jane austen
- Patricia Wright, a retired college librarian and music aficionado, died of a pulmonary embolism Friday at Greater Baltimore Medical Center. The Towson resident was 79.
- The 18th annual festival features a new comic book pavilion and exhibitions on the art of book-making
- Susan Reimer on Jane Austen and the need for kindness in the world
- Baltimore-born author Adelle Waldman gets inside the male psyche to file dispatches in the gender wars
- Rarely does a literary classic transfer from page to stage as eloquently as Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice" does in the current production of the Annapolis Shakespeare Company at Bowie Playhouse.
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- With her latest production, Annapolis Shakespeare Company founder and artistic director Sally Boyett-D'Angelo is expanding the young company's horizons, both artistically and physically.
- In this new year, we're enjoying memories from last year's highlights on Anne Arundel's theater scene - and looking forward to encore performances in 2013.
- Dr. Moreland Perkins, a philosophy professor who had taught at the University of Maryland, College Park and was also former mayor of Riverdale Park, died Nov. 7 of pneumonia at St. Joseph Medical Center.
- Although Jane Austen lived nearly 200 years after William Shakespeare, hey shared a literary sensitivity to the social rituals that make courtship such a trying experience. That's why it isn't much of a stretch for the Chesapeake Shakespeare Company to do a theatrical adaptation of Austen's novel "Pride and Prejudice" at the Patapsco Female Institute Historic Park in Ellicott City
- "Romeo and Juliet"'s enduring romance holds up in an outdoor production by the Chesapeake Shakespeare Company that fortunately includes an all-important balcony that has been temporarily attached to the stabilized ruins at the Patapsco Female Institute Historic Park in Ellicott City
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- Mostly Main Street: If you are in search of a beer to go with your corned beef to celebrate St. Patrick's Day, I'd head to The Phoenix, at the corner of Main Street and Maryland Avenue
- Longtime Enoch Pratt Free Library patron and activist had a wide-range of reading interests that included biographies, mysteries, novels and history
- A father sends his son off to college, with wisdom from a boy wizard
- Although it's un-American to say so, the British monarchy gives that nation certain advantages over our form of government.