By Lucy Lazarony The Heart of the Square art exhibit at the Cornell Art Museum gets down to the heart of the matter, providing a showcase for Old School Square, the arts and cultural complex which has been serving Delray Beach for 32 years. The complex, which features restored early 20th-century school buildings, is located in downtown Delray Beach and includes the … [Read more...]
Archives for December 2021
New jazz festival set for Pompano Beach from Jan. 28-29
Editor's note: Organizers of this festival canceled it Jan. 6 because of the spike in coronavirus cases. Percussionists are often an afterthought for band leaders who are putting together musicians for recording or live performance. From pop music to jazz, most think that having vocalists and a guitarist, bassist and drummer, plus perhaps a keyboardist and/or horn players, … [Read more...]
Omicron cancels ‘RomaDrama’ convention, Theatre Lab play festival
A convention featuring stars and writers from romance dramas featured on channels such as Hallmark, Lifetime and Netflix has been canceled because of the spread of the omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus. The second RomaDrama Live! convention, which debuted last year in Nashville, had been scheduled for Jan. 7-9 at the Palm Beach County Convention Center in West Palm … [Read more...]
Lincoln Center musicians deliver Brandenburg goods after sprinkler disruption
It has been 300 years precisely since the day that Johann Sebastian Bach sat down at a table in the little German principality of Cöthen to compose a letter to a Berlin potentate to accompany a package containing what he called “six concertos with several instruments.” Those works, sent off to the Margrave Christian Ludwig of Brandenburg in March of 1721, have become known … [Read more...]
‘Evan Hansen’ makes compelling art of insecurity, solitude
With the recent death of composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim, many felt that the future of musical theater was thrown into doubt. But we need not fret over the fate of this quintessentially American art form with the emergence of the songwriting team of Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. Having shown impressive promise with Dogfight and A Christmas Story, the duo proclaimed their … [Read more...]
Young artists do Purcell proud at Palm Beach Opera opener
By Rosie Rogers Although the exact circumstances of the composition of Henry Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas have been contested over the last 30 years, the first verifiable performance of the work was given in London by the students at Josias Priest’s School for Girls in 1689. The lively cast of Palm Beach Opera’s 60th anniversary production of the opera on Dec. 11, made up … [Read more...]
Christie whodunit opens DB Playhouse season in witty style
By Dale King The Delray Beach Playhouse marks its 75th anniversary with the COVID-delayed opening of its 2021-22 season of mainstage productions, kicking off with A Spider’s Web, a delightfully wry and redoubtable Agatha Christie whodunit. The DBP, on the east shore of Lake Ida, fully opens in January with the addition of Lunch Club Matinees and a schedule of Classic Rock … [Read more...]
Show about Marilyn’s last days is, indeed, unremarkable
What is there left to be said about Marilyn Monroe? Almost 60 years after her death from a drug overdose at the age of 36, the Hollywood sex goddess still is a subject of fascination for us. Particularly for those who were alive while she was, which happens to also be the primary audience of Boca Stage. So one can understand why the company chose to produce … [Read more...]
Clarinetist, Palm Beach Symphony pay sublime tribute to Mozart
Into this crazed COVID world of variants popping up ad infinitum, there came a sublime evening of music-making given by the Palm Beach Symphony under the leadership of conductor Gerard Schwarz on Dec. 2 at their permanent new home: The Kravis Center. It was dedicated to four works written by Mozart in his last year of life, 1791. Each of the four pieces selected had special … [Read more...]
Miami Art Week: Icebergs, gardenia mazes and blow-up clouds
By Sandra Schulman It’s back! Art Week in Miami exploded early this year, starting with some star studded gallery pop-up openings and eye-popping public art all over South Beach. A new gallery district sprung up along Washington Avenue between Lincoln Road and Espanola Way. At Skin in the Game, a pop-up exhibition of work by 35 diverse artists, curated by Zoe Lukov, … [Read more...]