It is 1986 and Richard Hollander’s parents, Joseph and Vita Hollander, have died in a car crash. A briefcase that Richard will discover later that…
Posts tagged as “arts and entertainment”
It is Theatre Night for Teens at Everyman Theatre, and the second floor lobby area has been transformed into an educational wonderland. Students grades 9-12…
Sophie Treadwell’s play “Machinal” has been making the rounds in college theatre departments across the country. An expressionist – and incredibly feminist – play written…
Baltimore calls itself a city of neighborhoods, sectioned off into communities of churches, corner stores, barbershops and, once upon a time, movie theaters, that Amy…
Aubergine sounds so much better than eggplant. It takes a simple word, a simple food, and turns it into something extraordinary, something worth lingering on…
For Al Loving, the 80’s were a time for a redefinition of his artwork. After years of art revolving around geometric shapes, the 80’s proved…
“There’s nothing like watching the slow unraveling of another human being,” my friend said as we stepped out of Everyman Theatre after the opening night…
“The press release says something about the ‘absurdities of motherhood,’” Dawn Ursula says of the play she is directing later this month as she drives…
It’s always incredibly refreshing to sit down to a play written by a woman, about women. The most-produced living playwright in the United States this…
“Alice in Wonderland” purists may be surprised by Center Stage’s production of “Lookingglass Alice,” a retelling of Lewis Carroll’s popular children’s novels, “Alice’s Adventures in…