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2,374 stories by "TERRY TEACHOUT"

Almanac: George Bernard Shaw on argumentation by Terry Teachout

"A man has his beliefs: his arguments are only his excuses for them." George Bernard Shaw (quoted in Michael Holroyd, Bernard Shaw: 1856-1898, The Search for Love)

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 16, 2016

Lookback: on turning fifty and looking for new things to do with your life by Terry Teachout

From 2006: When you cross the fiftieth meridian, as I did last month, you're more than likely to feel the need for some kind of change, especially if your life has been running fairly smooth…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 15, 2016

Almanac: Tom Stoppard on the nature of live theater by Terry Teachout

"I'm going to see a play of mine day after tomorrow which opened about a month ago, and it will be full of things which will be different. And some of it will be slightly out of focus, and s…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 15, 2016

Just because: Fred Astaire sings and dances "One for My Baby" by Terry Teachout

Fred Astaire performs "One for My Baby," by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer, in The Sky's The Limit, directed by Edward H. Griffith. This is the film in which the song was introduced. Robert …

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 14, 2016

Almanac: Gene Lees on tragedy by Terry Teachout

"You cannot write tragedy without a sense of humor; the lack of it produces something turgid and dull. Wit must be the underpainting of all dark writing." Gene Lees, Portrait of Johnny: The …

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 14, 2016

Their big fat Zimbabwean wedding by Terry Teachout

In today's Wall Street Journal I review four New York shows, Familiar, Eclipsed, Blackbird, and Disaster! Here's an excerpt. * * * Danai Gurira is the zombie-whacking star of "The Walking De…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:30am on March 11, 2016

Replay: James Brown performs on The Hollywood Palace by Terry Teachout

The James Brown Revue performs a medley of "I Can't Stand It," "If I Ruled the World," "Cold Sweat," "Try Me," "I Feel Good," and "There Was a Time" on The Hollywood Palace. They are introdu…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 11, 2016

Almanac: Fred Chappell on humanity and the artist by Terry Teachout

"I have got to where I should like for my work to be humane, and I do not much care if it even becomes sentimental." Fred Chappell, afterword to The Fred Chappell Reader

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 11, 2016

So you think you can act on Broadway? by Terry Teachout

My "Sightings" column for today's Wall Street Journal is occasioned by Forest Whitaker's unsuccessful Broadway debut. Here's an excerpt. * * * Forest Whitaker's much-ballyhooed Broadway debu…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 6:30am on March 10, 2016

Almanac: Fred Chappell on accessibility and the artist by Terry Teachout

"There are already so many artists whom one admires more than he likes. Am I the only reader who finds in the achievement of James Joyce something that is"well, a little obtuse? Who sees Che…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 6:00am on March 10, 2016

Snapshot: Esa-Pekka Salonen conducts Vertigo by Terry Teachout

Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic perform the "Scene d'amour" cue from Bernard Herrmann's score for Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo: (This is the latest in a series of arts-relat…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 9, 2016

Almanac: Richard Sennett on craftsmanship vs. creativity by Terry Teachout

"Good craftsmen are not expressing themselves. They're expressing something outside themselves. In that sense, craft is not about selfhood. When somebody declares to you, 'I feel I have a no…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 9, 2016

The comforts of home by Terry Teachout

I'm a middle-aged semi-homebody whose chosen line of work requires me to spend a fair amount of time traveling. I don't do it resentfully (except for the time I spend sitting on airplanes an…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 5:10am on March 8, 2016

Lookback: on not going to classical concerts by Terry Teachout

From 2006: I rarely go to classical concerts. It's not that I love the music any less, but over time I've become increasingly alienated from the experience of concertgoing: the noisy audienc…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 5:05am on March 8, 2016

Almanac: John Lukacs on the power of love by Terry Teachout

"It is hate that unites people, whereas love is always individual, rather than collective. To this we may add what immediately negates whatever moral essence the purposes of class struggles …

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 5:00am on March 8, 2016

Just because: Vivian Blaine sings "Adelaide's Lament" by Terry Teachout

Vivian Blaine sings "Adelaide's Lament," from Guys and Dolls, at the 1971 Tony Awards. The song is by Frank Loesser. Blaine created the role of Adelaide in the original 1950 Broadway product…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 7, 2016

Almanac: John Lukacs on hatred, fear, and ideology by Terry Teachout

"One of the fundamental differences between extremes of Right and Left is this: in most instances hatred moves the former; fear the latter." John Lukacs, Democracy and Populism: Fear and Hat…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 7, 2016

Additional dialogue by… by Terry Teachout

In today's Wall Street Journal drama column I review a Florida show, Orlando Shakespeare Theater's production of a new, modernized "translation" of Pericles. Here's an excerpt. * * * It's th…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:30am on March 4, 2016

Replay: Alfred Drake sings "Where Is the Life That Late I Led?" by Terry Teachout

Alfred Drake sings "Where Is the Life That Late I Led?" in the Hallmark Hall of Fame TV version of Cole Porter's Kiss Me, Kate, directed by George Schaefer. The musical numbers were staged b…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 4, 2016

Almanac: T.S. Eliot on confusion by Terry Teachout

Men tighten the knot of confusion Into perfect misunderstanding. T.S. Eliot, The Family Reunion

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 4, 2016

Almanac: Eric Hoffer on compassion by Terry Teachout

"Compassion alone stands apart from the continuous traffic between good and evil proceeding within us." Eric Hoffer, The Passionate State Of Mind, and Other Aphorisms

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 3, 2016

Snapshot: Peggy Lee sings "Fly Me to the Moon" by Terry Teachout

Peggy Lee sings Bart Howard's "Fly Me to the Moon" (originally titled "In Other Words") on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1960: (This is the latest in a series of arts-related videos that appear in…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 2, 2016

Almanac: Henry James on the limits of criticism by Terry Teachout

"We must grant the artist his subject, his idea, what the French call his donnée; our criticism is applied only to what he makes of it. Naturally I do not mean that we are bound to like it …

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 2, 2016

Lookback: on the power of criticism to make some readers uncomfortable by Terry Teachout

From 2006: Alas, I've found over the years that many people (especially midwesterners, who are trained to say "sir" and "ma'am" and be polite to strangers) become uncomfortable whenever they…

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:15am on March 1, 2016

Almanac: Ortega y Gasset on intelligence by Terry Teachout

"Nothing has instilled more melancholy in me than the discovery that the number of intelligent men is extremely small." José Ortega y Gasset, On Love: Aspects of a Single Theme (translated …

SOURCE: ArtsJournal at 7:00am on March 1, 2016
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