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  • The World's Highest Vineyard (10,207 feet)

    Argentina's Colome Releases Altura Maxima

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Mar 01st, 2016

    Colome, after ten years of production, finally releases, Altura Maxima 2012, a Malbec wine grown from the world's highest vineyard. This is a distinctive wine from Argentina.

  • Tanglewood Update, new popular artists added to venue

    June will be rocking at Tanglewood.

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Mar 01st, 2016

    Tanglewood is appealing to all age categories with the addition of popular artists, Earth, Wind & Fire, Jackson Browne, Train and the B52's.

  • Tanglewood Adds Popular Artists

    Rounding Out 2016 Season

    By: BSO - Feb 29th, 2016

    Depending on what acts are on tour it generally takes some time for the BSO to fill in the gaps with non classical programming. Of the four acts that have been added three have previously been featured at Tanglewood. In addition to previously announced artists Berkshire audiences will be offered Earth Wind and Fire, Jackson Browne, and Train. The dance band B-52s will appear with an evening of Pops.

  • Sand and Seas – Part One

    A Summer Tale for Winter Days

    By: Astrid Hiemer - Feb 29th, 2016

    It takes time to collect and develop a photo project. The subject may have spooked around my head for days, weeks, perhaps months. The raw material are thousands of digital photographs, which include the subject matter at hand. Then questions arise: What is there to work from? What do I want to say? What can I show? How many images do I need to convey my ideas? Too many sub-categories for one essay? Yes! So, please peruse the first part of 'Sand and Seas.'

  • NY Theatre Ballet's Legends and Visionaries

    Steven Melendez Shines as Dancer and Choreographer

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 29th, 2016

    Chamber Ballet charms as New York Theatre Ballet performs classic works and the very latest choreography. The strong and stylish presentation of the dancers is a pleasure to watch.

  • Trevor Nunn Directs Pericles at Polonsky

    Storytelling Reaches New Heights at Theatre for a New Audience

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 27th, 2016

    Pericles marked a turning point in Shakespeare's career. Director Trevor Nunn has anchored the many strands of the play in a giant orb, in the storyteller Gower and in the music of the Pigpen Theatre. The many strands of a play, difficult to weave into one satisfying piece, are brought together brilliantly in the Polonsky Shakespeare Center of the Theatre for a New Audience.

  • Stunning Intersections at Peabody Essex Museum

    A Beacon for Remembering Beauty of Islamic Creative Culture

    By: Mark Favermann - Feb 26th, 2016

    In a period of radicalism and terrorism, Intersections serves as a beacon for remembering and cherishing the sensitive beauty of the best of Islamic creative culture. This is a must-see visual and environmental experience.

  • Gagliole Tuscany's Wine Gem

    Blends Sangiovese Grapes with International Varieties

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Feb 26th, 2016

    Tuscany is known for beauty, cypress tress and wine. Gagliole is a boutique winery that excels with the Sangiovese grape.

  • Beckett for Just Three Bucks

    Endgame at Williams '62 Center March 10 to 12

    By: Williams - Feb 25th, 2016

    Here is an offer you cannot refuse. Tickets are just three bucks for a student production of Beckett's Endgame. Such a deal! It is presented March 10 to 12 at the '62 Center in Williamstown. Theatre of the absurd is a challenge for actors as well as the audience.

  • Denver Playwright Summit Part II

    Measuring Degrees of Change

    By: Susan Hall and Diane Pinkard - Feb 24th, 2016

    A Greenland research project measuring climate change, perhaps caused by Shakespeare's death, and the passage of time when beloved possessions no longer work. These are all the subjects of wonderful plays in development in Denver. After years of work, Theresa Rebeck got her play The Nest ready for its well-received premier.

  • City of Glass is Sensational!

    Robert Honeywell Wows in Einhorn Adaptation of Auster Novel

    By: Deborah Heineman - Feb 24th, 2016

    Untitled Theater Company No. 61's presentation of "City of Glass" is outstanding theater, with a phenomenal performance by Robert Honeywell as Daniel Quinn -- the only speaking actor in this 95-minute-long play! "City of Glass" was adapted and directed by Edward Einhorn from the novel written by Paul Auster. Mateo Moreno (Silent Man) and Dina Rose Rivera (Silent Woman) are terrific in this dark and disturbing -- but also very funny -- theater "noir!" Composer/Musician Freddi Price is excellent as well.

  • Susan Vencl Presents Long Before Afterward

    Her Fourth Evening-Length Work at Graham Center, NYC

    By: Deborah Heineman - Feb 24th, 2016

    Jessica Ames, Tomomi Imai, Erin Pellecchia, Cristina Ramos and Jessica Ruddock dance together in Vencl’s new, four-part piece exploring the relationship between the past, present and future. Choreographed to a suite of nine expressionistic works by Arlene Sierra, “Long Before Afterward” debuted February 19 at the Graham Center of Contemporary Dance in NYC.

  • Forest Whitaker Charms in O'Neill's Hughie

    The Life-Sustaining Power of Performance as Mourning Becomes Morning

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 23rd, 2016

    Erie Smith in Eugene O'Neill's Hughie is often played for the dark side of a fleabag world of dawls and bangtails. Chuckles erupt as a funny story is woven yet submerged. Forest Whitaker in his Broadway debut creates an incredible lightness of being in the dark night of an off-Broadway flop house.

  • Miner Family Wines Not Minor Wines

    Great Napa Vintages

    By: Philip S.Kampe - Feb 23rd, 2016

    From IT to wine, the journey of Dave Miner is a Napa Valley success story. It's a true family business.

  • Denver Playwriting Summit Part I

    Readings, Full Productions, Playwrights at Work

    By: Susan Hall and Diane Pinkard - Feb 22nd, 2016

    Readings, full productions, theatre has been key to Denver since Henry Lowenstein arrived to work for the Bonfilses. For the past 11 years Denver has put on a playwriting summit, celebrating theatre and bringing forward talent waiting to hit the main stage.

  • Berlinale 2016

    Another Blockbuster Film Festival

    By: Angelika Jansen - Feb 22nd, 2016

    Berlin just concluded the February 11 - 21, 2016 Berlinale by presenting 434 international films and more than 300.000 tickets were sold. Perhaps for the first time, a documentary film received the most coveted Golden Bear, 'Fuocoammare,' by Gianfranco Rosi. A thread of 'the right to happiness' was woven into the selection of movies, as there were also most serious subject matters in 15 categories. Two demanded much of the audience, time wise: They were 8 and 11 hours long.

  • 2666 at Chicago's Goodman Theatre

    Adapted from Roberto Bolaño's Massive Novel

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 22nd, 2016

    The Goodman's production of the late Roberto Bolaño's epic novel 2666 takes five-and-a-half hours to unfold on stage. It’s a beautiful mess.

  • Influential Winemaker Roberto Cipresso from La Fiorta

    Partners With Natalie Oliveros

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Feb 21st, 2016

    Famed winemaker Roberto Cipresso takes on Natalie Oliveros as a partner. Expansion of plots, new state of the art facilities and greater production are on the radar at La Fiorita.

  • Superhero Clubhouse's Jupiter at La MaMa

    A Play About Power!

    By: Deborah Heineman - Feb 20th, 2016

    Jonathan Camuzeaux, Jeremy Pickard and Sarah Ellen Stephens deliver powerhouse performances in Jupiter – A Play (literally) about Power. Camuzeaux & Pickard are also responsible (respectively) for the music and script for this futuristic “what if” that explores the potential disasters that lie ahead if we continue to abuse the environment. Jupiter will be at La MaMa through February 28.

  • Bonnie Bonnie Scotland

    You Take the High Road and I'll Take the Low Road

    By: Sandy Katz - Feb 20th, 2016

    During our 7 day trip, we visited a selection of the country’s top sites of historical significance, including the battlefields of Culloden and Glencoe and Skara Brae, the best preserved prehistoric village in northern Europe dating back to 3,000 B.C.

  • Berkshire Theatre Group 2016

    Lively Mix of Musicala Plays and Performances

    By: BTG - Feb 20th, 2016

    The Berkshire Theatre Group announces a full schedule of musicals, plays and performances at the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield as well as its two stages in Stockbridge. The program includes events from June through October. As usual a musical, Little Shop of Horrors, opens at the Colonial just after the July 4th holiday weekend which launches high season in the Berkshires.

  • An Act of GOD at LA's Ahmanson Theatre

    By David Javerbaum Former Writer for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart

    By: Jack Lyons - Feb 19th, 2016

    When GOD, the bearer of good or bad news, makes one of his rare appearances to his earth-bound children, he wisely chooses comedy as the medium of communication. The pain of hearing the truth is mercifully muted by audience laughter in his visit to the Ahmanson Theatre’s current production.

  • The Good Girl is Provocative Theatre

    Award Winner by Emilie Collyer

    By: Deborah Heineman - Feb 18th, 2016

    Melbourne Fringe Award-Winning “The Good Girl” by Emilie Collyer stars Leah Gabriel and Giacomo Baessato in a humorous but horrifying glimpse into a future with no human intimacy – just robo-sex encounters! Variation from the “program” can only create disaster! At the upstairs theatre at 59 E. 59 Theaters.

  • The Wedge Horse by Fault Line Theatre

    At NY's IATI Theater Mainstage

    By: Deborah Heineman - Feb 18th, 2016

    Ali Rose Dachis, Jorge Eliezer Chacon and Charlie Thurston star as three teens dealing with angst and loss in the doldrums of Long Island just after the tragedy of 9/11. Written by Nick Gandiello and directed by Aaron Rossini. "The Wedge Horse" has a limited run at IATI Theater Mainstage from January 29 – February 21.

  • The Flick at Steppenwolf in Chicago

    Annie Baker’s Pulitzer-winning Script

    By: Nancy Bishop - Feb 18th, 2016

    The Flick has a history of annoying playgoers. When the play premiered in 2013 at Playwrights Horizons, a well-regarded off-Broadway house in Manhattan, some subscribers were infuriated and threatened to cancel their subscriptions. And when I saw it at the Barrow Street Theatre in the Village last fall, a noticeable number of seats were empty after intermission. The Steppenwolf performance I attended was made up mainly of professional theatergoers, Jeff Committee members and press. No one left at intermission.

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