Suffrage and outrage make for rich stage experiences.
Ife Olujobi’s claws-out satire doesn’t quite reach the tragic potential of its DEI-in-the-workplace premise.
“Challengers” review: Zendaya is electric in new thriller that finds three athletes in a romantic and sports triangle.
“Challengers” review: Zendaya is electric in new thriller that finds three athletes in a romantic and sports triangle.
The Huey Lewis musical is fine, fun, and as lightweight as a cardboard box.
Big high-energy performances, undercut by the folks behind the curtain.
Are you ready for some movies this summer? There's action-adventure, romance, horror, franchises and anniversary re-releases of some of your favorites populating theaters and streaming services from May through Labor Day. You just have to know where to look.
A curiously muted Hemings-and-Jefferson meta-story by Suzan-Lori Parks.
NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) — “Avatar: The Last Airbender” In Concert is making its
In the early 2000s, Brandy Melville gained traction because of its breezy, coquette-style clothing. Soon, the aesthetic turned into a stamp of approval used to brand the haves and the have-nots; the haves being skinny white girls and the have-nots being anyone of a minority or non-conventional body type. HBO’s newest documentary “Brandy Hellville & This story Review: ‘Brandy Hellville & the Cult of Fast Fashion’ has been a long time coming appeared first on Washington Square News.
In her third studio album, “Older,” American singer-songwriter Lizzy McAlpine expertly crafted a hauntingly raw collection of 14 songs — each describing the passage of time, uncertainty and, as per the title, the reality of growing up. McAlpine brilliantly voices the struggles of young people placing undue pressure on themselves to have life all figured This story Review: Lizzy McAlpine’s ‘Older’ is an ode to coming-of-age stories appeared first on Washington Square News.
Shaking the Tree Theatre's latest production, The Brother and the Bird, adapts a short story by Alissa Nutting, which was based on the Brothers Grimm's "The Juniper Tree" into a tight 60-minute spring season play filled with tension, suspense, and stray rays of humor. Fairy tale adaptions are only as good as the people adapting them, but Shaking the Tree has boiled the bones of "The Brother and the Bird" into a visual feast. I disliked shadowplay before I saw Shaking the Tree do it, and I...