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The Prom’s greatest strength is how the musical can be, almost simultaneously, satirical, hilarious, and nuanced.
Read MoreA documentary about the female band Fanny asks why the talented LA hard rockers missed out on the big time.
Read MoreArts Fuse critics supply a guide to film, dance, visual art, theater, author readings, and music. More offerings will be added as they come in.
Read MoreHER | alive.un.dead proves that some stories are best told by trusting the audience’s imagination.
Read MoreDirector Ryan Stevens Harris talks about his stunningly cinematic home-grown labor of love, Moon Garden.
Read MoreWhat makes Scout Tafoya’s book a radical departure from earlier studies is his in-your-face challenges to John Ford’s character and his racial politics.
Read MoreThis week’s poem: Jim Dunn’s “The Day Before the Drowning Girl”
Read MoreNeighbor is steeped in what could be considered rock ’n’ roll’s golden era — the ’70s. That is when bands could be — and were damn well expected to be— both technically dazzling and broadly appealing.
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Arts Commentary: The Goldsmith-Warhol Copyright Decision — Reason to be Concerned
Decisions like these are increasingly troublesome because they will dictate what constitutes”fair use” for decades to come, even as technology evolves in threatening ways.
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