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  • WAM Remounts Gunderson's Emilie

    Art Meets Activism in the Berkshires

    By: A. Jones - Apr 13th, 2017

    This past weekend WAM Theater closed out a re-mount production of Lauren Gunderson’s “Emilie: La Marquise du Châtelet defends her life tonight”, and donated a portion of the proceeds to the Flying Cloud Institute in support of science summer camp scholarships for girls.

  • New Zealand: North Island

    Bay of Islands

    By: Zeren Earls - Apr 12th, 2017

    A subtropical archipelago, the Bay of Islands is a unique ecosystem of nearly 150 islands. Pristine natural environment with emerald hills and clear turquoise waters set the stage for picturesque historic towns, which mark the crossroads of English and Maori cultures, giving birth to the nation of New Zealand.

  • ATCA Honors Playwrights

    Awards Presented at Humana Festival

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 12th, 2017

    Man in the Ring and The Ice Treatment are honored by theater critics. Michael Cristofer wins Steinberg award for Man in the Ring. Nate Eppler receives Osborn award for The Ice Treatment

  • Figaro 90210

    Direct from Hollywood to Broadway (Off)

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 12th, 2017

    Figaro 90210 may mess with Mozart, but he would have loved the result. The updated opera is hilarious. All the singing actors bring to their individual characters voices that are rich and illuminating. Action is packed with gesture, silly and often touching.

  • Rocker J. Geils at 71

    Leader and Namesake of a Boston Band

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 12th, 2017

    J. Geils (1946-2017) was the guitarist and leader of Boston's iconic J. Geils Band. The blues and rock group started in 1987 when lead singer Peter Wolf joined after Hallucinations broke up. Initially a blues based band they toured relentlessly while enjoying modest hits and mostly FM radio play. That changed when they left Atlantic Records and released the hit album Centerfold for Capitol/ EMI in 1981. While touring arenas for several years the band broke up after one last album when Wolf left to pursue a solo career.

  • Mason Bates and Mark Campbell's Steve Jobs

    New Opera at Santa Fe Previewed at the Guggenheim

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 12th, 2017

    Mason Bates, one of the most frequently performed contemporary composers, has created an opera about Steve Jobs. Mark Campbell, the go-to librettist for contemporary opera, is Bates' teammate in the (R)evolution of Steve Jobs. A teaser was presented at the Guggenheim Museum’s indispensable and entertaining Works and Process series.

  • Maxim Gorki Theatre, Berlin: Winterreise

    'Trip in Winter' by New Group: Exil

    By: Angelika Jansen - Apr 11th, 2017

    The Maxim Gorki Theatre in Berlin continues to present issues that reflect the 'now and how' of living circumstances in present day Berlin. The newly founded theatre group Exil will be part of the Gorki ensemble for two years, where it will create theatre events in dialogue with their own sensibilities. 'Winterreise' (Trip in Winter) on April 8th, by the in-house Israeli director Yael Ronen, presented the first project with seven actors and actresses, who cannot perform in their home countries of Syria, Palestine and Afghanistan.

  • Ross Moffett from the Permanent Collection

    Provincetown Art Association and Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 11th, 2017

    Ross Moffett (1888-1971) first came to Provincetown in 1913 to study with Charles Hawthorne. A year later a group of artists formed the Provincetown Art Association (later and Museum). In 1964 he published Art in Narrow Streets the first study of the art colony. Currently, the museum is exhibiting Ross Moffett from the Permanent Collection. It provides a rare opportunity to evaluate the work of a seminal Provincetown artist.

  • World Premiere of Play Near Ft. Lauderdale

    James L. Beller's Son at Island City Stage

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 11th, 2017

    Son, a new play with a shocking development, is gripping but it is still a work in progress. The performers shine in world premiere production in South Florida

  • How to Watch a Movie

    Salvation in a Darkened Room

    By: Nancy Kempf - Apr 10th, 2017

    This think piece explores the difference between movies and cinema. In a compelling overview Kempf states that "I go to a lot of movies for a variety of reasons: to learn about other worlds/people/times through fictions and documentaries, to measure the zeitgeist, to ease a 100°+ summer day, but my primary desire is to experience the art of cinema, a remarkable art that, even more than stage, is collaborative and incorporates the entire constellation of the arts."

  • Can the Metropolitan Opera Survive

    The House is One-Quarter Full

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 10th, 2017

    Sitting in the 7th row of the orchestra at the Metropolitan Opera on Saturday night, in a skimpy house, most of my neighbors had paid between $20 and $37.50 for their tickets. Fortunately for the Met Opera, HD fans have a different take on Met productions than people who like their opera live.

  • Lester Johnson Works on Paper

    Provincetown Art Association and Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 10th, 2017

    The sixteen works on paper that comprise the small but evocative exhibition Lester Johnson from the Permanent Collection provide rarely seen early works, starting in 1951. They provide examples of how the artist was looking at and deconstructing or abstracting seascapes, facades of houses, and breaking down the human figure. It is on view at the Provinctown Art Association and Museum through May 7.

  • Michael Tilson Thomas at Carnegie Hall

    San Francisco Orchestra Comes in From the Storm

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 08th, 2017

    The San Francisco Orchestra arrived in New York at 4:30 am on the morning of their first concert. Storms had delayed them, and stormy music formed the center of their magnificent concert at Carnegie Hall. You would never guess that these performers were sleep-challenged as they played John Cage’s Seasons, the Shostakovich Cello Concerto and Bartok’s intimate Concerto for Orchestra, a marvel in its ability to engage and draw us in.

  • Jersey Boys on Tour

    Production in Miami Through Sunday

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 08th, 2017

    Audience still marvels at Jersey Boys music, a performance marked by enthusiastic, sustained applause. Jersey Boys equity touring production is touring U.S., Canada with a too brief stop in Miami.

  • Three Generations of Composers at Carnegie

    Part, Glass and Reich Featured

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 07th, 2017

    The Deans of Contemporary Music for the past fifty years were represented at Zanekl Hall, in Carnegie Hall. Steve Reich is curating this series of concerts. They are revealing and surprising.

  • Garson Kanin Play Born Yesterday

    Chicago's Remy Bumppo Theatre

    By: Nancy Bishop - Apr 06th, 2017

    Going to see Remy Bumppo Theatre’s sparkling production of the Garson Kanin play, Born Yesterday, was a re-introduction to a play that’s rich and relevant. Not fluffy. Funny and witty with a definite edge.

  • Conrad Tao Rages at Crypt

    Copland and Rzewski Featured

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 06th, 2017

    Conrad Tao is a fearless performer. He is open to reactions that can be very harsh and cruel, and also very beautiful. The Aaron Copland Piano Sonata that sat in the center of the program is a very calm, contemplative and yearning piece. It is during this almost withheld performance that you can clearly feel Tao’s art.

  • In to America by Griffin Theatre

    World Premiere in Chicago

    By: Nancy Bishop - Apr 05th, 2017

    In to America, the world premiere production by Griffin Theatre, is America’s origin story, a documentary-style production that tells our history of immigration and multiculturalism, in all its glorious and cruel aspects. William Massolia, Griffin’s artistic director, has compiled a richly researched story of 400 years of American history.

  • Biotope: Friends, Life Forms, Landscapes

    Exhibition at Gallery 51 in North Adams

    By: Sarah Sutro - Apr 04th, 2017

    In the show Biotope, at Gallery 51 in North Adams, the viewer is given the chance to experience life from the perspective of other life forms: animals, landscape, and vast fields denoting the pattern and apparent chaos in nature. Biotope refers to “habitat –an area within a biome where smaller subdivisions of species live,” suggesting a search for the “spirit of place” mentioned in the show’s introduction.

  • Boston Art Dealer Alan Fink at 91

    Art Was the Family Business

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 04th, 2017

    Alan Fink met his artist wife, Barbara Swan, in Paris where he lived for three years on just $700. They married in 1952 and relocated to Boston. There he went to work for the next 16 years at Boris Mirski Gallery. In 1967 he founded Alpha Gallery now run by their daughter Joanna. Their son Aaron is an expressionist painter.

  • LBJ Play in Miami

    Actors Playhouse Goes All the Way

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 03rd, 2017

    A riveting All the Way in South Florida. Matlock star triumphs as LBJ with strong performances all around.

  • Remembering Jim Rosenquist

    Billboard Painter to Pop Artist

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 02nd, 2017

    For a period of time in the late 1960s I worked in the studio of Pop artist James Rosenquist. He passed away recently at 83. When Jim first arrived in New York he painted billboards high above Times Square. He later used those techniques as a key but undervalued Pop artist.

  • Arcadia in South Florida

    Play Of Ideas at Palm Beach Dramaworks

    By: Aaron Krause - Apr 01st, 2017

    Tom Stoppard's play is a mental exercise. Cast excels at Arcadia a time traveling play on-stage for a month.

  • Karoo Restaurant

    Taste of South Africa on Cape Cod

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 01st, 2017

    The name Karoo derives from a semiarid region of South Africa. In local dialect the term translates as “land of thirst.” But you will find the cuisine of Chef Sanette Groenwald, of Afrikaner Dutch heritage, to be no mirage. This a great place for exotic cuisine on Lower Cape Cod.

  • Adams and Riley at Carnegie Hall

    Saved by the Bells

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

    For the past half century our ears and minds have been assaulted with sound. Many of us have ceased to hear. Yet modern composers are creating music to which you must listen to enjoy. They are opening up our ears. This spring, in the intimate Zankel Hall, Carnegie is presenting three generations of contemporary composers led by curator Steve Reich. There is no better way to start listening again. No matter how minimal the style, this music is saved by the marimba and vibraphone bells.

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