the touring company that performed briefly in Palm Beach, Florida.

  • Winemaking at Chateau De La Dauphine

    Great Wines At Reasonable Prices

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Nov 18th, 2016

    Chateau de La Dauphine in Bordeaux offers wine tourism possibilities for all visitors, year round. Marion Merker heads the operation of this beautiful estate.

  • Tanglewood 2017

    Expanded Role for Andris Nelsons Includes Sharing Film Night

    By: BSO - Nov 17th, 2016

    In his most significant commitment yet to Tanglewood, Andris Nelsons will lead both the opening and closing BSO concerts, Mahler’s Symphony No. 2, Resurrection, and Beethoven Symphony No. 9; Mahler’s Symphony No. 4 with Kristine Opolais; an opera gala with Ms. Opolais and Dmitri Hvorostovsky performing excerpts from Simon Boccanegra, La traviata, and Eugene Onegin; the world premiere of John Williams’s Markings with violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter; and the first-ever BSO and festival concert performance of the complete Das Rheingold, a tour de force milestone in the history of the festival.

  • William Kentridge's Return of Ulysses

    The Father of Opera Celebrated

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 17th, 2016

    Claudio Monteverdi is considered the first major composer of an opera. The richness of his talent is on abundant display in William Kentridge’s direction of The Return of Ulysses.

  • Jon Robin Baitz's Vicuna

    World Premiere at Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 16th, 2016

    “Vicuna” is comedy rich in innuendo and roman à clef portrayals. I’ve seen several of Jon Robin Baitz’s plays in the past, but this one is a little different from his usually serious efforts as a dramatist.

  • Eastman Philharmonia at Alice Tully Hall

    Renée Fleming Sings Kevin Puts

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 16th, 2016

    The Eastman Philharmonia under the brilliant Neil Varon, performed Maurice Ravel, Kevin Puts and Serge Prokofiev at Alice Tully Hall.

  • From Silence by Anne Marilyn Lucas

    NY's Theater for the New City

    By: Aaron Kraus - Nov 16th, 2016

    The brutally honest play From Silence by Anne Marilyn Lucas is based on her observations of second generation Holocaust survivors and their families. The piece centers on a Jewish Holocaust survivor who, as a coping mechanism, has remained silent about her experiences in detention.

  • Playwright Lauren Gunderson Takes Action

    An Offer We Cannot Refuse

    By: Lauren Gunderson - Nov 15th, 2016

    Any theatre company, group, or person who wants to do a reading of my feminist political comedy, The Taming, on Inauguration Day 2017 can do so for free, with thanks to Playscripts.

  • Intriguing Wines From D.O.Navarra, Spain

    Diversity Rules

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Nov 15th, 2016

    Located in the 'Basque' country, the Navarra region is gaining recognition for producing superb wines at reasonable costs.

  • First Annual Berkies Awards

    Theatre VIPs Jam Mr. Finn's Cabaret

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 14th, 2016

    The Berkshire theatre gilterrati crammed into Mr. Finn's Cabaret for a raucous evening celebrating The First Annual Berkshire Theatre Awards. Seventeen arts journalists voted on 120 nominees in 25 categories chosen from artists in the 75 live theatre productions mounted in Berkshire County and adjacent areas between October 1, 2015 and September 30, 2016.

  • Venetian Coronation at Lincoln Center

    Gabriele Conducted By Paul McCreesh

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 13th, 2016

    For a Venetian Coronation, the golden wood of Alice Tully Hall is lit around the stage by floor floodlights cast upwards. The 1595 Coronation ritual inducted Marino Grimani who would rule until his death in 1605. The Baroque style of the performance was delivered with clarity and beauty Challenges in playing period instruments with fewer vents and using the high larynx to produce tones of exquisite beauty were not apparent in the formal but easy movements of the groups.

  • << Previous Next >>