Brooklyn Rider returns for 10th time
Chapel Hill is a home away from home for many students during their college years, but even musicians from Brooklyn, New York, have found comfort in returning to the town time and time again.
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Chapel Hill is a home away from home for many students during their college years, but even musicians from Brooklyn, New York, have found comfort in returning to the town time and time again.
Imagine Cookie Monster lyrically professing his love for Internet porn, or Bert and Ernie serenading each other with romantic confessions, alongside other “Sesame Street” characters as they crack jokes about racism and religion. Add in the heart and dedication that UNC’s Pauper Players has injected into their latest production, and you’ll have a good picture of “Avenue Q,” which opens tonight.
A fresh cast will bring a fresh perspective to Company Carolina’s production of “Dog Sees God,” which opens tonight at Historic Playmakers Theatre.
Three and a half tons of rice will arrive on campus tonight. Not at the dining hall, but on the stage of Memorial Hall.
Audiences will enter a surreal world tonight in which presidential assassins mix and mingle in PlayMakers Repertory Company’s production of “Assassins.”
The statistics are staggering — approximately 27 million people are in slavery today — yet many people don’t know that sex trafficking exists.
The ModernExtension Dance Company and Wilson Library's Rare Books Collection have joined efforts to present "Haunted," a performance combining choreography, film, improvisation and live music based on modernist poetry. The show is at 7 p.m. Saturday in Gerrard Hall and is free and open to the public.
Courtesy of Celeste Cowan.
The Peanuts gang is taking Chapel Hill, complete with melancholy monologues by a young Charlie Brown, philosophical ponderings from a confused Snoopy and bullying antics by the infamously evil Lucy.
Frustrated with the impracticality of performing all of William Shakespeare’s “Henry VI” plays consecutively, senior Melanie Rio was determined to revamp the classic plays she so loves.
The UNC Opera and UNC Opera Orchestra are teaming up for the second time this weekend to perform Puccini’s “Gianni Schicchi” and Michael Ching’s “Buoso’s Ghost,” a two-part opera combining the classic and its 21st-century sequel.
Costume pieces, sheet music, black and white production pictures and multicolored playbills tell the story of the PlayMakers Repertory Company, one of the first student theater groups at UNC which was formerly known as Carolina Playmakers.
Eric Kuhn and Erica Fink are not your average couple. Sure, they can finish each other’s sentences and there’s a sparkle in their eyes when they look at one another, but there’s something else that makes their bond even stronger: music.
Members of The Carolina Irish Association practice in the dance studios below Woolen Gymnasium on Thursday for the group's upcoming Spring Showcase in the Student Union Great Hall on March 23rd. From left to right Brianna Gallagher Halie Reed Olivia Barnes Emma D'Agostino Olivia DeSena Caitlyn Carmean
When world-renowned bluegrass bass player Missy Raines started her own band several years ago in West Virginia , everyone who heard their music said the electrifying acoustic sound made the group unique.
Not your little sister’s dance recital, Carolina Dance Initiative’s showcase is a full-blown production with talented performers who will tap, waltz and pirouette their way into Memorial Hall Friday night.
Their acronym may be CIA, but the Carolina Irish Association does not tap secrets — they tap their feet to tunes.
Jacques d’Amboise was a principal dancer for the New York City Ballet by the age of 17. While dancing with the company, he founded the National Dance Institute in 1976 to help engage children in the arts and teach the importance of the arts in education.
For Pete and Maura Kennedy, it all started with a day off.
STREB is coming to Memorial Hall tonight to have an adventure, and its members are taking the audience with them.