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  • 4000 Miles

    Palm Beach Dramaworks in Southeast Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Oct 04th, 2022

    Palm Beach Dramaworks (PBD) in Southeast Florida will open its 2022-23 season with "4000 Miles." The comedy-drama by Amy Herzog was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. PBD's production will run from Oct. 14-30, with preview performances on Oct. 12 and 13.

  • Cate Blanchett Becomes an Orchestra Conductor

    Todd Field's Film Opens New York Film Festival

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 03rd, 2022

    Cate Blanchett is an orchestra conductor Lydia Tár in Todd Field’s new  film Tár, which premiered at the New York Film Festival. Anyone who has been exposed to Blanchett's performance will be eager to see her latest, mind-blowing work. This is also an opportunity for the unexposed to be introduced. Blanchett is an actress who will always take a dare and push herself beyond perceived limits.

  • MIT Appoints Janet Echelman Distinguished Visiting Artist

    The artist Will Develop New Work in 2022-23

    By: MIT - Oct 03rd, 2022

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is pleased to announce visual artist Janet Echelman as a 2022-23 Distinguished Visiting Artist at MIT. The appointment, hosted by the MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology (CAST) will begin this fall.

  • Herman Melville and the Berkshires

    60,000,000 Copies of Moby-Dick Have Been Published

    By: Ralph Brill - Sep 29th, 2022

    By the 1930s, Herman Melville's novel became an example of Great American Writing and was studied in many University English Programs.  The interest in Herman Melville continues such that since his death on this day (September 29) in 1891, more than 60,000,000 copies of MOBY-DICK have been published around the world!

  • Indecent by Paula Vogel

    San Francisco Playhouse and Co-produced with Yiddish Theatre Ensemble,

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 01st, 2022

    The genesis of “Indecent” begins in Warsaw in 1906.  Young author Sholem Asch has written a Yiddish play called “God of Vengeance,” which acts as a play-within-a-play in “Indecent,”  as scenes from the former appear throughout the latter.  Portrayed passionately and with grand gestures by Billy Cohen, Asch entreats other writers to participate in a table reading.  After the reading, I. L. Peretz, Warsaw’s most distinguished Yiddish author, tells Asch to burn the play.  Despite contentiousness and only a modicum of support, a Yiddish language company produces the play.  

  • Grace Kelly and U Conn Jazz Ensemble

    Stationery Factory in Dalton, Mass

    By: Ed Bride - Oct 01st, 2022

    All signs point to a full house for Grace Kelly’s evening of big band music. The young lion of jazz headlines with the University of Connecticut Jazz Ensemble on Sunday evening, Oct. 9.

  • volksbuehne.com ~ Berlin

    Ophelia's Got Talent

    By: Angelika Jansen - Sep 28th, 2022

    An amazing theatrical performance took place at the stage of the Volksbuehne, Berlin.  The Austrian performance artist Florentina Holzinger made her newest work „Ophelia's Got Talent“ into a show that stretched the technical abilities of the theatre to the fullest. 

  • All of Me by Laura Winters at Barrington Stage

    World Premiere for Award Winning Drama

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 26th, 2022

    In 2017, Madison Ferris was the first disabled actor on Broadway as Laura in Glass Menagerie. This astonishing performer stars in All of Me by Laura Winters. By Laura Winters. It is having a World Premiere of the Burman New Play Award Winner at Barrington Stage Company.

  • Opera Philadelphia Expands Poe's Raven

    Toshio Hosokawa's Monologue with Dance

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 29th, 2022

    Opera Philadelphia and the Obvious Agency present a choreographed Raven, based on Toshio Hosokawa's Monologue. The audience is transported by the fantastic music and dance.

  • Rachel Linsky Debuts Dance Hidden

    Boston Center for the Arts Plaza Black Box Theater

    By: BCA - Sep 29th, 2022

    Boston-based contemporary dance artist Rachel Linsky debuts “Hidden,” the latest in her ongoing choreographic series ZACHOR that seeks to preserve stories of WWII Holocaust survivors through dance. “Hidden” is inspired by the story of Holocaust survivor Aaron Elster who at 10 years old was hidden from the Nazis in a Polish family’s attic for two years.

  • Golden Leaf Ragtime Blues By Charles Smith

    Decades Old Play Revised for Shakespere & Company

    By: Charles Giuliano - Sep 27th, 2022

    For its fall production Shakespeare & Company is presenting the revised, heart-warming, one act play Golden Leaf Ragtime Blues by Charles Smith. We left with many pull-out talking points about vaudeville, ragtime, aging, racism, welfare and most importantly the never ending human comedy.

  • Renovated Huntington Theatre Reopens

    August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone

    By: Huntington - Sep 28th, 2022

    The Huntington announces the casting and creative team for the highly anticipated revival of August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, directed by Lili-Anne Brown. Wilson’s masterpiece serves as the inaugural production of the newly renovated Huntington Theatre and runs from October 14 – November 13, 2022, with digital access to the filmed performance available until November 27, 2022.  

  • Eugene Onegin by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    San Francisco Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 28th, 2022

    But, oh, that music.  Those haunting melodies and the euphonic lilt of the language produce a signature Russian experience.  It should be no surprise that this is currently the world’s most produced Slavic opera, given its many attractions.  Happily, it remains in the repertory of San Francisco Opera, which offers a striking and highly enjoyable rendition.  

  • MFA Free on Monday, October 10

    Indigenous People’s Day

    By: MFA - Sep 28th, 2022

    On Monday, October 10, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), offers free admission and activities all day as part of an annual Indigenous People’s Day celebration. Visitors are invited to enjoy music and dance, drop in on a variety of engaging family art-making activities, and explore galleries showcasing 20th-century Native art from the Southwest as well as Indigenous artworks from across the U.S. and Canada

  • Dance Theatre of Harlem: Sounds of Hazel

    Works & Process at the Guggenheim

    By: Guggenheim - Sep 28th, 2022

    Sounds of Hazel, choreographer Tiffany Rea-Fisher’s is a new ballet inspired by the life of virtuoso classical and jazz pianist, singer, and civil rights activist Hazel Scott.

  • Britten's the Prodigal Son

    Boston- and U.K.-based Enigma Chamber Opera

    By: Enigma - Sep 28th, 2022

    The Boston- and U.K.-based Enigma Chamber Opera continues its exploration of chamber works by Benjamin Britten with two performances of the English composer’s biblically inspired 1968 opera “The Prodigal Son.” The work is the third of Britten's three Parables for Church Performance; Enigma mounted the first, “Curlew River,” to critical acclaim last fall. This new production is directed by Artistic Director Kirsten Z. Cairns, who finds in the universal story of parent/child reconciliation and forgiveness a balm for an often bitterly divided society.

  • Experiments in Augmented Reality

    Installation Space North Adams

    By: Installation Space - Sep 27th, 2022

    Augmented reality (AR) is the integration of digital information with the user's environment in real time. AR users experience a real-world environment with generated perceptual information overlaid on top of it. Freeman and Lewy have installed their distinctive augmented reality works at the Installation Space gallery, as well as at access points in downtown North Adams public spaces.

  • Opera Philadelphia Festival Returns

    Rossini's Otello Features Lawrence Brownlee

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 27th, 2022

    Opera Philadelphia brings Gioachino Rossini's Otello to the stage. Beethoven told Rossini that he should stay away from serious drama. It was not in his nature. That is not the only reason Rossini’s serious opera Otello has been largely ignored. When Verdi and Bioto wrote their Otello, it replaced Rossini’s in the repertoire. Now we can hear the glorious bel canto tenor Lawrence Brownlee and also Daniela Mack dazzle and emote as Rodrigo and Desdemona.

  • Sunset Boulevard

    Music Theatre of Connecticut

    By: Karen Isaacs - Sep 26th, 2022

    Have you forgotten this show? It is based on the classic 1950 film noir of the same name which tells the story of an aging silent screen actress deluded that she will make a comeback and the struggling screenwriter she hires to help her with a script. Add in music by Andrew Lloyd Webber and you had a smash hit in both London and New York.

  • BSO Launches Season

    Andris Nelsons Leads the Orchestra

    By: BSO - Sep 22nd, 2022

    Andris Nelsons, marking his ninth season as BSO Music Director, leads the Boston Symphony Orchestra in the opening concert of the 2022–23 season on September 22 at Symphony Hall. Pianist Awadagin Pratt appears for the first time with the BSO, performing a work written for him by American composer Jessie Montgomery (Rounds, for piano and string orchestra) and J.S. Bach's Concerto in A, BWV 1055.

  • Rachel Portesi: Standing Still

    Griffin Museum of Photography

    By: Griffin - Sep 23rd, 2022

    Rachel Portesi: Standing Still, a solo exhibition of works by artist Rachel Portesi, featuring a selection of collodion tintypes made with large-format vintage cameras that explore the evolving lifelong complexities of female identity. The works in Standing Still are part of the artist's ongoing series of “hair portraits.”

  • Victoria Jefferies: A Garden as a Work of Art

    Or Gardening as an Artistic Activity

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Sep 18th, 2022

    "A Garden as a Work of Art ~ Or Gardening as an Artistic Activity" -- This garden poses a statement as well as a question. So, please follow the work described in this collaborative project and decide for yourself.

  • The Moholy-Nagy Estate

    Collaboration with Web-3 Photography Organization Fellowship

    By: Moholy-Nagy - Sep 22nd, 2022

    The Moholy-Nagy Estate announces collaboration with web-3 photography organization Fellowship to launch its first NFT collection 

  • Processional Arts Workshop at Columbia U.

    Alex Kahn and Sophia Michahelles, Artistic Directors

    By: Susan Hall - Sep 20th, 2022

    The beloved neighborhood tradition of shaping our stories in light returns, in person for the first time since 2019. Starting on September 17, Miller Theatre opens its doors for a week of free lantern-building workshops, culminating in a magical illuminated procession through Morningside Park. The theme of the 11th Morningside Lights is centered around how we memorialize.

  • Lear Written by Marcus Gardley

    Cal Shakes and Oakland Theater Project & Play On Shakespeare

    By: Victor Cordell - Sep 19th, 2022

    Marcus Gardley’s “Lear” is phenomenal in conception and breathtaking in execution.

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