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  • Visionary Artist Paul Laffoley

    World Renowned Except in Boston

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 18th, 2015

    When I curated a solo exhibition of work by the Visionary artist Paul Laffoley it was his first Boston show in 20 years. The exhibition was ignored by the Boston Globe. A few years later, during his brief time at the Globe, Ken Johnson declared Laffoley to be the most important Boston artist of his generation. In recent years he enjoyed national and international recognition

  • Westward Ho Ho Ho! Berkshire Museum

    2015 Holiday Theme at the Berkshire Museum

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Nov 16th, 2015

    Each year, the Berkshire Museum, hosts the Festival of Trees. Both a fundraiser and a social event, this years theme is 'Westward Ho Ho Ho!' The goal is for the eighty participants to decorate their holiday trees in the theme of the event. The theme coincides with the museums 'American West' and 'Go West' exhibition.

  • The Tutu Trilogy by Richard Curtis

    Civilian, Chemistry and Exposed Twirl on Stage

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 08th, 2015

    What if you are obsessed with dance, entertain dancers, embrace them as friends? Yet you are not a dancer, just an observer who is steeped in the traditions and the pas de deuxs. So it was for balletomane Richard Curtis, who couldn't resist a charming tale about an audience member who finally makes it to a dressing room after weeks of watching performances and is able to fully embrace the lead dancer. Rollicking good fun and true to the spirit of dance.

  • National Aviary in Pittsburgh

    Birds of a Feather

    By: Susan Cohn - Nov 08th, 2015

    The National Aviary is open daily except Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve, and Christmas. Although some of the birds must be fed in private, almost all feedings (both vegetarian and carnivorous) are scheduled to be viewable by visitors. Since 1999, annual attendance has consistently topped 100,000.

  • Chapatti at North Coast Rep

    The Lilt of Irish Laughter

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 07th, 2015

    From the pen of Irish playwright Christian O’ Reilly, comes “Chapatti”, a tender, poignant, and charming tale that bubbles with the lilt of Irish laughter, wit and charm for which those silver-tongued Gaelic writer/philosophers are known.

  • Mariano Di Paola of Argentina's Rutini Wines

    He Wants to Make Rutini a Household Name.

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Nov 07th, 2015

    Winemaker Mariaono Di Paola of Rutini Wines of Argentina was recently acknowledged as one of the top 30 winemakers in the world. Decanter magazine, a British publication, awarded Mr. Di Paola with this honor,

  • Sarah Ruhl on Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell

    J. Smith-Cameron and John Douglas Thompson Captivate

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 06th, 2015

    The Women's Project Theatre is presenting "Dear Elizabeth", a delightful, insightful and warm correspondence between two of America's great poets, Eiizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell. The leads revolve week to week. After seeing completing satisfying performances by J. Cameron-Smith and John Douglas Thompson we yearned to see the play over and over with alternate casts like Cherry Jones and Rinde Eckert.

  • Lisa Yuskavage: The Brood at the Rose

    Bimbo Kitsch As High Art

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 06th, 2015

    The big boobs and porn of Lisa Yuskavage: The Brood at the Rose Art Museum are sure to delight some and offend many. With sensual, candy colors and finger licking erotic surfaces the Yale educated artist has made a nifty career of conflating high art and kitsch. If you visit this exhibition be sure to leave the kids and your inhibitions at home.

  • First Night Saratoga 2016

    Celebrating the New Year

    By: Chris Buchanan - Nov 06th, 2015

    Every New Years Eve different cities and towns host celebrations of varying caliber, but Saratoga outshines them all. This year marks their 20th anniversary.

  • Breaking Through at Pasadena Playhouse

    World Premiere Musical

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 06th, 2015

    The world premiere of “Breaking Through”, a musical with a book by Kirsten Guenther and music and lyrics by Cliff Downs and Katie Kahanovitz, is now on stage at The Pasadena Playhouse under the direction of Playhouse Artistic Director Sheldon Epps.

  • Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh

    Installation by Chiharu Shiota

    By: Susan Cohn - Nov 06th, 2015

    The Mattress Factory, featuring site-specific installations created by artists in residence from around the world, was founded in 1977 by Artist Barbara Luderowski in a former Stearns & Foster mattress warehouse in Pittsburgh’s historic Central Northside.

  • From Syria to Sonoma

    The Voyages of Elias Hanna

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Nov 05th, 2015

    Elias Hanna moved from Syria to America to further his education. Eventually, he was awarded a medical doctor degree and practiced during the Viet Nam war era. He never forgot the principles and values he grew up with, one being farming. This is the story of what evolved.

  • Black Mountain College: Truth or Dare

    Curator Helen Molesworth Is Against Interpretation

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 05th, 2015

    It took four years for former ICA curator Helen Molesworth and current one Ruth Erickson to organize 200 works by 100 artists as the landmark exhibition "Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College, 1933-1957." In a provocative catalogue essay, however, Molesworth states why she has come to no easy conclusions about what occurred in Appalachia during the formative years of the American avant-garde.

  • Beckett's The End Staged by Gare St. Lazare Ireland

    White Light Festival Presents the Lovetts

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 04th, 2015

    The End is the beginning of Beckett's most productive and distinctive phase and in this wonderful production by Gare St. Lazare, the mysteries of his final period begin to be revealed. Since the state of unknowing and almost non-being is revealed best in monologue, this novella told in the first person lends itself to the stage. Conor Lovett captures every nuance and all the humor as well.

  • Happy Hour at CV Rep Theatre

    First World Premiere for California Company

    By: Jack Lyons - Nov 03rd, 2015

    “Happy Hour” centers around aging widower father Harry Townsend (Gavin Macleod) and his forty-year old son Alan (John Hawkinson) who come to grips with the vexing, but immutable, fact that aging is a human process that comes to most of us. The one longer lives, the tougher it becomes to accept it. A frequently asked question by people of a ‘certain age’ is ‘how did I get so old so quick?’

  • Boston Theatre Update

    Huntington Theatre Company Sanguine

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 02nd, 2015

    Regarding Boston Theatre it is broke and time to fix it. This fall as one shoe after another dropped the Boston Theatre Community seemed to collapse like a house of cards. In 2004 through a partnership between Druker Development, Boston Center for the Arts and the Huntington Theatre Company the multi-stage Calderwood Pavilion was created in the South End. Is it possible that Huntington can swing a similar development to save, renovate and expand its antiquated facility? That's just a part of dramatic changes for the city.

  • Christine Brewer and Paul Jacobs at Alice Tully Hall

    Lusty Prayers Presented by the White Light Festival

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 02nd, 2015

    Paul Jacobs, head of the organ department at the Juilliard School, and a magnificent performer invited Christine Brewer, the huge-voiced soprano of great delicacy, to join him in concert. Their alliance is for the ages.

  • NY Pays d'Oc Wine Week Nov.2nd to 8th

    Exciting, dDverse Wines at Fair Prices

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Nov 02nd, 2015

    If you live in, visit or are near Manhattan, the Pays d'Oc IGP Wine Week takes place from November 2nd through November 8th. Quality wines made from international varieties exist from this sun swept Mediterranean outpost.

  • A Confederacy of Dunces Slated for World Premiere

    Creative Team Dicusses Production for Huntington Theatre Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 01st, 2015

    A Confederacy of Dunces was published in 1980 eleven years after John Kennedy Toole's suicide. Recently the creative team- adapter Jeffrey Hatcher, director David Esbjornson, and actor Nick Offerman- met with the media to discuss the production for Boston's Huntington Theatre Company. The comedy will run from November 11 through December 13.

  • William Christie Conducts at Lincoln Center

    Handel's Theodora is Heavenly in White Light Festival

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 01st, 2015

    William Christie's Les Arts Forissants performances in New York are eagerly anticipated. Theodora, a late oratorio of Handel, delivered in spades. Listeners got the music, the story, the orchestra and chorus and magnificent individual singers.

  • Daniel Toral Wins 6th Annual Sommelier Slam

    Ten Competitors, One winner

    By: Philip S.Kampe - Nov 01st, 2015

    It was fierce competition at the Brooklyn Expo Center in Greenpoint,Brooklyn, where the sixth annual sommelier slam competition took place. The contestants had to know wine theory, master wine pairings and then sell their pairings to the jurors.

  • Duberman's In White America the New Federal Theatre

    Woodie King Stages for the New Federal Theatre

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 31st, 2015

    In White America was first produced fifty years ago. Sadly, its insights have yet to be fully absorbed in America. This production, as much as it satisfies dramatically, also stimulates action.

  • ZERO and Sky Art in Istanbul

    A Poetic Convergence at the Sabanci Museum

    By: Zeren Earls - Oct 31st, 2015

    ZERO, Countdown to the Future is a comprehensive exhibition, which highlights the works of the movement's founders, Heinz Mack and Otto Piene, and their close friend Gunther Uecker. It provides in depth understanding of ZERO that took away the limits of "what is art" and expanded what art can be in the 20th century.

  • Van Zweden at New York Philharmonic

    Inon Barnatan Joins the Magic-Making

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 30th, 2015

    While listeners do not always agree with Jaap van Zewden's take on the classics, everyone is thrilled to listen. Taking the music in long arcs, permitting interpretation by individual artists in the orchestra and accompanying soloists, van Zweden is a passionate and generous music-maker. The New York Philharmonic was alive with the sound of music.

  • 1984 at Steppenwolf in Chicago

    Theatre for a Young Audience

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 28th, 2015

    Andrew White's careful adaptation of 1984, directed by Hallie Gordon, brings the story to life in the person of Winston (Adam Poss), who secretly hates Big Brother and the IngSoc party, misses chocolate and fears rats.

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