IN Series' free opera 'Black Flute' to premiere online Saturday
A bold, brazen, and Black engagement with Mozart's 'Magic Flute' and by extension with the western canon of music.
A bold, brazen, and Black engagement with Mozart's 'Magic Flute' and by extension with the western canon of music.
The story of folks who choose to be committed to each other's well-being, the play is a paean to the possibility of connection.
The show consists of popular R&B songs that featured Aframerican performers and is all about having a good time in a world full of dark, cold nights.
In Artistic Director Timothy Nelson's knowledgeable hands, the device comes off not like a gimmick but as a doorway into discovery.
The play sings to us about the African American genius for finding a way to make a way out of no way.
Any child will love it. But so will any adult.
Event November 10 to feature music composed by 19-year-old Duke Ellington grad Ronald Walton.
The Afro-Latinx reimagining of Puccini's beloved classic opera, performed two nights only at GALA, will be available free on-demand.
Despite aesthetically engaging music and an enthusiastic cast, the production does not work.
A solo performer's tribute to his maternal grandmother, who raised him and gave him the tools he needed to engage with life.
The evening encourages us to engage with Dr. Ruth's memories as well as to contemplate what might be our own.
The second production from Welders 3.0 is her audioplay horror story, 'Girls' Night (with Spirits).'
Terri Weagant juggles accents and body postures to give us five distinctly and flamboyantly desperate people we won't soon forget.
Psalmayene 24 to adapt local history for the stage in unique county-wide anti-racist collaboration.
In a video they devised, young people show the critical thinking, problem solving, and empathy we need to get us out of the mess we are in.
The performances are strong, the script by James Ijames surprises, and the poignant show is so, so satisfying.
Psalmayene 24's graphic novel come to life is delightful in its form and harrowing in its emotional impact.
The third Welders playwrighting collective launches with a look at Black gay men and beauty.
George Brant's play lays out in inescapable terms what the inhumane policy of separating children from their parents means for the moral state of Americans.
The solid voices of Adelina Mitchell (as Catherine) and Alex Stone (as Jamie) convey the evening's exhilaration, hope, and grief.
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Nobody knows how the crisis that we are currently experiencing is going to turn out. The questions What are we to do? and How are we to go on? are at the center of Freewheelin' Insurgents, t…