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Arts Fuse critics select the best in film, dance, visual arts, theater, music, and author events for the coming weeks.
The genius of this film is that no preaching is necessary; it makes its political point in an apolitical way, an art film that is, incidentally, didactic.
The Black Clown commands the vastness of the Loeb’s stage with an enviable energy.
Does Shakespeare need a digital makeover to stay relevant and entertaining?
“What is new since the ’70s is a much broader ideological shift in the business world itself, and the way in which it came to approach the jazz world as a result.”
Choreographer Paul Taylor leaves a repertory that sprawled from the outrageous to the sublime.
With this album, Luciana Souza has created her own indelible “book” of songs that ache and celebrate, muse and regret, dream and mourn.
Summer Cannibals’ main virtue is its keen transmission of psychological warfare in families.
This fascinating documentary should be compelling to guitarists and to jazz fans in general.

Remembrance: Burt Reynolds — A Manly, Funny, and Prolific Actor
Burt Reynolds was appealing primarily because one always knew what to expect from him: sex appeal, charm, humor, and a manly warmth that permeated every part he played.
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