Eighth Arts Everywhere Day serves as catalyst for yearlong creativity
Last Friday, students, creativity and bubbles filled the Pit for an Interactive Art Fair, organized as part of the eighth annual Arts Everywhere Day.
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Last Friday, students, creativity and bubbles filled the Pit for an Interactive Art Fair, organized as part of the eighth annual Arts Everywhere Day.
Agatha Christie may have written the murder mystery, but PlayMakers Repertory Company brought it humor.
Before he came to UNC in 2016, from the small town of Wadesboro, N.C., Gage Tarlton had a plan: to be an actor.
As part of an effort to destigmatize mental health among community members, UNC is putting on 14 performances of "Every Brilliant Thing" across campus in the coming weeks.
A Shakespearean comedy comes to 1940s Appalachia in PlayMakers Repertory Company's rendition of "Much Ado About Nothing."
The PlayMakers Repertory Company recently announced its upcoming productions for the 2023-2024 season in a Youtube video, including well-known shows like “Murder on the Orient Express” and “Much Ado About Nothing.”
UNC alumnus and performance artist Tristan André hopes people feel at home when they attend the PlayMakers Repertory Company’s production of “They Do Not Know Harlem.”
Kidzu Children’s Museum will celebrate its 17th birthday with a party on Sunday, March 5 from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Last month, Vivienne Benesch made her directorial debut on the stage that most thespians only dream of – Broadway.
After weeks of six-hour-long rehearsals, the PlayMakers Repertory Company's cast of "A Wrinkle in Time" has officially opened its doors to the UNC community.
As a first-year student, it can be difficult to occupy your weekends since you won’t be very familiar with the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area yet.
With a focus on uplifting women in theater, PlayMakers Repertory Company recently announced its @PLAY initiative is supporting two female playwrights through the process of producing plays.
Playwright and associate professor, Jacqueline E. Lawton, wants to put Black and marginalized communities at the center of her work. Her most recent play, "Edges of Time," shows the life of Marvel Cooke, the first Black female journalist to have her own byline in a major U.S. newspaper.
Audience participation is an important component of actor and playwright Mike Wiley’s work. In Playmakers Repertory Company’s production of “Blood Done Sign My Name,” Wiley performed in front of a live Zoom audience to maintain the interactive nature of the play.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this article incorrectly attributed the virtual "Angels in America" performance to Playmakers Repertory Company. The show was produced virtually by Company Carolina this year. The article has been updated to reflect the change. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for this error.
For Mike Wiley, a local performer and civil rights activist, having genuine and open conversations about racial injustice is non-negotiable, despite the pandemic. That’s why he created Playmakers Repertory Company’s latest virtual series, "Higher Ground Conversations."
No eating, no drinking and silence your cellphone — from your living room, that is — the show is about to begin.
Sometimes passion is ingrained in our subconscious when we are young and other times it takes the shape of an opportunity arbitrarily stumbled upon later in life. For a few students at UNC, this passion is costume design, but their paths to finding their enthusiasm for the art all look very different.
When theater was created by the Greeks, they wanted the experience to be engaging. Director Zi Alikhan hopes he can emulate that in the Playmakers Repertory Company's production of "Ragtime."
A UNC social science graduate student was blocked from parking in the last available disability spot next to the Paul Green Theatre when going to see PlayMakers Repertory Company's "Dairyland" on Oct. 20. The spot was reserved for Thomas S. Kenan III, UNCSA Board of Trustees member and UNC alumnus who has a disability and a disability placard.