Month: February 2016
In a period of radicalism and terrorism, this installation serves as a beacon for remembering the beauty of the best of Islamic creative culture.
Read More1984‘s theatrical vision of authoritarianism in action is not for the faint of heart.
Read MoreHardly any of the under-60s generation can tell you who Serge Koussevitzky was or what his legacy consists of.
Read MoreElgar’s brilliant scoring in his Symphony no. 1 was front and center, in this performance not an end in itself but serving clearly expressive goals.
Read MoreNo one I know is neutral about this kind of material and I was pleased to watch a play that did not shrink from its many complexities and challenges.
Read MoreArts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, dance, music, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
Read MoreNobody, these days, plays the music of the Strauss family better than the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.
Read MoreThe Witch‘s brief jolts of violence seem perfectly calibrated to knock us out of our seats..
Read MoreSunday afternoon’s hourlong program in BB@Home series took us from the nineteenth century to this very minute.
Read MoreThis compact documentary presents a poignant picture of the intersection of segregation, enlightenment, and failure.
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