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  • Last Night in Inwood

    A World Premiere Production by Theatre Lab

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 03rd, 2023

    Theatre Lab in Boca Raton is producing a fine world premiere of "Last Night in Inwood" byu Alix Sobler. The production runs through Feb. 12. Theatre Lab, Florida Atlantic University's resident professional theater company, is dedicated solely to new work.

  • Christine Quintana's Espejos:Clean

    Hartford Stage Company

    By: Karen Isaacs - Feb 04th, 2023

    The playwright Christine Quintana makes an interesting point about communication in the program of Hartford Stage’s production of Espejos:Clean. She says, “Every interaction we have with one another is an act of translation.”

  • Irish Repertory Theatre Mounts The Smuggler

    One Man in a Smashing Play

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 04th, 2023

    No small theatrical space is better used than the Irish Repertory Theatre's W. Scott Lucas Studio. The stage fills the room, inviting the audience in. Selections are always apt. Ronan Noone’s  The Smuggler is no exception.

  • Indecent by Paula Vogel

    West Hartford’s Playhouse on Park

    By: Karen Isaacs - Feb 06th, 2023

    The play interweaves three elements – the life and works of the Yiddish author Sholem Asch, the history of productions of his play The God of Vengeance, and the stories of the people involved in a Broadway production of the show in the 1920s. It may sound confusing, but it isn’t.

  • Opera Philadelphia Mounts Credos

    Margaret Bonds and Carl Orff in One Performane

    By: Susan Hall - Feb 06th, 2023

    In one smashing performance, Opera Philadelphia presented two Credos, statements of belief by composers who lived and worked at about the same time, in strikingly different circumstances. Carl Orff survived the Nazi regime in Germany by not protesting. Margaret Bonds grew up in a thriving Chicago art community.

  • & Juliet (and Juliet) on Broadway

    Stephen Sondheim Theatre

    By: Karen Isaacs - Feb 07th, 2023

    The new Broadway musical – already seen in London and Toronto — & Juliet (and Juliet) has a clever concept, that grows on you. I like the play now more than I did while I was in the theater. The clever idea behind  & Juliet is what saves it from being preachy and predictable.

  • La Cage Aux Folles, Komische Oper, Berlin

    An Over The Top Production

    By: Angelika Jansen - Feb 08th, 2023

    What a performance of La Cage Aux Folles at the Komische Oper, Berlin!! This musical with music by Jerry Herman and a book by Harvey Fierstein has seen many international interpretations since it opened in 1983 at the Palace Theatre in New York.

  • Adriana G. Prat: Topographical Visions

    Hall Space

    By: Hall Space - Feb 10th, 2023

    HallSpace presents paintings by Adriana G. Prat, an academically-trained scientist with a Ph.D. in Biophysics. Adriana’s curiosity for the natural world stemmed in her country of birth, Argentina. In Topographical Visions, Prat shares her awareness of the environmental crisis.

  • Falstaff

    A Great Production of Verdi's Exquisite Comic Opera

    By: Victor Cordell - Feb 12th, 2023

    Frothy delights like “Falstaff” present particular challenges. Comic timing, enthusiastic affect, and vocal versatility must be heightened. Opera San Jose’s production excels in every dimension. Performers sing with joy and act with charm. All of the artistic elements strike the right note, resulting in a production that glitters.

  • The Science of Leaving Omaha

    World Premiere at Palm Beach Dramaworks in South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 12th, 2023

    "The Science of Leaving Omaha" is a layered play about the power of words and the desire to matter and be acknowledged. The play's world premiere production is running through Feb. 19 at Palm Beach Dramaworks in South Florida. Carter W. Lewis, a playwright who has won several national playwrighting awards, penned the play.

  • Future Lab(s) Gallery in North Adams

    Anna Vojtech and Maria Denjongpa  

    By: Future Labs - Feb 15th, 2023

    Future Lab(s) is an artist run, community based gallery that welcomes the public to the historic, cultural district in North Adams, MA. We are a visual arts gallery and installation space dedicated to providing support and exhibition space to (primarily) northern Berkshires artists at every stage of their artistic development. 

  • Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival 2023

    Mark Morris Launches Season

    By: Pillow - Feb 15th, 2023

    Running June 28 through August 27, Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival 2023 will feature nine weeks of performances in the Ted Shawn Theatre and on the outdoor Henry J. Leir Stage, as well as special events, parties, and pop up performances in Berkshire County. This season will offer the largest breadth of international performers since 2019, as well as multiple performances with live music, and dance styles ranging from hip hop and street dance to ballet and contemporary.

  • Jazz in the Berkshires

    Three Upcoming Events

    By: Ed Bride - Feb 17th, 2023

    There is a lot of great music on tap for the next three weeks. It's time to shake of cabin fever and get out and about. Laissez les bons temps roule as they say in Creole.

  • The 12th Annual 10X10 New Play Festival

    Barrington Stage Company Extended Through March 12

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 20th, 2023

    It is time yet again for the much anticipated 12th Annual 10X10 New Play Festival which is part of the 2023 10X10 Upstreet Arts Festival that runs through March 5.  For the 2023 version, under new artistic director, Alan Paul, 10X10 New Play Festival cast features 10X10 veterans Matt Neely, BSC Associate Artist Peggy Pharr Wilson and Robert Zukerman.  Making their BSC 10X10 debuts are Skyler Gallun, Sky Marie and Camille Upshaw.  

  • Bubbles for Oscars

    FLEUR de MIRAVAL Will Flow for Celebrants

    By: Mirval - Feb 20th, 2023

    Oscar night will prove to be absolutely Mirvalous. The Champagne poured at the 95th Oscars®, taking place on Sunday, March 12th will be fabulous FLEUR de MIRAVAL.

  • The Literary Life

    Winter Is for Writing Books

    By: Charles Giuliano - Feb 28th, 2023

    In 2015 I wrote a book of poetry, Shards of a Life, which was launched with a reading and dialogue with director, Susan Wissler, at Edith Wharton's The Mount. It was an auspicious beginning. Each winter other books of poetry and oral history followed. There was a disruption in 2021 entailing recovery from spinal surgery. The eighth book, Annisquam: Pip and Me Coming of Age, is on track for a Spring/ Summer release.

  • 73rd Berlinale

    Februray 16 to 26, 2023

    By: Angelika Jansden - Mar 01st, 2023

    Too bad and not long enough! The 73rd Berlinale is now film history. After the limited screenings during the Covid years, the festival became an obvious success.

  • Kissing the Floor in New York

    Ellen McLaughlin's Moving Take on Antigone

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 02nd, 2023

    Kissing the Floor,  a radical and strangely beautiful retelling of Antigone by Sophocles, is playing on Theatre Row in New York through March 12th. It is beautifully acted. The language, even as it describes ugly scenes, is lilting and lovely. Playwright Ellen McLaughlin often delves into Greek subjects.

  • Whitney Museum Workers

    Negotiate First Union Contract

    By: Union - Mar 06th, 2023

    After more than a year of bargaining, the Whitney Museum Union of Local 2110 UAW have reached a tentative agreement with the Museum on a first union contract. Union members are in the process of voting on the contract.

  • The Vienna Philharmonic at Carnegie Hall

    A Prelude to Carnegie's Weimar

    By: Susan Hall - Mar 08th, 2023

    The Vienna Philharmonic arrived at Carnegie Hall, a highly anticipated occasion that enticed the cast of Lohengrin at the Metropolitan Opera to come over for a busman’s holiday. Richard Strauss, who was featured in the first program, loved Lohengrin.  His last tone poem, The Alpine Symphony was performed in a program with Arnold Schoenberg's Vertlarke Nacht.

  • Strindberg's Totentanz at Berliner Ensemble

    August Strindberg's Play of 1900

    By: Angelika Jansen - Mar 11th, 2023

    August Strindberg's "Totentanz" had its opening in Berlin at Bertolt Brecht's famed theater, the Berliner Ensemble. Written in 1900 it is one of those plays that lets one shudder about the senselessness and cruel relationship some couples endure and call it a marriage.

  • Creative Alloys: The Boston Metal Scene

    Fuller Craft Museum

    By: Mark Favermann - Mar 16th, 2023

    Like Sutton Hoo, King Tut’s Tomb, and Scythian Gold, the most exhilarating archeological finds are often the discoveries of beautifully crafted metal objects. A gorgeous shiny object suggests riches of untold value, something precious with which to feather our nests. Viewing the Fuller Craft Museum’s compelling show Creative Alloys is a bit like peeking at an elegantly revealed excavation filled with treasures.

  • The Art of Burning

    Riff on Medea At Hartford Stage

    By: Karen Isaacs - Mar 21st, 2023

    Though The Art of Burning is described as a comedy, it is really a drama centering on Patricia (Patti) who is about to be divorced from Jason, after a many year marriage (they have a 16-year-old daughter).

  • August: Osage County

    Palm Beach Dramaworks in South Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Mar 22nd, 2023

    Palm Beach Dramaworks is poised to perform August: Osage County. The production runs from March 31 thru April 16. Playwright Tracey Letts won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Tony Award for Best Play for August: Osage County. The director and a cast member say that despite its three-plus hours, the play flies by.

  • Endgame at Irish Rep

    John Douglas Thompson and Bill Irwin

    By: Karen Isaacs - Mar 24th, 2023

    The Irish Rep has mounted a superb production of Samuel Beckett's difficult and riveting Endgame. It features Bill Irwin, know for his Beckett interpretations, and renowned Shakespearean actor John Douglas Thompson. The hit show will be live streamed for its final performances,

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