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  • Tanglewood on Parade

    Popular Annual Event

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 02nd, 2017

    Indeed it was a long evening ending around 11 PM with the tradition arsenal of fireworks accompanying the climax ith a massive performance of Tchaikovsky’s energizing 1812 Overture. It evoked Moscow’s triumphant church bells and the thunderous boom of Napoleon’s captured canons.

  • Berkshire Museum Stonewalls Critics

    Hires Costly PR to Spin Its Reboot

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 02nd, 2017

    When ethical concerns and second guessing of its "reboot" plans surfaced the Berkshire Museum has spent money it doesn't have for expensive PR and marketing. Heavy hitters have been hired to deflect tough questions from the media and flack the museum's strategy to sell 40 works of art and change its mandate.

  • Ballet Hispanico at Jacob's Pillow

    From Indigenous to Mainstream

    By: Charles Giuliano - Aug 01st, 2017

    In 1970 the Venezuelan dancer and educator, Tina Ramirez, founded the community based Ballet Hispanico. Under her administration the company commisioned 70 plus works. We saw one of them Palladium at MASS MoCA in October 2006, co sponsored by Jacob's Pillow Dance. This past week the company performed at Pillow in a program created by artistic director Eduardo Vilaro who followed Ramirez in 2009.

  • Footloose the Musical in Fremont. California

    Starstruck Youth Performing Arts

    By: Victor Cordell - Aug 01st, 2017

    "Footloose the Musical" is based on a film that was part of a strong cluster of movies that in some ways was a gentle echo of the youthful rebellion of the '60s. Hollywood struck a rich vein of teen and young adult musical films in the decade starting 1978. Some were based on earlier stage musicals, and others would later become live theater pieces. Starstruck Youth Performing Arts has selected a perfect vehicle for a large teen cast.

  • Bad Jews in Miami Lakes

    Main Street Players Stages Joshua Harmon Dramedy

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 31st, 2017

    Bad Jews is a biting comedy/drama at South Florida theater. Joshua Harmon play marks Main Street Players' third professional production. Company excels in an intense, funny production.

  • Arsenic and Old Lace by Joseph Kesselring

    Making Family Insanity Hilarious in Stockbridge

    By: Maria Reveley - Jul 31st, 2017

    This is a classic comedy that still entertains with a spectacular cast and great timing! Arsenic and Old Lace ran for three years on Broadway starting in 1941 and still holds up. There is a lively production on Stage at Bekshire Theatre Group in Stockbridge.

  • Dimitrij by Dvorak at Bard's SummerScape

    Leon Botstein Conduts an Underdog Opera

    By: Susan Hall and Djurdjija Vucinic - Jul 31st, 2017

    Leon Botstein, a great American educator and music polymath, makes the case for underexposed compositions by known and unknown composers. This year, he presents Anton Dvo?ák's Dimitrij as a feature of the Bard SummerScape Festival.

  • Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow Moscow

    Feiffer Deconstructs Chekhov in Williamstown

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 30th, 2017

    Over 62 years of Williamstown Theatre Festival there have been 18 productions of the four best known plays by Anton Chekov; The Cherry Orchard, Uncle Vanya, the Seagull and Three Sisters. There have been five prior versions of Three Sisters and this season we have yet another. Well, not exactly.

  • Intimate Apparel by Lynn Nottage

    American Dreams in 1905

    By: Maria Reveley - Jul 29th, 2017

    Inspired by her great grandmother's life, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Lynn Nottage, presents Esther, a fine seamstress in 1905's New York City. Through this lens, we meet others of various races and sexes, from places around the world, all struggling to achieve their dreams. How they fare becomes our concern.

  • Celebrating Thelonious Monk's Centennial

    Concert wth Ted Rosenthal in Lee August 12

    By: Ed Bride - Jul 29th, 2017

    Berkshires Jazz, Inc. continues its summer of centennial tributes on Aug. 12 with the Ted Rosenthal Quintet, in a 100th birthday salute to Thelonious Monk. TD Bank is sponsoring the concert, which takes place at the Lee Meeting House (Congregational Church), starting at 7:30pm.

  • Berkshire Artist Arthur Yanoff's Exhibition

    Reynolds Fine Art in New Haven

    By: Reynolds - Jul 29th, 2017

    The Thimble Islands are an archipelago of more than 100 pieces of land in Long Island Sound, off northeastern Connecticut. Some are big enough for people to live on, but many more are just tiny granite outcroppings. Arthur Yanoff visited them a year or so ago, and created a sequence of abstract paintings about them. They will be shown at Reylonds Gallery in New Haven.

  • San Francisco’s Chinatown

    Largest in the Nation

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 29th, 2017

    It was a relatively short walk from our hotel in San Freancisco to the entrance of its vast Chinatown. We explored and returned several times for fabuous meals.

  • The Nance at Pride Arts Center

    Evoking an Era of Burlesque

    By: Nancy Bishop - Jul 28th, 2017

    The burlesque acts at the Irving Place Theatre make up almost half of The Nance, which is riproaringly directed by John Nasca. You’ll see a feathery fan dance by Joan (Britt-Marie Sivertsen) and other songs, dances and modest strip routines by Sylvie and Carmen (Steph Vondell). The women’s costumes are colorful and sparkly—and designed by Nasca, doing double duty as costume designer.

  • I Left My Heart in San Francisco

    Theatre Critics Met by the Bay

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 28th, 2017

    Coincidently, the 2017 ATCA conference took place at the same time that San Francisco is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the city’s now famous 1967 “Summer of Love” revolution of sexual freedom, psychedelic flower-power, pot, and tons of young people with raging hormones.

  • Katrin Hilbe Directs Dear Jane

    Joan Beber Play Mounted at the Clurman

    By: Susan Hall and Rachel de Aragon - Jul 28th, 2017

    Joan Beber has tackled an intimate part of her own life, the death of a twin sister, in her new play, Dear Jane. Formed as a letter to her deceased sibling, Beber creates many memorable characters. Katrin Hilbe directs flawlessly.

  • Berkshire Museum Ignores Outcry

    40 Works to be Sold at Sotheby’s

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 27th, 2017

    In compiling a list of 40 works to deaccession the Berkshire Museum opted to sell no works given by living artists or donors. When Norman Rockwell gave two works to the museum the letter, which is referred to in media coverage, states his wish to share them with the people of the Berkshires. In selling the works is the museum in legal violation of that trust? GIven the sensitivity of what is at stake we demand that the museum make public the artist's letter.

  • Epic British Film Dunkirk

    Written and Directed by Christopher Nolan

    By: Jack Lyons - Jul 27th, 2017

    Currrently number one at the box office the epic British film Dunkirk, written and directed by Christopher Nolan, is the surprise hit of the summer season. This is the time of year for action adventure cartoon characters, like Wonder Woman, kids stuff and date movies. The film focuses on the British army, then defeated in France, about to be driven into the sea by Rommel and his Panzers. Miracuously that didn't as the British used every available vessel from yachts to fishing boats to ferry the troops across the channel. This was the moment and event when the fate of Europe was at a tipping point. It makes for a heck a movie.

  • Timon of Athens at Stratford Festival

    Yet Another Superb Production

    By: Herbert Simpson - Jul 27th, 2017

    Stratford has a special history with this Shakespeare play, dating from Michael Langham’s extraordinary 1963 production with incidental music commissioned from Duke Ellington. Updating the setting, Langham offered an opulent melodrama with some textual additions, guest musicians and dancers.

  • The Clean House by Pulitzer Nominated Sarah Ruhl

    All Star Production at Williamstown Theatre Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 26th, 2017

    Mandy Greenfield, artistic director of Williamstown Theatre Festival, has produced The Clean House, a 2005 Pulitzer nominee, by Sarah Ruhl. Ii is a play written by, about, and for women. It is directed by Tony winner, Rebecca Taichman, and pairs Tony nominees Jayne Atkinson and Jessice Hecht. There are two other women and a guy who Ruhl sends packiing in Alaska leaving his terminally ill mistress.

  • Sweeney Todd in South Florida

    Sondheim Thriller at Palm Beach Dramaworks

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 24th, 2017

    A fine cast and crew captures the darkness and the comic in Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street The lead actor creates a sympathetic Sweeney, even if we abhor the character's actions. The unease of Sweeney Todd's world eerily mirrors our own.

  • Christian Marclay Performs Calder

    Small Sphere, Heavy Sphere at the Whitney

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 24th, 2017

    Small Sphere, Large Sphere was Alexander Calder's first mobile construction. Hanging in the center of the Hess Theater at the Whitney Museum in New York, it is set in motion, not only to delight the eye, but the ear as well. Christian Marclay makes music with the small wooded sphere carved by Calder.

  • Berkshire Museum Releases Auction List

    Two Rockwells and 38 Other Works

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 24th, 2017

    Initially the Berkshire Museum disclosed plans to sell two paintings by Norman Rockwell but declined to reveal the other works. Under intensive media scrutiny and concerns from the community the museum has posted responses to frequently asked questions on the website and has released the full list of deaccessioned works. The lot has a pre auction estmate of $50 million toward a goal to "reboot" with $20 milion in renovation and $40 million for endowment. The remaining $10 millions will be raised apart from the sale of works of art.

  • The Package Arrives

    Wines From France, Sardegna And Italy Are Analyzed

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Jul 24th, 2017

    Its always a treat when a package of wines arrive unannounced. When you open the box with the help of your mailman, the situation heightens, as you will see in this article.

  • Rossini Mass at Caramoor

    Rachelle Jonck Conducts Bel Canto Young Artists

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 24th, 2017

    Rossini stopped writing operas at the age of 37. He did not compose again for decades. When he was able to move back to Paris, and build a country home in Passy with his second wife, he took up his composer’s pen again. To the end of his life, he composed over 200 works which he gave the umbrella title Sins of Old Age. He was touching up the Petite Messe Solennelle when he died in 1868.

  • Taking Steps by Alan Aykbourn

    Farce Rocks Barrington Stage

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 24th, 2017

    Leaving our thinking caps at home there was no heavy lifting in the delicious British farce, Taking Steps, by the redoubtable Alan Ayckbourn. At last count he has written 77 plays. After the knockout job that director, Sam Buntrock, and a truly gifted cast did with this one, one hopes that over time Barrington will produce the other 76.

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