'ID: Coming Home' brings pop-up art to North Carolina Study Center
Everything we make says something about where we’re from — at least that's how UNC seniors Emma Biggerstaff and Maggie Blank see it.
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Everything we make says something about where we’re from — at least that's how UNC seniors Emma Biggerstaff and Maggie Blank see it.
Audience members at the Gram-O-Rama show tonight might not be participles, but they’ll be dangling on the edge of their seats.
Growing up and becoming the person you dream to be is never easy.
If Coach Roy Williams and Duke University men’s basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski are serious about national titles, they should just dance together — or at least that’s how Kamikazi sees it.
Panicked students flip through notes in a last-ditch effort to absorb the material. The only open seat is in the middle of the normally-spacious 400-person lecture hall. That tiny foldable desk is where it happens — the final exam.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story misrepresented Nikolaus Gunawan's sentiments on dancing with Moonlight. Gunawan is happy to have found a place that does not focus on being a perfect dancer. The story has been updated to reflect these changes.
For the fifth year in a row, the writing for the screen and stage minor will give aspiring screenwriters and playwrights an experience ordinarily reserved for the most successful professionals in entertainment.
Hopscotch Music Festival attracts 20,000 people nationwide to Raleigh, features more than 140 bands and is essentially run by two-and-a-half people. The chief of that small crew is the director, founder and UNC graduate Greg Lowenhagen.
The dimly lit, around-100-square feet space was filled to capacity, containing around 20 people sitting on oversized couches, chairs and intimate tables. Patrons listened to soothing, folksy music over the loud speakers, speaking to each other in hushed tones and ordering tea, kava and vegetarian meals.
Emil Kang, executive and artistic director of Carolina Performing Arts, has been appointed to serve on the selection committee of the Institute of International Education’s new Artist Protection Fund, the same fund that sponsors the Fulbright Scholar Program.
The UNC volleyball team held their annual blue and white scrimmage in Carmichael arena on Friday night.
When the nation’s racial conflicts became too overwhelming over the summer, senior June Beshea found herself logging off Twitter and turning to art.
To Wendy Whelan, the show is like getting on a ride she can’t get off.
Students and designers in UNC’s Fine Arts program have been tasked with creating some of the notable costumes and props that will be featured in the new Museum of Science Fiction, set to open in Washington, D.C. in two to three years.
Kenan Bateman knows "False Profits, the Musical" is a misnomer.
Senegalese musician Youssou N’Dour’s performance at Memorial Hall in September wasn’t just greeted with applause — the Senegalese community rallied in Chapel Hill, waving his nation’s flag in support.
The man who got PlayMakers Repertory Company on sound financial footing will leave his post for Minneapolis’ Guthrie Theater in July.
Christian Payne, a senior dramatic arts and English major, performs "Just Friends" during the UNC-Duke collaboration, the Me Too Monologues.
The first time senior dramatic art major Ben French mentioned his short story to senior Katie Chelena, he told her that if anything ever happened to him, she should get a file on his computer containing the story and make something out of it.
Lovers of Shakespeare have been given a chance to witness a production that picks up where one of the playwright’s most well-known works leaves off.