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To some degree, everything fit under the resilient umbrella that the late George Wein raised at the edge of Newport Harbor.
Read MoreGrand Horizons at the Gloucester Stage Company is a wild, funny, and sometimes wonderfully touching ride.
Read MoreNope, Jordan Peele’s highly anticipated third feature, is an awe-inspiring marvel about our own unrelenting obsession with spectacle.
Read More“Ukrainian culture — Ukrainian language, Ukrainian books, literature, poetry, arts — is the testimony of our existence through all these centuries … It is still here, and we try to save it.”
Read MoreThe Stone Age is only about the gossip, to the point where even when something (potentially) true comes along, it still reads like trash.
Read MoreRodin in the United States: Confronting the Modern is the show of the summer in the Berkshires — remarkably extensive, with 25 works on paper and 50 sculptures in terra cotta, plaster, marble, and bronze.
Read MoreAs the age of Covid-19 more or less wanes, Arts 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 MoreEarwig taps into a diabolical Freudian cabinet of uncanny curiosities and symbols.
Read MoreShakespeare’s text has been streamlined for easy consumption on a summer’s evening — there’s no intermission, lots of physical comedy, and a party vibe.
Read MoreNew recordings serve up fine performances of music from Latin America, Brazil, and post-1918 England. And a novel sends its main character back two centuries into Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro.
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Arts Feature: Best Movies (With Some Disappointments) of 2025