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  • Ceramics, MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA

    In the Expanded Field

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Nov 02nd, 2021

    Ceramic art works and products have increased substantially in size and expression over the last ten or more years. The sky is the limit here at the current MoCA exhibition and the energy was palpable in the galleries during a rainy Saturday.

  • Definition Theatre's Social Justice Film

    America v.2.1: The Sad Demise and Eventual Extinction of the American Negro,

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 08th, 2021

    At a time when we should all be thinking about how America’s history might be taught in all its blood and glory, Definition Theatre succeeds in tossing new ingredients into this steamy pot of burgoo. Its new theatrical film, America v.2.1: The Sad Demise and Eventual Extinction of the American Negro, is a raw, sad and funny story of a future America, told in four parts.

  • MFA Union On Strike November 17

    Administration Nickle and Dimeing Staff

    By: Maida Rosenstein - Nov 12th, 2021

    Over 96% of staff at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,voted to strike on Wednesday, November 17 in support of a fair union contract. Workers in departments across the Museum will picket at 465 Huntington Avenue that day starting at 8:30 am. The MFA Union includes curators, conservators, library workers, public-facing staff, educators, and administrative and professional workers.

  • Sovereignty & Indigenous Curation Panel

    Art, Culture, and Technology Program at MIT

    By: ACT - Nov 13th, 2021

    Our panel discussion will consider ways in which the practice of Indigenous curation enacts sovereignty. We will address the various challenges of doing Indigenous curation within and, at times, against art institutions. Our discussion will take into account the difficulties of collaborating across various differences—cultural, disciplinary, educational, etc.—that are specific to exhibiting Indigenous arts.

  • Come from Away

    National Touring Production in South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 13th, 2021

    Come from Away is docked in South Florida before heading north. The musical relates the true tale of a small Canadian town that welcomed and cared for stranded passengers on Sept. 11, 2001 and the days after.

  • At Clark Art Institute

    Hue & Cry: French Printmaking and the Debate over Colors

    By: Clark - Nov 13th, 2021

    Hue & Cry: French Printmaking and the Debate over Colors presents a wide array of French color prints from the Clark’s works-on-paper collection, by artists including Pierre Bonnard, Mary Cassatt, Paul Cézanne, Jules Chéret, Maurice Denis, Camille Pissarro, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Édouard Vuillard.

  • Arthur Miller's The Price

    At GableStage in Coral Gables, a Miami suburb

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 15th, 2021

    GableStage in Southeast Florida is opening its season with Arthur Miller's "The Price." New Producing Artistic Director Bari Newport is directing it, based on late Producing Artistic Director Joe Adler's notes. This production of "The Price" marked Adler's last directorial effort at GableStage, where he spent 20 years as Producing Artistic Director. GableStage has dedicated this production to Adler.

  • Berkshire Theatre Critics Association

    2021 "Berkie" Award Winners

    By: Berkie - Nov 16th, 2021

    The big winners of the Berkies were A Crossing: A Dance Musical, presented by Barrington Stage Company, which won the Sally and Robert Sugarman Award for a World Premier of a New Work as well as many acting and design awards, and Nina Simone: Four Women, presented by the Berkshire Theatre Group. 

  • Shaw's Mrs. Warren’s Profession

    Ginglold Group at Theatre Row on 42nd Street.

    By: Karen Isaacs - Nov 17th, 2021

    The funniest complication is that Mrs. Warren has steadfastly refused to reveal who is Vivie’s father; so there is the possibility that it could be Sir George or even the Rev. Samuel, who wasn’t always a man of the cloth.

  • The Butterfly Process

    Boston Lyric Opera Fires the Canon

    By: BLO - Nov 17th, 2021

    Madama Butterfly inspires a deep look at its historical context through a contemporary lens. Internal and public discussions are part of the project dubbed The Butterfly Process by Boston Lyric Opera.

  • New Dutch and Flemish Galleries at the MFA

    A Hundred Works by the Greatest Artists

    By: MFA - Nov 19th, 2021

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), opens a suite of seven newly renovated galleries that explore the rich visual culture of the Dutch Republic and Flanders during this time, bringing together nearly 100 paintings by the greatest masters—including Rembrandt van Rijn, Peter Paul Rubens, Gerrit Dou, Frans Hals and Anthony van Dyck—in addition to works on paper and decorative arts such as silver and Delft ceramics.

  • Father/Daughter by Kait Kerrigan,

    Produced by Aurora Theatre

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 21st, 2021

    The Bay Area is blessed with many great performing artists, and Sam Jackson (for the sake of clarity – she!) and William Thomas Hodgson (he) are among the finest.  Jackson portrays both females, and Hodgson both males.  And both actors are scintillating.

  • Thoughts of a Colored Man On Broadway

    Twenty-nine Producers Express Faith in a Terrific New Play

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 21st, 2021

    Keenan Scott, playwright, objected to the widespread notion that black men don’t express themselves. In his play, Thoughts of a Colored Man, they do. Our conventional notions of black silence are shattered by a rich rhetorical tradition of the group that Eldridge Cleaver called the most challenged in American society. In some ways not much has changed since Cleaver made that statement over a half century ago. Black men have an expiration date that expires before everyone elses'.

  • Al Perry Was a Cool Head at WBCN

    As Station Manager He Kept the Lid On

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 23rd, 2021

    During the wild and crazy days of WBCN, which is now celebrated with a movie and book, Al Perry functioned as the adult in the room. As station manager he kept the lid on. Respected and loved by those who knew and worked with him Al passed on November 6.

  • Così Fan Tutte

    At San Francisco Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 26th, 2021

    “Così Fan Tutte” was the last of three collaborations by perhaps the strongest composition team in opera history.  Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and librettist Lorenzo da Ponte had previously written “Le Nozze di Figaro” and “Don Giovanni.”  Acknowledging the significance of this unplanned trilogy, San Francisco Opera is presenting them all over a three-season period. 

  • Fittness Tips for Seniors

    Be the Envy of All

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 28th, 2021

    It's time for sweating to the oldies. Or is it time for oldies to be sweating. Ok gang, all together now. Get off the couch, Start with a five pound potato sack in each hand.

  • To Fall in Love

    A Southeastern Premiere at FAU's Theatre Lab

    By: Aaron Krause - Nov 29th, 2021

    Theatre Lab, the professional resident company at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, is giving Jennifer Lane's two-hander, "To Fall in Love" its Southeastern premiere production. In the play, an estranged couple turns to a study that scientists claim can help people fall in love in order to save their marriage. The study features 36 questions that each individual asks the other.

  • Remembering Stephen Sondheim

    A Graduate of Williams College

    By: ATCA - Dec 01st, 2021

    Stephen Sondheim was a Class if 1950 graduate of Williams College. Regarded as an icon of American theatre he passed recently at 91. We repost tributes by several members of the American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA).

  • Ted Rosenthal Trio at Gateways Inn in Lenox

    With Guest vocalist Karrin Allyson

    By: Berkshire Jazz - Dec 01st, 2021

    The Ted Rosenthal Trio with special guest vocalist Karrin Allyson will perform their Wonderland holiday show in a one-time event this Sunday, December 5 in Lenox, Mass. Performing jazz versions of holiday favorites and more, they will be appearing at the Gateways Inn in two shows, at 5 and 7pm.  

  • Guggenheim Museum 2022 Schedule

    Works & Process Performing Arts Series

    By: Guggenheim - Dec 02nd, 2021

    Alongside the commissions, Works & Process will present performance excerpts and artists discussions of new works prior to their premieres at leading organizations including BAAD!, BAM, Boston Ballet, Federal Hall, Glimmerglass Festival, The Metropolitan Opera, and New York City Ballet. Taking place in the Frank Lloyd Wright–designed Peter B. Lewis Theater at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.

  • The Wickhams at Shakespeare & Company

    Written by Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon

    By: S&Co - Dec 03rd, 2021

    Written by Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon and directed by Ariel Bock, The Wickhams features many familiar characters of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, as well as some new faces: a no-nonsense housekeeper, a spirited new maid, and a love-sick, enterprising footman. The staff is deeply engaged in holiday preparations at Pemberley, the estate of Elizabeth and Darcy.

  • A Tribute to Stephen Sondheim

    Genius in a Minor Key

    By: Jack Lyons - Dec 03rd, 2021

    It may sound like ‘Heresy’ to some of my colleagues, but for me personally, the gifts that resided inside the genius that was Stephen Sondheim was an acquired taste.

  • Manual Cinema’s Christmas Carol

    Performed by Shadow Puppets

    By: Nancy Bishop - Dec 04th, 2021

    If you like Dickens’ A Christmas Carol performed by shadow puppets with special effects from an overhead projector, Manual Cinema has an adaptation of the holiday classic for you. Its 2020 virtual production of the Dickens’ classic A Christmas Carol is available for viewing this year and it’s still quirky and delightful, even though it retains its earlier pandemic theme. (Yes, we’re still in the damnable pandemic or endemic, so enjoy this view of it.)

  • The People Downstairs

    A World Premiere Production by Palm Beach Dramaworks

    By: Aaron Krause - Dec 05th, 2021

    In "The People Downstairs," versatile and prolific South Florida playwright Michael McKeever presents the Anne Frank story from the perspective of the people who hid the 13-year-old girl and others during World War II. Palm Beach Dramaworks (PBD) in West Palm Beach is presenting the world premiere.

  • Sound of Music at Palm Canyon Theatre

    Enjoy the Tender Trapp

    By: Jack Lyons - Dec 08th, 2021

    “The Sound of Music”, is a show that the whole family can enjoy. It’s based on an inspirational true story of the famous Austrian von Trapp Family Singers and their escape to Switzerland on the eve of Germany’s 1938 Anschluss, and it’s annexing of Austria prior to World War II that will break out one year later.

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