Gun control to be discussed on stage
PlayMakers Repertory Company is starting the new year off with a bang. Its first performance of 2014 is the world premier of Mike Daisey’s one-man show, “The Story of the Gun” as part of the PRC2 series.
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PlayMakers Repertory Company is starting the new year off with a bang. Its first performance of 2014 is the world premier of Mike Daisey’s one-man show, “The Story of the Gun” as part of the PRC2 series.
Laughter, music, puns, oxymorons and other grammatical concepts will echo through Wilson Library this afternoon.
Three boys are sitting in a dorm of an all-boys’ boarding school: One is telling the story of his most recent sexual encounter. One is waiting anxiously for his girlfriend to call, and the last one is trying — and failing — to get some homework done.
“Big Fish” is making a new splash — on Broadway.
Nathan Kotecki is a North Carolina author who will hold a release party for the second book in his “Suburban Strange” series today at Flyleaf Books. The young adult series tells the stories of Suburban High School through the eyes of different teenagers.
Last academic year, Company Carolina planned to perform Shakespeare’s “Titus Andronicus” on UNC’s campus. The play was advertised as “Shakespeare’s earliest and bloodiest tragedy,” but objections over the gore caused Company Carolina to drop the show.
Instead of performing at the usual Center for Dramatic Art, LAB! Theatre’s next show, “Tender Napalm,” will be held at Linda’s Downbar on Franklin Street.
Author Peter Rizzolo will be reading from his new novel “Forbidden Harvest” today at the Bull’s Head Bookshop.
To go along with the summer motif of red, white and blue, Claymakers’ Gallery in Durham has an exhibit, “Copper, Kaolin & Cobalt: Ceramics in Red, White & Blue.”
As the Ackland Museum opens a new exhibit on contemporary art in India, the museum’s store will give shoppers a chance to explore artisanal works from the country.
Loudon Wainwright III’s song “Surviving Twin,” which he wrote about his complex and emotional relationship with his late father, is the inspiration behind his new show of the same name.
Alberto Lung is standing in front of a group of eight children at the Durham Arts Council Wednesday, teaching them how to draw ninjas and dragons.
Coker Arboretum has been transformed for LAB! Theatre’s performance of William Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” which premieres tonight.
Tonight, Local 506 brings iconic Broadway hits with a twist.
Those brave enough to sit in one of the front rows at tonight’s one and only production of “Titus Andronicus” will be given ponchos to combat the barrage of blood and limbs.
A UNC student will be showing on campus Saturday his original musical — a children’s fairy tale with a twist.
Audience choice is the driving force behind LAB! Theatre’s production “Who Ate My Sandwich? 30 Plays in 60 Minutes.”
Audience participation, not a complete script, will dictate a small part of each night of Company Carolina’s “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee.”
Company Carolina’s new show “Glengarry Glen Ross” is about doing whatever it takes to get to the top in the cutthroat world of business.
Professor William Ferris will give a lecture Friday based on his latest book “Give My Poor Heart Ease: Voices of the Mississippi Blues.” This event is in celebration of Black History Month.