38 stories by "Marylynne Pitz / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"
In a single week last month, a trio of veteran arts executives announced their departures, launching the search for a new executive leader at Fallingwater and at two major art museums in Wes…
Michael E. Hill, a nonprofit management executive, has been named president of Chautauqua Institution and will start his new job on Jan. 1, 2017. Mr. Hill succeeds outgoing president Tom Bec…
If you notice something suspicious at a play, musical or concert Downtown, the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust wants you to alert an usher or call 911.
Hard times can make it harder for small nonprofits to stay afloat, but five small arts groups in Pittsburgh have found a creative way to collaborate by sharing the services of a certified pu…
Catherine Palmer had never attended a Moth story slam until a friend invited her to the Rex Theater on the South Side. As a university professor, she is quite comfortable talking to a room f…
Art in the Park, a weekly summer event held at the Penn Avenue Parklet in Wilkinsburg, starts Thursday with painters, poets and singers gathering at 743 Penn Ave. The parklet is across the s…
Tom Becker, president of Chautauqua Institution, will retire at the end of this year.
Leaders of Chautauqua Institution voted Wednesday to demolish its historic amphitheater and build a replica of it at the lakeside summer retreat in southwestern New York. The project will co…
The Sugar Plum Fairy will perform her famous solo and pre-professional dancers from Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre will perform vignettes from "The Nutcracker" ballet at Phipps Conservatory at 11…
When The Moth presents five storytellers on Wednesday at Downtown's Byham Theater, Pittsburgh's own David Montgomery will unfold a tale in which the Spice Girls play starring roles.
Paul Organisak, vice president in charge of programming for the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust since 2004, has resigned from that position, effective Sept. 30.
A few years ago, when Becka Nazario Wright suggested introducing second-graders to "Macbeth," Wendell McConnaha feared it was too bloody.
Plans to restore the childhood home of the late playwright August Wilson received a boost this week with a $50,000 Keystone grant from the Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission.