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  • Kahlil Gibran for the Holidays

    Decorated Sculpture in the South End

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 16th, 2020

    The late Kahlil Gibran created a sculpture for a mini-park in his South End neighborhood. It has been decorated for the holidays with a festive, bright red bow and flowers.

  • Shakespeare & Company Greetings

    If music be the food of love, play on

    By: Allyn Burrows - Dec 18th, 2020

    Holiday greetings from Allyn Burrows the artistic director of Shakespeare & Company. With hope for a New Year and a lively summer season.

  • David Bowie's Lazarus

    2017 London Production to be Live Streamed

    By: Edward Rubin - Dec 20th, 2020

    David Bowie's Lazarus. As luck will have it, the London Production, filmed in 2017, is available for streaming from January 8 - January 10.

  • Home for the Holidays

    Cooking for Two

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 21st, 2020

    Home alone for the holidays. Decorating and cooking for two.

  • Seven Deadly Sins

    A Safe Outdoor Theatrical Experience in Miami Beach.

    By: Aaron Krause - Dec 21st, 2020

    Socially-distanced, mask-clad audience members are taking in 'Seven Deadly Sins,' a production of short plays in Miami Beach. Miami New Drama is staging 'Seven Deadly Sins' live and in person, with COVID safety protocols. 'Seven Deadly Sins' runs through Jan. 17 on Miami Beach's Lincoln Road, an outdoor shopping and dining promenade.

  • Tom Stoppard’s The Coast of Utopia

    Riveting Nine Hour Trilogy of 19th Century Russians

    By: Nancy Bishop - Dec 27th, 2020

    Recently I had a chance to revisit the most spectacular theater experience I’ve ever had. It took place on a weekend in February 2007. Over the course of two days, I experienced all nine hours of The Coast of Utopia, Tom Stoppard’s trilogy on 19th century Russian intellectuals and revolutionaries.

  • PBS Louisa May Alcott

    More Than Little Women

    By: Edward Rubin - Dec 27th, 2020

    Writing to his 'possums" New York critic Fast Eddy was gobsmacked by the PBS documentary of author Louisa May Alcott. "This beautifully acted documentary (Elizabeth Marvel Plays The Mature Louisa) brings back Louisa, her times, her family and her good friends - both gods in my pantheon -  Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) and Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)."

  • Pen/Man/Ship by Christina Anderson

    Moliere in the Park Streams Its First Contemporary Play

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 27th, 2020

    Moliere in the Park, with their streaming team Andy Carluccio and Liminal Entertainment Technologies, LLC are presenting Christina Anderson’s pen/man/ship free through January 4th.  It is a powerful play set on a boat passage that reverses the more familiar journey of black Africans.

  • 2021

    By: Susan Erony - Dec 31st, 2020

    Change is going to come some day soon.

  • Readers Series Slated

    At Ft. Lauderdale's Thinking Cap Theatre

    By: Aaron Krause - Jan 03rd, 2021

    Thinking Cap Theatre in Southeast Florida is launching a virtual series in which participants will read plays and then discuss them with artists. The first installment, "Race on the American Stage" kicks off this month. Pulitzer Prize-winning Fairview and the multi Tony-nominated Slave Play are among the featured works.

  • Berkshire Based Blue Heron Gallery Online

    Launched January 13 With Work by Galen Cheney

    By: Blue Heron - Jan 07th, 2021

    During the Covid pandemic artists continue to work. Exhibitions, however, have been cancelled. To meet a need Michael McGrath an entrepreneur and designer has created Blue Heron Gallery Online. The Berkshire based site will offer online exhibitions as well as options for a range of services from PDF and print catalogues to promotional and marketing strategies. Visitors to the exhibition have easy access to make "go to cart" purchases. The gallery will launch with an exhibition by Galen Cheney from January 13 through February 12.

  • Prototype Festival Opens OnLine

    Modulation Startles and Stuns

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 09th, 2021

    Undaunted by the constraints of COVID, the Prototype Festival launched its 7th annual event on January 8th. Modulation opened the week of new, streaming works. While the trailer and prologue look like the Hollywood Hills striped with waving geological lines, the three florescent doorways invite entrance to an interior. The inventive work, made up of 13 parts, is divided into three acts, Isolation, Fear and Identity.

  • Network for New Music Presents Extraordinary Measures

    Composer Portrait of Richard Wernick

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 11th, 2021

    Network for New Music gives us a delightful composer portrait of Pulitzer-prize winner Richard Wernick, a native Bostonian. He has studied at Tanglewood, and with Leonard Bernstein. Can you imagine a "Sunken Synagogue" replacing the Ys' cathedral of Debussy?

  • Arts Critic Sandy Katz at 80

    Traveling Sandy Was an ATCA Member

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 13th, 2021

    Sandy Katz, a theatre critic and travel writer from Charleston, Carolina, busted out with charisma and personality. Dubbed “Traveling Sandy” her bags were always packed for any destination.

  • Wide Slumber at Prototype Festival

    Gorgeous Music Combining Science and Art

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 13th, 2021

    Wide Slumber is a taped work presented at the Prototype Festival.  It premiered in Reykjavik in 2014.  Icelandic composer Valgeir Sigurdsson adapted a much lauded poem by Canadian a. rawlings. In evocative, erotic and riotous words. rawlings shows us the night zone between sleep and dreams.  Shakespeare dwelt there often – to sleep perchance to dream.  Wide Slumber is a large work.

  • A Dancer's Covid Tale

    Chriselle Tidrick's "The Limits of Escape."

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 16th, 2021

    Make Do is not what many artists are doing in the time of Covid. In the process of coping, they have extended boundaries, created new forms, and looked particularly to visual distribution channels  to show their new work. Chriselle Tidrick is a formidable aerial dancer who has also appeared on stilts at the Metropolitan Opera. Here is the dancer herself on how she came to create "The Limits of Escape."

  • World Travel and New Plays

    Southeast Florida Theater Companies Present Diverse Offerings

    By: Aaron Krause - Jan 21st, 2021

    Theatre Lab, Florida Atlantic University's professional resident theater company, will offer its new play festival online this year. Miami’s Juggerknot Theatre Company and the international-based PopUP Theatrics offer the chance to travel the world from the comfort of your home. "Travel" to places such as Lagos, Mumbai, Portland-Oregon, Beirut, Los Angeles, and Mexico City.

  • The Catastrophist by Lauren Guderson

    True Story About Pandemic Expert, Her Husband

    By: Charles Giuliano - Jan 26th, 2021

    Though not a play about COVID19, it is a true story of a pandemic expert. An interactive deep dive into the profundities of scientific exploration and the harrowing realities of facing your own mortality, The Catastrophist by Lauren Gunderson is a world premiere theatrical experience built of and for this moment in time. 

  • Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher

    Boston Lyric Opera Streaming Philip Glass

    By: Doug Hall - Jan 28th, 2021

    Boston Lyric Opera has boldly re-adapted Poe’s famous gothic horror story “The Fall of the House of Usher” with music of Philip Glass. It streams on operabox.tv for seven days starting on January 29/

  • TFANA Streams an Outsider Rehearsal

    John Douglas Thompson Takes on Shylock

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 28th, 2021

    Preparing for live-reopening, Theatre for a New Audience (TFANA) is sharing its rehearsal process. Arin Arbus, a regular as TFANA, directs. She and John Douglas Thompson have worked together on Otello and Macbeth. Now they take on Shylock and Merchant of Venice.

  • Atlanta Opera Presents Love Letters to Atlanta

    Jamie Barton Sings Georgia on My Mind

    By: Susan Hall - Jan 29th, 2021

    Georgia has been very much our minds this year and last. The state significantly contributed to the return of Happy Days. The Atlanta Opera Company is offering Love Letters to Atlanta on February 14. Morris Robinson, Jamie Barton and Kevin Burdette.

  • A Class Act

    A Garden Theatre production in Florida

    By: Aaron Krause - Jan 31st, 2021

    The Garden Theatre in Winter Garden, near Orlando, is presenting A Class Act, based on the life of A Chorus Line lyricist Edward Kleban. The touching and funny production runs through Feb. 7. You must wear a mask and practice social distancing in order to attend.

  • Chinese New Year

    Year of the Ox

    By: Cheng Tong - Feb 02nd, 2021

    The Chinese New Year is Friday, February 12, the Year of The Ox.  To those who celebrate, Xinnian Kuaile.

  • 15-Minute Musical Challenge

    New Musicals Emerge from Contest

    By: Aaron Krause - Feb 11th, 2021

    Five new short musicals will mark their world premieres virtually. The shows came out of the National Alliance for Musical Theatre's "15-Minute Musical Challenge." The Cleveland-area's Beck Center for the Arts, in collaboration with the Baldwin Wallace University Music Theatre Program, will present the shows.

  • Boston Artist Peter McGrath, Sculptor and Painter

    Second Virtual Exhibition at Berkshire's Blue Heron Gallery

    By: Blue Heron - Feb 11th, 2021

    Blue Heron Gallery Online, a virtual online art gallery, will be presenting the art of Boston artist Peter McGrath beginning at noon on Friday, February 12, 2021.  The show, appearing on www.blueherongallery.online, will feature both sculptures and paintings, and present the artist in photographs and his Artist Statement. The artist is the brother of North Adams gallerist, Michael McGrath.

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