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  • Die Nase at Komische Oper, Berlin

    The Nose, a Surreal Opera, Delights

    By: Angelika Jansen - Jun 21st, 2018

    This final opening of the 2017/18 season at the Komische Oper, Die Nase/The Nose, in Berlin is a typical Barrie Kosky production - eccentric, colorful, and totally entertaining in its over-the-top action on stage. It will be performed in June and July.

  • American Weather at HERE

    Chris Green Makes His Way through Climate Change

    By: Susan Hall - Jun 24th, 2018

    American Weather takes the emotional temperature of Americans today. Chris Green, who created this moving and multi-dimensional theatrical piece, speaks of our country losing its narrative. Rather than proposing a new narrative, he suggests a new posture, one of gropipng acceptance, where we come to terms with the shape of our present in order to better prepare for the future.

  • Harry Connick, Jr. at Tanglewood

    Laissez les bons temps rouler!

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 24th, 2018

    Harry Connick, Jr. was the real deal at Tanglewood. Backed by a fabulous eleven piece band over two and a half hours of non stop fun he explored a wide range of musical genres with a distinctly New Orleans flavored patois.

  • Debra Jo Rupp Takes the Cake

    Timely Comic Drama by Bekah Brunstetter

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jun 25th, 2018

    The Cake by Bekah Brunstetter is a ripped from the headlines topical drama at Barrington Stage. While addressing vendors refusing to provide services for gay marriages it does so with a comedic touch. As Della, the conflicted specialty baker, the brilliant Debra Jo Rupp has never been more hilarious.

  • The Finger Lakes, Gateway To American Wines

    Riesling Rules

    By: Philip S. Kampe - Jun 26th, 2018

    Only hours away from millions of people, the Finger Lakes, located in central New York state, is home to a large wine making population. With over one hundred twenty vineyards, located on or near one of the eleven lakes, the Finger Lakes 'cold climate' wine culture thrives year round, focusing on the Riesling varietal.

  • Now + There — Reinterpreting Public Art

    Making the city of Boston An Art City

    By: Mark Favermann - Jun 27th, 2018

    Now+There is the lineal descendant of the Urban Arts Institute. Its mission has expanded to reinforce social justice and environmental concerns with community-involved public art projects. Led by the creative and energetic Kate Gilbert, it works on a variety projects throughout the City of Boston.

  • Long Day’s Journey Into Night

    O'Neill at Stratford Shakespeare Festival

    By: Herbert Simpson - Jun 29th, 2018

    I’m not sure that Canadian audiences share the idolatry that Americans have for O’Neill. Several Canadian critics gave this performance muted approval and a suggestion that O’Neill is a trifle unconvincing and overdone in this play’s insistent hopelessness.

  • Tempest at San Diego's Old Gold Theater

    Summer Shakespeare Festival

    By: Jack Lyons - Jun 30th, 2018

    The Old Globe’s prescient Erna Finci Artiti Viterbi Artistic Director Barry Edelstein, himself a Shakespeare scholar, understands how the hidden magic in Shakespeare’s plays can still inspire and entertain. His tapping of Irish director Joe Dowling to helm the technically challenging Old Globe production of “The Tempest,” is both a stroke of genius and of timing. Dowling ran the famous Guthrie Theatre of Minneapolis for 20 years. Kate Burton leads as Prospera.

  • Two Mile Hollow's Rolling World Premiere

    At Potrero Stage in San Francisco

    By: Victor Cordell - Jun 30th, 2018

    The producing theater company Ferocious Lotus and playwright Leah Nanako Winkler are on the same wavelength in promoting Asian inclusion in theater. Although the narrative of Two Mile Hollow is about a white family, the pivotal character is Asian played by an Asian, and actors with Asian or Pacific Islanders blood play all of the white roles as well. So add one more brick to the building of ethnic inclusion in the arts.

  • The Closet By Douglas Carter Beane

    PC Gay Themed Satire at Williamstown Theatre Festival

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 01st, 2018

    PC or not to be was the question in a world premiere comedy The Closet by Douglas Carter Beane at Williamstrown Theatre Festival. It stars Broadway's Matthew Broderick in his first WTF appearance. He is backed by renowned WTF veterans Jessica Hecht and Brooks Ashmanskas. There was also a breakout performance by Ann Harada.

  • World Premiere of Tilikum by Kristiana Rae Colón

    Whale of a Tale at Sideshow Theatre Company

    By: Nancy Bishop - Jul 02nd, 2018

    “Tilikum, the infamous SeaWorld killer whale, has died.” That was the headline in the Orlando Sentinel on January 6, 2017. Sideshow Theatre’s world premiere production of Tilikum takes the story of that sea creature and creates a poetic, percussive fantasy that demands that we pay attention to a range of social justice issues.

  • The Big D in South Florida

    World Premiere of Comic-Drama near Ft. Lauderdale

    By: Aaron Krause - Jul 03rd, 2018

    The Big D has a dual personality as a play, with some of the material risque and lively, while other moments are tender and tragic. Michael Mizerany's new work is having its world premiere at Wilton Manor's Abyss Theater. Prolific theater artist Ronnie Larsen is directing the play, featuring some strong acting.

  • Objects of Desire at Eclipse Mill Gallery

    Larry Alice and Joan Kiley Paired In Evocative Exhibition

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 03rd, 2018

    The special exhibition Objects of Desire pairs whimsical narrative paintings by Joan Kiley with relief sculpture and polychromed assemblages by Larry Alice. There is a confluence and empathy of fantasy and the surreal in work that will be on view in the Eclipse Mill, 243 Union Street, from Friday, June 29 through Sunday, July 29. A receptiom will be held on Friday, July 6.

  • Coming Back Like a Song at Berkshire Theatre Group

    World Premiere of Juke Box Musical

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 04th, 2018

    It's Christmas Eve at the NY apartment of Irving Berlin. He is joined by fellow masters of the Great American Songbook Jimmy Van Heusen and Harold Arlen. With just a piano we get 35 of their songs in Berkshire Theatre Group''s world premiere of Coming Back Like a Song by Lee Kalcheim,

  • The Bennington Mural Project

    Union Street Mural Unveiled

    By: Chris Buchanan - Jul 03rd, 2018

    In downtown Bennington, a new mural lets local artists shine and brings the community together.

  • End of The Royal Family of Broadway

    NY Times Review Spikes Barrington Stage Production

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 06th, 2018

    The Barrington Stage world premiere of the musical Royal Family of Broadway has earned mostly positive reviews. It has been treated as a work in progress potentially bound for Broadway. The team assembled for this production have been there before. Because of a devastating review by Jesse Green in the New York Times that may not happen. While Green is an established, and well qualified critic, is it the role of the Times to nip in the bud regional productions being developed for a run in New York?

  • Van Zweden and the New York Philharmonic

    A Beethoven Prelude to Action

    By: Paul J. Pelkonen - Jul 05th, 2018

    With all the secrecy that surrounds the arrival of a new music director for America's oldest orchestra, one must rely on live performances and recorded documentation to assess such a relationship. Happily, such documentation arrived earlier this year in the form of a DeccaGold recording of Beethoven's Fifth and Seventh Symphonies, made by the New York Philharmonic under the aegis of its new boss, Jaap van Zweden.

  • Hair at Berkshire Theatre Group

    Celebrating 50th Anniversary

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 08th, 2018

    If you plan to see Hair at the Unicorn Theatre in Stockbridge, as well you should, a few tokes of medical marijuana will help to set the mood. Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair. On opening night we spotted a granny with a crown of woven daisys.

  • Batsheva — The Young Ensemble at Jacob's Pillow

    Audience Insulted by Naharin’s Virus

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 09th, 2018

    With a combination of theatre of nihilism, taunts and insults the audience at Jacob's Pillow endured a riveting performance by Israel's Batsheva — The Young Ensemble. There was a single, hour long piece “Naharin’s Virus” (2001). It was choreographed by soon to retire artistic director Ohad Naharin. Like an ersatz Stockholm Syndrome experience the audience perhaps too politely thanked their tormentors for the assault on their sense.

  • Four Quartets Danced at Bard

    Tamowitz, Saariaho and Marden Capture the Still Point

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 09th, 2018

    Bard's Summerscape, ever brave, captures extraordinary moments in poet T.S. Eliot's masterwork, Four Quartets. The words the poet so clearly relishes in his own reading now dance before our eyes like searing moments at the still point. Choreographer Pam Tanowitz, composer Kaija Saariaho and painter Brice Marden join forces at the Fisher Center in Annandale.

  • I Will Speak for Myself

    Evoking Historical Women of Color by Valerie Joyce

    By: Victor Cordell - Jul 11th, 2018

    In Professor Valerie Joyce’s visits to schools, she asks students to name African-American women they know of from before 1865. Even among black female students, the responses quickly falter – Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, maybe Sally Hemings. With 250 years of history in the United States before the Civil War, this whole segment of our population is virtually silent, unknown.

  • Macbeth the Scotched Play at S&Co.

    Botched by Misdirection of Melia Bensussen

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 12th, 2018

    It helps if you have read or seen other productions of Macbeth. Without that background the radical deconstruction ot the iconic play directed by Obie winner, Melia Bensussen, won't make sense.

  • Artney Jackson by James Anthony Tyler

    African American Theatre in Williamstown

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jul 15th, 2018

    For the past decade there has been a tradition of at least one Afircan American themed production each season. This time its a benign and charming comedy Artney Jackson by James Anthony Tyler. Arguably there is progress that the well crafted and superbly acted play is a step back from polemical social and political agendas.

  • Kevin Puts' Silent Night at Glimmerglass

    Pulitzer-Winning Opera Wrenching and Gorgeous

    By: Susan Hall - Jul 16th, 2018

    Silent Night by Kevin Puts with libretto by Mark Campbell is being presented at the Glimmerglass Festival. Tomer Zvulen directs this complex tale revealing each subtle turn in the story of a 24 hour truce during the First World War. Nicole Paiement conducts to bring forth all the subtlety and beauty of Puts’ score. Puts is both a fabulously gifted entertainer and a deep musical thinker. The music paints the scenes. The singers capture the tone in gorgeous melodies and often appropriately harsh recitative.

  • MCLA Gallery 51 Exhibition by Charles Giuliano

    Heads and Tales a 40 Year Retrospective

    By: BFA - Jul 17th, 2018

    A forty year retrospective by Charles Giuliano "Heads and Tales" opens Thursday, July 26 at MCLA Gallery 51 in North Adams, Massachusetts. It will be a part of the monthly Downstreet celebration, The artist will give a talk at the gallery on Wednesday, August 8 from 6 to 7 PM. The exhibition, curated by gallery director Arthur Debow, surveys 40 images of jazz and rock musicians from the Rolling Stones, to Marvin Gaye, Miles Davis, Yoko Ono and Frank Sinatra.

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