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  • 2022 Boston Artadia Award

    Winners Announced

    By: Artadia - Nov 08th, 2022

    The recipients of the 2022 Boston Artadia Awards are Stephen Hamilton, the Liberty Specialty Markets Artadia Award recipient, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, and Shantel Miller. The 2022 Boston Artadia Awards were also supported by the Paul and Edith Babson Foundation, the Meraki Artist Award, the Artadia Board of Directors, Artadia Council Members, anonymous funders, and individual donors across the country.

  • Ellen Schön’s New Directions Home

    At Boston Sculptors

    By: Sculptors - Nov 08th, 2022

    Ellen Schön’s New Directions Home, her second solo exhibition at Boston Sculptors Gallery, features two discreet series of new ceramic sculpture. Inspired by diverse cultural traditions, Schön employs both ancient and contemporary technologies in her sculptural interpretations.  

  • Gimme Gamay

    Underdog Wine Poured at Mezze

    By: Mezze - Nov 08th, 2022

    Did you hear the one about the time the Duke of Burgundy Philippe the Bold, outlawed the cultivation of Gamay back in 1385? He claimed it was a "disloyal and bad plant." He reserved his region for the more elegant Pinot Noir. You may wonder why we have such an affection for Gamay at Mezze. We often root for the underdog. 

  • Berkshires Jazz Sprawl

    Downtown Pittsfield and Lenox

    By: Jazz - Nov 06th, 2022

    The downtowns of Pittsfield and Lenox, Massachusetts will be sprawling with live music on the weekend of Nov. 18-20, with the first Berkshires Jazz Fall Sprawl. Artists range from small, local groups to the 17-piece Amherst Jazz Orchestra, and spotlight 16-year-old prodigy Brandon Goldberg, who is making his Berkshires debut that weekend.

  • Yet Another Guys and Dolls

    ACT-CT in Ridgefield

    By: Karen Isaacs - Nov 07th, 2022

    Within three months Connecticut theatergoers have seen two excellent productions. In the summer it was produced at Sharon Playhouse. Now ACT-CT in Ridgefield has opened its season with another fine production which runs through Sunday, Nov. 20. Each is well cast, well sung and well directed.

  • Fall Festival of Shakespeare

    Schedule of School Performances

    By: S&CO - Nov 06th, 2022

    Now in its 34th year, the Fall Festival of Shakespeare leads students at 11 high schools in Massachusetts and New York through a language-based exploration of Shakespeare's plays. This work culminates in full-scale productions at their own schools as well as the Main Stage at the Tina Packer Playhouse during a raucous, four-day celebration.

  • Chekhov's First Play at the Irish Arts Center

    Chehkov's Methods Revealed in a Romp

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 06th, 2022

    Dead Center: Chekhov’s First Play has had a jam-packed audience in its run at the Irish Arts Center in New York.  To be sure the city is crammed with actors who play Chekov roles.  This play is a tip to fathoming their secrets.  It is also pure fun for any theater goer.

  • Mousetrap at Hartford Stage

    Where's the Beef

    By: Karen Isaacs - Nov 06th, 2022

    When the murderer reveals himself and points the gun at his next victim, I expect to feel some fear. Unfortunately, in the stylish but misguided Hartford Stage production of The Mousetrap (running through Sunday, Nov. 6), not only didn’t I feel fear, I had no sense that the intended victim felt fear.

  • Pie in the Sky on Acorn

    Must See TV

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 04th, 2022

    In every sense Richard Thomas Griffiths OBE (31 July 1947 – 28 March 2013) was a larger than life actor. We subscribe to Acorn through Amazon Prime. It offers a menu of British, Australian and New Zeland programs. Lately we have been binge watching Griffiths in five seasons as chef detective Henry Crabbe in "Pie in the Sky." You might also know him from appearances in Harry Potter films. On stage he won numerous awards including a Tony and Laurence Olivier Award.

  • We, the Innumerable at National Sawdust

    Niloufar Nourbakhsh Captures Iranian Protests

    By: Susan Hall - Nov 03rd, 2022

    We The Innumerable is an opera created by the Iranian/American composer Niloufar Nourbakhash with libretto by Lisa Flanagan. Sara Jobin, who is committed to works which bring about peace and global understanding, conducted. National Sawdust staged. The opera tells the story of a woman who protects the truth at all costs It is set during protests in Iran after a contested election in 2009. It echoes today’s protests.

  • Rose B. Simpson Legacies

    Boston's Instutute of Contemporary Art

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 03rd, 2022

    Through January 29 the Institute of Contemporary Art is displayng a gallery with 11 totemic ceramic standing figures by Rose B. Simpson. A graduate of RISD she grew up in a culture noted for its distinctive pottery created by her mother, Roxanne Swentzell, her late grandmother, Rina Swentzell and her late great-grandmother, Rose Naranjo.

  • Clue

    The Theatrical Version of the Board Game and Movie

    By: Victor Cordell - Nov 03rd, 2022

    Murder!  Mystery!  Mayhem! are the order of the day (er – night) as Center Rep takes on the classic trapped-in-a-scary-mansion who-dunnit?  Did the butler do it?  In a play that relies on style rather than gravitas, Director Nancy Carlin pulls all the right strings to make for a fluffy and entertaining ninety minutes.

  • Tony Winner Fun Home

    At TheatreWorks Hartford

    By: Karen Isaacs - Nov 03rd, 2022

    This is a big show for TheaterWorks Hartford with a cast of nine and a band of seven. Under Rob Ruggiero’s sure hand, it comes together to create a thought-provoking and moving play.

  • Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley

    Shakespeare & Company

    By: SA&Co - Nov 01st, 2022

    Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley is presented in honor of  Shakespeare & Company Costume Director Govane Lohbauer, and in memory of actor, teacher, and weapons master Bob Lohbauer,who passed away in September 2022.

  • '62 Center at Williams College

    Theatre and Dance

    By: Williams - Nov 02nd, 2022

    Upcoming at the Williams College '62 Center are theater and dance performances. THEATRE: A LOVE STORY By Caridad Svichm directed by Emmanuelle Delpech and Pachedu (F)ALL Ensembles.

  • An Evening of Jazz and Healing

    Justin Freed Presents at Coolidge Corner Theater

    By: Justin Freed - Nov 02nd, 2022

    In response to these difficult times, artist Justin Freed, former owner and programmer of the Coolidge Corner Theatre, has created An Evening of Jazz and Healing with live music, photography, drawings, projection and film.

  • All Quiet on the Western Front

    German Director Edward Berger Remakes 1930 Double Oscar Winner.

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 30th, 2022

    In 1929 Erich Maria Remarque published the controversial anti-war novel All Quiet on the Western Front. It follows the tale of Paul and his classmates who enlisted to fight for the Fatherland. One by one they died until Paul, the last, is killed by a sniper in the final minutes before Armistice. Just a year later Hollywood released the classic film which won two Oscars. Now available on Netflix is an epic, cinematic, gruesome remake by the German director Edward Berger. The spectacular retelling is disrespectful in selecting some and discarding many of the plot points and metaphors of a literary masterpiece.

  • Alice Denison: Posy Riot

    Boston's Gallery NAGA

    By: NAGA - Nov 02nd, 2022

    Alice Denison refers to this large body of work as her Pangloss series and they are rooted in her interest in ornately rendered plants and flowers.  At once dreamlike and mysterious with a tangle of floating flora, they are now beginning to allude to a real place—it’s as if the tapestry has been lifted to reveal a distant landscape.     

  • Rachel Siporin at Bowery Gallery

    Murals in the Marketplace

    By: Bowery - Oct 29th, 2022

    During the Depression years Mitchell Siporin found relief and commissions through the mural program of the WPA. In 1939 he traveled to Mexico and drew inspiration from the muralists. Recently discovered negatives from that trip led to an exhibitiion by his daughter Rachel Siporin at Bowery Gallery in New York. Siporin founded the studio program at Brandeis University.

  • Hamlet at the Brooklyn Academy of Music

    A Romp Directed by Thomas Ostenmeier

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 29th, 2022

    If you think spending an evening with Hamlet at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) is not your best choice for a fun experience, think again. This production is a hoot.  Pure pleasure.

  • Manship Artists Residency

    Betty Schlemm Silent Auction

    By: Manship - Oct 29th, 2022

    Curator Susan Erony presented a talk about Schlemm's career and impact on Cape Ann and throughout the world of watercolor artists, followed by remembrances from family and friends. The exhibition is now available online as a silent auction.

  • James Carson at The Crypt

    What to Expect from the Unexpected

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 28th, 2022

    The impresario Andrew Ousley is deeply in touch with audience needs in the 21st century. In selecting dramatic and unusual settings for concerts which range from the most formal performances of classical music’s iconic and ineffably beautiful Goldberg Variations to a completely improvised concert, he helps a new audience open their ears and hearts, and more traditional concert goers to hear works anew. 

  • Milk and Honey

    The Wick Theatre in Boca Raton, Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Oct 25th, 2022

    The Wick Theatre in Boca Raton has mounted an impressive production of the rarely-produced musical, "Milk and Honey." The production runs through Nov. 6. "Milk and Honey" takes place in early 1960's Israel. The plot focuses on a lover affair, set against the backdrop of Israel trying to gain recognition as an independent nation.

  • Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

    At Yale Rep

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 26th, 2022

    Director Bundy and René Augesen and Dan Donohue as Martha and George, manage to convey that these two people – as dysfunctional as their relationship may be – truly and deeply love each other.  In other productions this often  gets lost in the fighting, obscenities, insults and lies that they hurl at each other. Because of this, the play in this production ends on a more optimistic note.

  • La Traviata by Giuseppe Verdi

    West Bay Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 26th, 2022

    As usual, General Director and Conductor José-Luis Moskovich marshals a fine orchestra and production.  Of course, the party scenes in particular require special attention, and director Igor Vieira ensures their grandeur.

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