ArtsCenter play takes a step into Twilight zone
You are about to enter another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound, but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, the Twilight Zone: live and in color.
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You are about to enter another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound, but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, the Twilight Zone: live and in color.
Starting Block, a showcase of incubator teams, performed at DSI Comedy on Tuesday night at the new Franklin Street location.
After nine years of bringing world-renowned musicians like Yo-Yo Ma and breakthrough dance groups like L-E-V to UNC, Carolina Performing Arts has established itself in Chapel Hill.
America: land of the free — unless in a time of war.
Courtesy of Lia Chang
Every year, Carolina Performing Arts brings Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater to campus to engage students who are otherwise disinterested in the arts — and it works.
The Art of Cool Festival, an inaugural event in Durham, is bringing performances from local jazz combos, student musicians and internationally renowned jazz artists to the Triangle this weekend.
Having taken the stage over 700 times for her one-woman show, veteran actress Barbara Bates Smith still describes every performance as magical.
This gender-bending night of music and entertainment isn’t at all like your grandma’s typical theater show.
Camille Oswald (left) plays W and Sam Fletcher (right) plays John in Lab! Theatre's production of Cock.
Kenan Theatre Company presents Tmberlake Wertenbaker's "Our Country's Good," directed by Joesph Megel.
When scenic designer McKay Coble met with visiting artist Joseph Megel last spring to plan the Kenan Theatre Company’s 2013-14 season, she looked to a production from the past for inspiration.
PlayMakers Repertory Company’s production of “Assassins,” a musical written by Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman and directed by Mike Donahue, brought an assortment of well-developed and well-played characters to the Paul Green Theatre Saturday.
UNC Pauper Players’ “Avenue Q” combined two opposing elements — innocent-looking puppets and vulgar, crude humor — to teach audience members that the internet is only for porn.
Courtesy of Pam Loshak.
From left, Steffie Park, Connor Sturgis, Rachel Deason, Alex Ferraz, Mollie Paige Wilson, Wesley Darling, and Rachel Anderson act during a dress rehearsal of Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead. The play premieres on Friday evening and will run through Sunday.
Student performers act out a musical scene during a dress rehearsal for Pauper Player's production of Avenue Q. The rehearsal took place at the Arts Center in Carrboro, Wednesday the 2nd of April.
Student performer Will Hawkins at a dress rehearsal for Pauper Player's production of Avenue Q. The rehearsal took place at the Arts Center in Carrboro, Wednesday the 2nd of April.
Kenan Theatre Company is producing "Shakespeare's R+J," an adaptation b Joe Calarco. The modern interpretation of Shakespeare's classic, Romeo and Juliet, rotates between an all male and an all female cast of undergraduate students. The show opens February 27th and runs through March 3rd in the Elizabeth Prince Kenan Theater in the UNC Center for Dramatic Art.
Student performer Will Hawkins auditions in the UNC Student Union during callbacks for Pauper Player's production of Avenue Q