lincoln center
-
- Did you really think Don Draper would kill an ex-lover? You did? Really?
- We all like to share happiness with others, and our neighbors to the south, in Gaywood, certainly brought some to the Govans CARES food pantry last month.
- The program's flexible format will allow audience members to choose the order in which the pieces are presented. The repertoire will include traditional classical works for voice and piano as well as songs by modern American composers. Composers represented will be Barber, Granados, Milhaud, Mozart, Oldham, Purcell, Rorem, Strauss, Vercoe, Verdi, Walker and Wolf.
- Much of the Baltimore-born actor and author's book 'After Annie' hits close to home
- Now that Punxsutawney Phil has seen his shadow and we've all declared our love for family, friends and others at Valentine's Day, it won't be long before local Christians begin the six week observance of Lent.
- Now that Punxsutawney Phil has seen his shadow and we've all declared our love for family, friends and others at Valentine's Day, it won't be long before local Christians begin the six week observance of Lent.
- The issue of audience members interfering with the art is an old one. Candy wrappers, talking, coughing, whistling hearing aids — those used to be the primary culprits. Now it's the cellphone, and that means not just calls, but texting, emails, calendar reminders, and, of course, alarms.
- A tuxedo seems like the one sartorial item that HAHN-BIN might not wear when this 24-year-old violinist appears for the Candlelight Concert Society on Saturday …
-
- Stop to smell the flowers or see a big top show this weekend
-
- Jay Frisby, Columbia actor comes to town in 'South Pacific' revival
- Bringing any musical back can be a risky business, as producers of such recent misses as "Bye, Bye Birdie" and "Promises, Promises" and "Ragtime" can attest.
-
- The Annapolis Shakespeare Company has grown from a small Shakespeare workshop taught by founder Sally Boyett-D'Angelo in summer 2009 into a thriving young company.
- New York Philharmonic's star-filled concert version of Sondheim's 'Company' reaches HD movie theaters