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Charles Giuliano

Bio:

Publisher & Editor. Charles was the director of exhibitions for the New England School of Art & Design at Suffolk University where he taught art history and the humanities. He taugh tModern Art and the Avant-garde for Metropolitan College of Boston University. After many years as a contributor, columnist and editor for a range of print publications from Art New England, Art News, the Boston Phoenix, the Boston Herald Traveler and Patriot Ledger, to mention a few, he went on line with Maverick Arts which evolved into a website.

Recent Articles:

  • On This Ground: Being and Belonging in America Front Page

    Revisionist Installation at Peabody Essex Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 17th, 2022

    The Peabody Essex Museum has long collected Native American material and is now doing so intensively. In that regard it is an outlier. Contemporary Native American artists have been egregiously neglected by the mainstream American art world — we lag far behind Canada. The PEM has just reinstalled its American collection, which runs from the Colonial era to the present, and it is an ambitious, intriguing, but problematic exhibition.

  • Deathtrap a Thriller Front Page

    At The Legacy Theatre

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jun 16th, 2022

    Ira Levin (author of novels Rosemary’s Baby and A Kiss Before Dying) wrote this play that he billed as a comedy/thriller in 1978. It had a long Broadway run and was made into the 1982 film starring Michael Caine, Christopher Reeves and Dyan Cannon.

  • Ringo to Starr at Tanglewood Afterall Front Page

    The tour Now Begins September 5

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 16th, 2022

    Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band - Steve Lukather, Colin Hay, Warren Ham, Gregg Bissonette, Hamish Stuart and Edgar Winter - revealed the revised itinerary for their September tour, includes all 12 of the dates that they recently had to postpone.  The tour now begins September 5 at Tanglewood, in Lenox, MA and concludes in Mexico City, Mexico on October 20.

  • Jungle Fever Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 14th, 2022

    jungle

  • Don Giovanni Front Page

    Produced by San Francisco Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 13th, 2022

    The dark comedy “Don Giovanni” holds a place as one of the greatest operas ever composed.  In the hands of a world class company like San Francisco Opera with a great orchestra and the ability to attract some of the best artists to grace the stage, the production is as musically rich as it is professionally performed.

  • Cabaret at Goodspeed Front Page

    Production Lacks Sting

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jun 12th, 2022

    Cabaret is one of the great musicals of the 1960s. Kander and Ebb (and book writer Joe Masterhoff) created a show that used a seedy, third-class nightclub as a metaphor for Germany slipping into the Nazi era.

  • Ringo Won't Starr at Tanglewood Front Page

    Cancelled Because of Covid

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 11th, 2022

    The Ringo Starr All Stars were cancelled from Tanglewood's Popular Artists last season. It was rescheduled for this coming week, Friday, June 17. The BSO announces that it yet again will be rescheduled.

  • Blithe Spirit by Noel Coward Front Page

    Witty Summer Fun in Chicago

    By: Nancy Bishop - Jun 11th, 2022

    Blithe Spirit is personal for me; it was my first involvement in live theater, when I joined the Cortez, Colorado, community theater many decades ago. I worked on the set, sold tickets and made new friends who were interested in the arts in that oil-boom town. Later I directed (William Inge’s Picnic) and acted (in Arthur Miller’s All My Sons and a western melodrama, Deadwood Dick, or the Game of Gold). As a child and teen in Chicago, I had often gone to the theater with my Aunt Belle and also attended theater as a student at UIC. But Blithe Spirit was the first time I experienced the stage. And I still can repeat many of the lines.

  • Hadestown Produced by Broadway SF Front Page

    Plays at the Orpheum Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 10th, 2022

    From this play’s outset, it is clear that “Hadestown” will have a distinctive style.  Although the musical’s auteur, Anaïs Mitchell, comes from the folk world, she developed a unique musical amalgam for the show with elements from blues, jazz, and pop in addition to folk.  Her orchestration is as unexpected as it is brilliant in providing a magnificent background sound. 

  • Rodin in the United States Confronting the Modern Front Page

    Organized by the Clark Art Institute

    By: Clark - Jun 09th, 2022

    The Rodin exhibition explores changing perceptions of the sculptor’s work, beginning with the first acquisition made by an American institution—the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1893—and Rodin’s controversial debut at Chicago’s World’s Columbian Exposition in the same year. The exhibition examines the collecting frenzy of the early twentieth century, promoted by noted philanthropist Katherine Seney Simpson, avant-garde performer Loïe Fuller, and collector Alma de Bretteville Spreckels

  • Todd McKie: Last but Not Least Front Page

    On View at Gallery NAGA

    By: NAGA - Jun 09th, 2022

    Last but Not Least is an exhibition of sixteen new paintings.  Created in the last nine months of Todd McKie’s life, the paintings are as fresh and witty as ever. 

  • Andy Warhol in Iran by Brent Askari Front Page

    Hit Premiere at Barrington Stage Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 09th, 2022

    Overall we loved this new play. The actors were compelling in their roles and the direction of Skip Greer navigated them nicely. There were twists and turns that kept us engaged.Henry Stram was a very good if not great Warhol. He was actually too pretty with none of Andy’s awkward enigma. This was a play after all and not a documentary. To portray an authentic Andy would have added another half hour at least. This production kept it tight and sweet.

  • San Antonio’s Young Women’s Leadership Academy Front Page

    Tried to Deny Afro-Indigneous Senior, Kayla Price Graduation Ceremony

    By: Fossil Free Media - Jun 07th, 2022

    On Friday June 3rd, the Dean of Schools and Principal at San Antonio’s Young Women’s Leadership Academy tried to deny Afro-Indigneous senior, Kayla Price, from walking in her ceremony because of the eagle feather beaded onto her graduation cap. The Young Women’s Leadership Academy (YWLA), part of the San Antonio Independent School District, ranks in the top 20 high schools in the United States. Per their Non-discrimination Statement,

  • Paintings by Haitian Artist Frantz Zéphirin Front Page

    Williams Features New Acquisitions

    By: WCMA - Jun 07th, 2022

    The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA)  presents Frantz Zéphirin: Selected Works, an exhibition of ten paintings by the renowned Haitian artist, whose work is also featured in the 2022 Venice Biennale. Tomm El-Saieh, a Haitian-born artist and curator who lives and works in Miami, organized the display for WCMA. El-Saieh’s work is the subject of Tomm El-Saieh: Imaginary City, a year-long solo exhibition at the Clark Art Institute.

  • Tiptoe Through the Tulips Word

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 06th, 2022

    yo

  • The Pajama Game Front Page

    Produced by 42nd Street Moon at the Gateway Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 06th, 2022

    Although “The Pajama Game” may not come across as an expressly political play, it was written when over 300 entertainers were still blacklisted as a result of House Un-American Activities Committee investigations.  The central clash is certainly a classic between capital and labor.  “Old Man” Hasler, the factory head, is played unsympathetically for his dishonesty and for his rigid rejection of a workers’ raise when the factory is doing extremely well.

  •  Belfast Girls by Jaki McCarrick Front Page

    Irish Repertory Theatre

    By: Edward Rubin - Jun 06th, 2022

    Belfast Girls, the Irish Rep’s current play by Jaki McCarrick is a sure-fire winner. Though all of the play’s action takes place on the transport ship Inchinnan in 1848 bound for Australia, the majority of the two act, 12-scene play with one intermission, takes place in a small, cramped, and windowless 5-bunk bed cabin in the ship’s steerage, and to a lesser degree on the ship’s deck where the girls can be seen contemplating their future.  

  • McConnia Chesser Narrates An Iliad at S&Co. Front Page

    Was the War Fought in Troy or Pittsfield

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 06th, 2022

    Following an all too familiar trend the playwrights, Lisa Peterson and Denis O’Hare, have rewritten the iconic epic poem The Iliad, to the here and now. In the one act play McConnia Chesser compresses a ten year war into 110 minutes. It's a daunting task that exhausts the performer and her audience.

  • Queen by Madhuri Shekar Front Page

    At Long Wharf

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jun 04th, 2022

    I wasn’t sure what to expect from this work by Madhuri Shekar and produced in partnership with the National Asian American Theater Company’s project. But I found it an engrossing, if not always totally motivated work.

  • Beehive: the ‘60s Musical Front Page

    Produced by Center REPertory

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 04th, 2022

    In an implicit nod to the growing marijuana and hallucinogenic drug culture of the decade, David Crosby famously said that if you can remember the ‘60s, you weren’t there.  Fortunately, for most of us who lived through it, that is a canard. 

  • The Sound Inside by Adam Rapp Front Page

    Produced by Marin Theatre Company

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 03rd, 2022

    A relationship staple in the catalog of dramatic themes is that of professor and student.  Traditionally, the professor is a man who takes sexual or emotional advantage of a female student, but that formula has diversified in recent decades.

  • Cats With Music by Andrew Lloyd Weber Front Page

    Produced by Troika Entertainment, at Golden Gate Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 03rd, 2022

    Who could predict that such a musical would set performance records for both the West End (21 years) and Broadway (a mere 18 years)?  But innovation doesn’t put butts in seats.  So, what propelled “Cats” to immortal fame?

  • Funny Girl at the August Wilson Theater Front Page

    Beanie Feldstein Disappoints

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jun 03rd, 2022

    Fanny Brice – the real-like comedian who is the title character – had that quality. Unfortunately, while Beanie Feldstein is talented and tries hard – she doesn’t.

  • Zoey’s PERFECT Wedding Front Page

    TheaterWorks in Hartford

    By: Karen Isaacs - Jun 03rd, 2022

    Zoey’s PERFECT Wedding now playing at TheaterWorks in Hartford looks at what happens when the “perfect” part of the wedding doesn’t happen. Playwright Matthew López has combined humor (some farce, some slapstick) with an insightful understanding of our need for human connection and love.

  • MASS MoCA Business Opportunity Front Page

    Call for Proposals

    By: MOCA - Jun 01st, 2022

    MASS MoCA is inviting concepts for the old Sprague Electric Company guardhouse at the main entrance of the MASS MoCA campus located on Marshall Street in North Adams, MA.  

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