By ArtsFuse on Sep 12, 2008 in Theater, Featured | 1 Comment
By Caldwell Titcomb
Some plays are so long that they drive people to despair. In the standard theatrical canon the palm goes to Goethe’s “Faust,” Part I of which runs 4612 lines, and Part II takes the total to 12,111 lines. Next comes Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt.” The playwright did not intend this to be staged and […]
By ArtsFuse on Sep 3, 2008 in Literature, Featured, World Books | 1 Comment
by Bill Marx
I just noticed that a week before Janet Frame’s previously unpublished story “Gorse is not People” appeared in “The New Yorker” the magazine published a poem by another fine New Zealand author, C.K. Stead. He not only knew Frame at the time she wrote the tale but has sketched a fascinating prose portrait […]
By ArtsFuse on Aug 15, 2008 in Literature, Persona Non Grata, Featured, World Books | 0 Comments
by Bill Marx
Posthumous publication of a book by a great but grievously neglected writer gives posterity a chance to either rectify its mistake or compound it. The recent appearance in the “New Yorker” of a previously unpublished Janet Frame short story, which was deemed to be “too painful” for print in 1954, has generated some […]
By ArtsFuse on Aug 13, 2008 in Featured, Short Fuse | 4 Comments
By Harvey Blume
Whether you are seriously hooked on chess or casually intrigued by it, you probably think of the tables in Cambridge’s Holyoke Center as the Boston area’s one big outdoor chess venue. That’s, after all, where the Chess Master sets out his board a few tables down from his counterpart, the redoubtable Chess Mister. […]
By ArtsFuse on Jul 28, 2008 in Visual Arts, Featured, Schwartzlist | 3 Comments
By Gary Schwartz
One in so many Western works of art contains an image of a person we would call black. The phenomenon attracts relatively little attention in art history. The Menil Foundation went after it seriously, in a project now inherited by the Warburg Institute. An exhibition in the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam offers a […]
By ArtsFuse on Jul 26, 2008 in Theater, Persona Non Grata, Featured | 0 Comments
By Bill Marx
Now in its third year under the watchful eye of the admirable Whistler in the Dark Theatre, FeverFest presents a selection of Boston’s fringe groups in an evening of short performances, a sort of theatrical tasting event billed as a round up of “explosive work by vital young companies.” Tonight will be […]
By ArtsFuse on Jul 18, 2008 in Theater, Persona Non Grata, Featured | 0 Comments
by Bill Marx
“The way of the Samurai is a natural way of the Universe, Ma, and to learn it, one must live one’s life from first to last in self-control. I know all about that stuff now.”
– Wynne in Adam Rapp’s “Stone Cold Dead Serious”
Just how far are American playwrights from dramatizing a […]
By ArtsFuse on Jul 17, 2008 in Music, Featured | 0 Comments
By Caldwell Titcomb
Luckily the Boston area is home to a considerable number of world-class pianists. Among them is Victor Rosenbaum. An honors graduate of Brandeis University, he was chair of the piano faculty at the New England Conservatory before heading the Longy School of Music for 16 years. He currently is on the Conservatory faculty […]
By ArtsFuse on Jul 9, 2008 in Theater, Featured | 0 Comments
By Caldwell Titcomb
The American Theatre Critics Association, which moves around the country for its annual convention, this year spent a recent week in the nation’s capital and environs. The area houses 75 theatres – 43 in the District of Columbia, 17 in nearby Maryland, and 15 in the contiguous portion of Virginia. From the many […]
By ArtsFuse on Jul 8, 2008 in Literature, Visual Arts, Featured, Short Fuse | 0 Comments
By Harvey Blume
Though it does not originate in the Kuiper Belt, the Beijing summer Olympics (8/8/08-8/24/08) is bearing down upon us like an outsized asteroid, bringing China out of feudal/communist distance into full twenty-first century relief. Sports, at this point, remain secondary:before we get to ping-pong, swimming, the shot-put and gymnastics, Americans have unprecedented […]