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Summer 1993 is provocative, both for the raw depth of the emotions it evokes and the directness of its storytelling.
Read MoreArts Fuse critics select the best in film, dance, visual arts, theater, music, and author events for the coming weeks.
Read MoreDo the games of the Marquise and Valmont still have the same old sinful fire and political relevance?
Read MoreThe Fuller Craft Museum’s appealing and thoughtful exhibit showcases a wonderful assemblage of diverse utensils and accessories used in domestic as well as professional kitchens.
Read MoreFlat Earth Theatre has made a bold and relevant programming choice, taking on a play that examines how technology can both shape our illicit desires and fulfill them with ease.
Read MoreThis effort is the most ‘Hollywood’ score the BSFO has created yet, a plush musical carpet for The Man Who Laughs’s emotional high and lows.
Read MoreIt never occurs to him that, by championing just the great works of Western Civilization and consigning pop culture (notably science-fiction) to the flames, he’s exercising his own pernicious brand of censorship.
Read MoreIn the end, Philip Roth produced the greatest body of work in the 20th century since William Faulkner and Saul Bellow and I.B. Singer.
Read MoreWe will not get another Angels in America unless we demand it — and stop accepting bogus substitutes.
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Father’s Day Feature: My Father the Former Communist
Having a father in prison meant radical changes in our everyday lives.
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