UNC hosts health and illness seminar
To contextualize a 17th century play, the Program in the Humanities has assembled a panel of experts.
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To contextualize a 17th century play, the Program in the Humanities has assembled a panel of experts.
Along with a world-renowned conductor, the Mariinsky Orchestra of St. Petersburg will bring its Russian flair to Carolina Performing Arts’ “The Rite of Spring at 100” tonight.
Carolina Performing Arts has started a fiery campaign.
In an era of continuous budget cuts, campus arts organizations have made strides to become more self-sufficient, taking on larger budgets and projects.
The editors of UNC’s newest literary and arts magazine are young by most writers’ standards, but they say that’s where their charm lies.
Banjo enthusiasts, historians and musicians alike are strumming their way to UNC for a banjo jamboree.
PlayMakers Repertory Company will stage nine diverse shows in the 2012-13 season, including the world premiere of an adaptation of “Imaginary Invalid” and a spoken-word piece by hip-hop group Universes.
Carolina Performing Arts will bring nine world premieres and two U.S. premieres from around the globe to the Memorial Hall stage in its 2012-2013 season.
_The Tunnel of Oppression — an interactive tour experience through the basement of Cobb Residence Hall — is designed to educate students about the types of oppression at the University.
This is the fourth in a series of stories this week showcasing the student playwrights featured in LAB! Theatre’s “One Acts in the Park,” which begins Saturday at Forest Theatre.
On a Saturday rehearsal of “The Milford Project,” Richie and Penny skipped across a classroom-turned-meadow stage, speaking in oddly-pitched, curious tones.
After years of experimenting in every aspect in theatre, Adam Versenyi decided to focus on informing rather than performing.
The Carolina Chocolate Drops are making a return to their home state. The band is playing at Memorial Hall tonight at 8 p.m. along with New York’s Luminescent Orchestrii. Staff writer Deborah Strange spoke with a member of the band, Rhiannon Giddens, about folk music, inspiration and returning to North Carolina.
In 2003, UNC became one of few public universities to offer a screenwriting program for undergraduates.
Featuring classic Broadway tunes and pop-culture parodies, Sunday’s matinee of Pauper Players’ annual production “Broadway Melodies” was a high-energy, entertaining show.
This month is relatively empty for Carolina Performing Arts.
Though “The Nutcracker” was first performed in St. Petersburg in 1892, the Carolina Ballet has kept the holiday favorite interesting more than a century later.
Since the Carolina Ballet began presenting “The Nutcracker” in 2001, the performances have, for the most part, stayed the same.
James Brown proved that history played a role in popular music.
Even while writing scripts for television shows in Los Angeles, Stephen Neigher just wanted to help children he saw on the streets.