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  • Jazz Entrepreneur George Wein at 95

    It Started With Storyville in Copley Square

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 13th, 2021

    A native of Newton and Boston University graduate the career of jazz entrepreneur, George Wein, started with the club Storyville in Copley Square. With the Lorrilards as backers he founded the Newport Jazz Festival and later the Newport Folk Festival. He went on to the the world's foremost jazz promoter. He died today at 95 in New York.

  • Walking Evil by Mark St. Germain

    A Hilarious True Story of a Possessed Hellhound

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 14th, 2021

    The renowned playwright, Mark Saint Germain. has published his first non theatrical book. A true story, Walking Evil, is a hilarious account of the author's epic battle with his wife's dog Evie. Named Evil by St. Germain the hellhound is in league with the devil. The cur destroys everything in sight including a thirty five year marriage. Clearly not a work of fiction you can't make up such an incredible and riveting story. Indeed the devil is in the details of this compelling book.

  • WAM Theatre's US premiere of KAMLOOPA

    Staged at Shakespeare & Company

    By: WAM - Sep 15th, 2021

    WAM Theatre to present the US premiere of KAMLOOPA: AN INDIGENOUS MATRIARCH STORY by Kim Senklip Harvey, winner of Canada’s prestigious Governor General’s Award for English Language Drama, directed by Estefanía Fadul (WAM’s Native Gardens, The Oregon Trail). COVID safe live performances of this new comedy, will be presented at Shakespeare & Company’s Elayne P. Bernstein Theatre in Lenox.

  • Iphigenia at MASS MoCA

    Composer Wayne Shorter, Librettist and Performer esperanza spalding

    By: MoCA - Sep 15th, 2021

    In Iphigenia, two of the most visionary and daring musical voices of our time—composer Wayne Shorter and librettist and performer esperanza spalding—have created a modern operatic re-imagining of the ancient tale of a daughter sacrificed to the gods. The set is designed by luminary architect Frank Gehry. Performances in the Hunter Center are Friday, November 5, 8pm & Saturday, November 6, 8pm

  • A Different Kind of Self Portrait

    A nine-and-a-half-feet tall mastodon

    By: Aaron Krause - Sep 16th, 2021

    Jess the Mastodon is puppet artist Jim Hammond's self-portrait -- kind of. Hammond designed Jess for Theatre Lab's production of The Impracticality of Modern-Day Mastodons. The professional company based on Boca Raton's Florida Atlantic University campus is staging the play about dreams coming true.

  • Marjorie Kaye at Galatea Fine Art

    Energy Fields and Artifacts

    By: Galatea - Sep 16th, 2021

    Marjorie Kaye is a painter and sculptor residing and working North of Boston. Her work is an exploration of Sacred Geometry, organic forms, the relationships of color, and are kinetic and energetic. Her exhibition, Energy Fields and Artifacts, opens at Galatea Fine Art on October 1.

  • Domaine des Hospices de Nuits

    Videos of Harvest

    By: Domaine - Sep 17th, 2021

    This Friday, September 17, the Domaine des Hospices de Nuits begins its harvest on its plots in the heart of Burgundy. Discover in video all the work 1) in the cellar 2) in the vineyard and 3) admire the beauty of the Pinot Noir clusters on one of the Domaine's Old Vines.

  • William Beckman: Five Decades of Self-Portraits

    At NY's Forum Gallery

    By: Forum - Sep 17th, 2021

    From September 23 to November 6, 2021, Forum Gallery will celebrate William Beckman’s 50 years of self-portraiture with an exhibition of seventeen paintings and drawings made between 1976 and 2021. The exhibition, William Beckman: Five Decades of Self-Portraits, will present important examples from each decade beginning with 1976 and will include a group of current paintings, illuminating the Artist’s singular and ongoing contribution to the field.

  • Working by Studs Terkel

    Produced by Palo Alto Players

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 20th, 2021

    Terkel’s hometown beat was a great laboring town, Chicago, the City of Broad Shoulders.  From a lifetime of communing in his community and across the country, he produced powerful oral histories based on interviews, particularly “Working” (1974) and the Pulitzer Prize winning “The Good War” (1985).

  • The Last Five Years by Jason Robert Brown

    Branford’s new Legacy Theatre

    By: Karen Isaacs - Sep 20th, 2021

    The Last Five Years is a very popular musical with theaters; in part because it only needs two performers and minimal sets/costumes and partly because it tells a universal story of falling both in and out of love.

  • Noorrrraaaaaaa  after Ibsen

    The Gorki Theater, Berlin

    By: Angelika Jansen - Sep 21st, 2021

    Just be aware. The premiere of Nora at Berlin's smallest theatre, The Gorki Theater, offers anything but the expected story line of Henrik Ibsen's famous 1879 play about a woman stepping out of a comfortable upper middle class family life to become independent.

  • Jacob’s Pillow Announces Fall Artist Residencies

    Fourth Year of Pillow Lab

    By: Pillow - Sep 22nd, 2021

    Jacob’s Pillow announces this season’s artist residencies offered at the Pillow Lab, its year-round incubator of new work. The Fall 2021 recipients include jumatatu m. poe and Jermone Donte Beacham, Indigenous Enterprise, Taylor Stanley and Shamel Pitts, and Yve Laris Cohen.

  • Billy Crystal at Barrington Stage Company

    Mr. Saturday Night a Work in Development

    By: Barrington - Sep 22nd, 2021

    Barrington Stage Company (BSC),welcomes Tony and Emmy Award winner Billy Crystal in a presentation of a new musical in development, Mr. Saturday Night, on the Boyd-Quinson Stage (30 Union Street) for nine performances. A new musical comedy, Mr. Saturday Night is about one man’s meteoric rise to the middle. The musical is a work in development and will be presented with minimal set and costume pieces.  

  • Melvin Van Peebles, Going the Distance

    An Appreciation

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 27th, 2021

    Melvin Van Peebles, the black entrepreneur, died on September 21. Over the years, brief encounters revealed many of his sparkling facets.

  • Tattoos in Japanese Prints

    Museum of Fine Arts Exhibition November 20 to February 20

    By: MFA - Sep 28th, 2021

    Today tattoos are ubiquitous in our culture. The Museum of Fine Arts offers a timely echibition Tattoos in Japanese Prints from November 20 to February 20. The exhibition features nearly 80 works by Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797–1861) and his contemporaries—including his colleague and rival Utagawa Kunisada (1786–1864) and his pupil Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839–1892).

  • Shout! The Mod Musical

    At South Bay Musical Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 28th, 2021

    “Shout! The Mod Musical” is a musical revue of the ‘60s shown through the experiences of five young adult women living in London, as conceived and curated by three American men (of course)!  The songbook draws from tunes of the era, predominantly those popularized by English songbirds, especially Dusty Springfield and Petula Clark (“Wishin’ and Hopin’” and “Downtown” for starters.)  

  • Otto Zitko New Works

    At Crone Wien in Vienna

    By: Crone Wien - Oct 01st, 2021

    In Otto Zitko’s work, space determines form and content. The central design element is the seemingly endless line running across large-format picture panels, sheets, or walls, which is applied with paint rollers or thick oil pens. Behind the supposedly purely expressive character of his works lies a complex structure of self-organization, the sounding out of physiological movement in space, and different levels of consciousness and energy.

  • Haunted Hancock Shaker Village

    Spooky Tours

    By: Hancock - Oct 01st, 2021

    Peer into hidden spaces, with guides sharing tales of ghosts that dwell here and the Shakers' participation in the Spiritualist Movement.

  • Yehuda Hanani and Close Encounters Return

    Classic, Jazz, Whimy and Bee Bop in One Splendid Evening

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 30th, 2021

    An invitation to a close encounter with very special music.  Paul Schoenfield’s runaway classical hit, Café Music for piano trio, sets the tone for a celebratory re-opening. Combining elements of classical, jazz, klezmer and whimsy, Café Music is caffeine-fueled and irresistible.

  • A Crossing: A Dance Musical

    Barrington Stage Presents Powerful New Work for All of America

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 02nd, 2021

    While focused on a group of migrants this is the story of all of us. It conveys an America rooted in exclusion, violence and intolerance. This is a stunning new musical for all Americans.

  • Steel Magnolias Blooms in Denver

    Robert Harling's Classic Perfetly Produced

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 02nd, 2021

    Steel Magnolias is staged by the Cherry Creek Theater in Denver, Colorado. This comic tragedy comes alive in a beauty parlor, whose window frames look out on the talk of the town parading by. In the South, men sit under a pecan tree and talk about affairs as if they all had PhDs from Harvard.  The women hunker down to have their hair and nails done.

  • Performance Artist Tim Youd

    100 Novels Project

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 03rd, 2021

    Tim Youd has been at work on his 100 Novels Project for about 10 years. The Jungle is #71 and he just finished retyping Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio, on a early Remington typewriter at the Arts Club on Ontario Street. Anderson lived nearby (at the corner of what is now Wabash and Superior) when he was writing the book (a short story cycle), published in 1919.

  • Eclipse Mill Artists Annual Exhibition

    Reconnections 2021

    By: Eclipse - Oct 03rd, 2021

    Eclipse Mill Artists Annual Exhibition, Reconnections 2021, will present the work of 24 artist residents of the North Adams complex. The Annual is a long standing tradition for the artists loft building.

  • Arnie Reisman Journalist, Playwright, Poet at 79

    Resident of Martha’s Vineyard

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 05th, 2021

    Arnie Reisman, a Martha Vineyard resident died suddenly. He was 79. Starting as editor of the Brandeis University Justice he was later editor of the weekly Boston After Dark/ Phoenix. He was a prolific documentary filmmaker and playwright as well as publisher of several books of poetry. With his wife Paula Lyons, he was also a panelist on NPR’s Says You!, the long-running comedy quiz show. His documentary The Powder and the Glory was the basis of the Broadway show War Paint.

  • Scenes from a Marriage on HBO

    Remake of Ingmar Bergman Film

    By: Jack Lyons - Oct 06th, 2021

    Israeli filmmaker Hagai Levi decided he wanted to do a more modern updated version of Ingmar Bergman’s 1973 seminal film “Scenes from a Marriage” that originally starred Liv Ullman, Erland Joseph, Bibi Andersson, Jan Malmsjo, and Gunnel Lindblom.  However, writer/adaptor/director Levi trimmed several characters for his 2021 version.

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