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  • Jacob's Pillow Schedule

    Dance in the Berkshires

    By: Pillow - Apr 11th, 2024

    Jacob’s Pillow announces that tickets are now on sale to the general public for the full schedule of programming at this summer’s Dance Festival, which will offer nine weeks of performances by world-class artists, live music, and free and paid family-friendly events, on indoor and outdoor stages. In addition to featuring local and regional artists, the festival will include dance companies traveling from across the United States, Canada, England, Switzerland, Italy, Argentina, Spain, and beyond. 

  • Doubt a Parable

    Revival on Broadway

    By: Karen Isaacs - Apr 11th, 2024

    Though John Patrick Shanley’s play opened in 2004, he wisely set it in 1964. The Catholic church was in turmoil, but not for the priest abuse scandals that were roiling the church in 2004. The turmoil was caused by changes implemented by Pope John Paul the XXIII and Vatican Two, including the dropping of the Latin mass, proclamations on religious tolerance, and a philosophy that the church needed to be more involved with the community.

  • Macbeth, an undoing, at Theatre for a New Audience

    Zinnie Harris Reacts to Shakespeare

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 12th, 2024

    Theatre for a New Audience (TFANA) is producing Macbeth (an undoing) at the Polonsky Shakespeare Center in Brooklyn. The Royal Lyceum’s production of Macbeth (an undoing) at TFANA is a promising start to a reciprocal partnership, The Shakespeare Exchange, between Royal Lyceum and Theatre for a New Audience.

  • Yinka Shonibare CBE: Suspended States

    London's Serpentine Gallery

    By: Serpentine - Apr 11th, 2024

    For over 30 years, Yinka Shonibare CBE has used Western art history and literature to explore contemporary culture and national identities. Suspended States is the artist’s first London solo exhibition in over 20 years. It showcases new works, interrogating how systems of power affect sites of refuge, debates on public statues, the ecological impact of colonialisation and the legacy of imperialism on conflict and consequential attempts at peace.

  • The Kite Runner

    Broadway Tour of an Insightful Look into Growing Up Privileged in Afghanistan

    By: Victor Cordell - Apr 10th, 2024

    Twelve-year-old Amir comes from wealth and the dominant Pashtun tribe in Afghanistan. His only close friend, the illiterate Hassan, is not only from the deprived minority Hazara tribe but is the son of the servant of Amir's father. Hassan's kite running skills allow Amir to compete at the highest level in this important activity, but Amir will betray the trust of friendship, and the consequences reverberate.

  • Ferrin Contemporary Update

    From North Adams to the World

    By: Ferrin - Apr 11th, 2024

    Last fall, as Ferrin Contemporary shifted directions, we knew that moving the gallery meant we would have more time to focus on the work and exhibitions featuring gallery artists. It also gave us the freedom to travel to museums where their work is now on view and attend public events.

  • Tanglewood Popular Artists

    Three Acts Added

    By: BSO - Apr 09th, 2024

    Pop acts at Tanglewood this summer.

  • Gloucester's Matthew Swift Gallery

    Exhibition One Life

    By: Matthew Swift - Apr 09th, 2024

    I am pleased to introduce you to a new exhibition called One Life, curated with the inspirations of dance, plant life, and Coleridge’s poem “The Eolian Harp.”  

  • Singer/Songwriter Carsie Blanton

    Returns to Next Stage Arts in Putney Vermont

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 10th, 2024

    Carsie Blanton is a songwriter with hooks, chutzpah, and revolutionary optimism. Inspired by artist-activists including Nina Simone and Woody Guthrie, her catalog careens through American popular song from folk and swing to pop-punk protest anthems.

  • Birds and Balls

    Two Lively One-Act Operas From Innovative Opera Parallèle

    By: Victor Cordell - Apr 07th, 2024

    Imagine one opera about the heralded 1973 "Battle of the Sexes" tennis match and another about an obscure Belgian bird singing competition. How would they be packaged in a program? Of course, by framing them as broadcasts from ABC's Wide World of Sports, with Howard Cosell at the mic. Innovative production techniques lift these already interesting little gems.

  • Kristina Wong, Sweatshop Overlord

    ACT Presents an Award Winning Autobiographical Pandemic Experience

    By: Victor Cordell - Apr 05th, 2024

    When Kristina Wong's performing career was shut down by Covid, she turned to a skill that many Asian women learn from their mothers - sewing. Using social media and meeting technology, she organized a brigade of "aunties" who produced many thousands of cloth masks when masks were in short supply. In a high energy performance, she frames this personal experience in the context of the political world of 2020-21.

  • TEETH: When Men Attack, Her Body Bites Back

    A Pop/Horror Musical at Playwrights Horizons

    By: Jessica Robinson - Apr 05th, 2024

     Drawing inspiration from the 2007 cult-horror film by Mitchell Lichtenstein, this energetic show satirizes purity culture and sexual desire while tossing in a bit of biting commentary on misogyny.  

  • Season of Hits Planned for Lyric Stage

    Programming Proven Winners

    By: LYRIC - Apr 06th, 2024

    From Urinetown to Hello Dolly Boston's Lyric stage has programmed a seasons of hits. Unabashedly Artistic Director Courtney O’Connor says, “We’re thrilled to share six stories that focus on character connection and joy told by artists you already know and love and new artists we can’t wait for you to meet."

  • General Manager of Met Opera Competes with Trump

    Preivew of John Adams' El Nino at Works & Process

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 04th, 2024

    John Adams’ masterpiece Oratorio, El Nino, is being given a full production at the Metropolitan Opera this spring. The work premiered at Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris in 2000.  Kent Nagano conducted.  Luxury casting included Dawn Upshaw, Lorrraine Hunt Lieberson and Willard White

  • Comedy at Barrington Stage Company

    Laughter in Pittsfileld

    By: BSC - Apr 03rd, 2024

    Comedy reigns this summer in the Berkshires! Barrington Stage Company (BSC) is pleased to announce that it will be the new home of the Berkshire Comedy Festival, produced by the Long Island Comedy Festival in partnership with BSC. The company will also present special preview performances of Alison Larkin: Grief...A Comedy, written and performed by Berkshire resident, writer, and comedian Alison Larkin, prior to its UK premiere and world tour this summer.

  • Steinberg/ATCA

    Playwrights Vying for Annual Award

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 02nd, 2024

    Six play finalists are in the running for a major national annual award presented by theater critics. The American Theatre Critics Association annually presents the 2024 Harold and Mimi Steinberg/ATCA New play Award. The winner will be announced in May.

  • Gatsby the Musical

    American Repertory Theatre

    By: ART - Apr 02nd, 2024

    Gatsby is directed by Tony Award-winning director Rachel Chavkin (Hadestown; Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812; Moby-Dick) with choreography by Tony Award winner Sonya Tayeh (Moulin Rouge!). The production features an original score by international rock star Florence Welch (Florence + The Machine) and Oscar and Grammy Award nominee Thomas Bartlett (Doveman), and a book by Pulitzer Prize winner Martyna Majok (Cost of Living). Keenan Tyler Oliphant is associate director and Camden Gonzales is associate choreographer. Casting will be announced at a later date. 

  • Henrick Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People

    Stunning Revival on Broadway

    By: Karen Isaacs - Apr 01st, 2024

    Jeremy Strong stars in revival. Audiences may be amazed by how many issues in Ibsen's play equate to issues in our times.

  • Biennial Prilla Smith Brackett Award

    Davis Museum at Wellesley College

    By: Davis - Apr 02nd, 2024

    The Davis Museum at Wellesley College is proud to announce the third iteration of the biennial Prilla Smith Brackett Award. This biennial award honors an outstanding female-identifying visual artist based in the Greater Boston area. Funded by Prilla Smith Brackett (Wellesley Class of 1964) and administered by the Davis Museum at Wellesley College, the Brackett Award will be given to the artist whose work demonstrates extraordinary artistic vision, talent, and skill. The award winner will be announced in Fall 2024.  

  • Pal Joey

    Rodgers and Hart's Greatest Cad

    By: Victor Cordell - Apr 01st, 2024

    Nightclub entertainer Joey Evans attracts a patroness, Vera, who stakes him to a club of his own. But she is older, domineering, married, and hot for him. He's a footloose schemer with the morals of an alley cat. What could possibly go wrong? Happily, the clashes of nightclub life are revealed with liberal doses of the beautiful tune "Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered."

  • Kathia St. Hilaire at the Clark

    Lunder Center at Stone Hil

    By: Clark - Apr 01st, 2024

    "Kathia St. Hilaire is a remarkable young artist who creates captivating works that combine a wide range of media,” said Olivier Meslay, Hardymon Director of the Clark. “She interweaves Haiti’s history and her own personal biography into images that are beautiful, sometimes difficult, and utterly original.”

  • Unhurried Grace

    Patience of a Forest Stream

    By: Cheng Tong - Mar 31st, 2024

    While offering instruction in the various taiji forms I teach, I often refer to a forest stream and urge my students to become it, ever-flowing, to find and then move at the pace of their breath, ever-flowing, just as the stream finds its pace.  The stream does not move from one place to the next; there is no line of demarcation between places.  The stream simply flows.  

  • Cape Ann Museum 2024

    Is there Life After Hopper

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 30th, 2024

    With minimal marketing and fanfare the Cape Ann Museum launches its 2024 season with the special exhibition In the Round: 20th Century Cape Ann Sculpture which opens April 6 from 3 to 5 pm. It focuses on major sculptors who lived and worked on Cape Ann. In July there will be a survey of women artists. The museum has pulled back to business as usual following last summer's blockbuster Edward Hopper and Jo Nivison exhibition in collaboration with the Whitney Museum of American Art.

  • Two at Gallery Naga

    Joseph McNamara Josué Bessiake: A Bird’s Last Look

    By: NAGA - Mar 29th, 2024

    Joseph McNamara is a New York-based, realist painter whose work—often large-scale—is centered on paintings of the industrial landscape and his relationship to it.  His paintings are painstakingly detailed and can take months and even years, to complete.  McNamara uses photographs as aids, however, the paintings are not “photo-realistic”:  each painting strays away from a strict accounting of the subject matter and takes on a life of its own.

  • Dead Outlaw at the Minetta Lane Theatre

    The Crew from Band's Visit Reunites

    By: SusanHall - Mar 29th, 2024

    Dead Outlaw is Audible’s latest production at the Minetta Lane Theatre in New York.  The band is central on stage from start to finish. We enter the world of a rocking hoe-down celebrating life after death.

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