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ArtsJournal Classic (headlines)

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  • Does Esperanto Have Any Hope Of Ever Catching On As A World Language? Not Really, No.April 14, 2021
  • How Endorsements Took Over Celebrity CultureApril 14, 2021
  • Why Would Any Self-Respecting Woman Sing Schumann’s ‘Frauenliebe Und -Leben?’ In 2021? Let This One Tell You WhyApril 14, 2021
  • ‘The First Great Balanchine Dancer’, Mary Ellen Moylan, Dead At 95April 14, 2021
  • France Is Allowing Auction Houses To Keep Operating During Lockdown, But Not Galleries. Galleries Are SuingApril 14, 2021
  • Video Now/Live Later — How Pacific Northwest Ballet Approached Its Commissions After COVID Shut Down This SeasonApril 14, 2021
  • Univision And Televisa Sign Merger To Create Spanish-Language Media GiantApril 14, 2021
  • Edinburgh International Festival Will Go On This Summer — Outdoors (Yes, In Scotland)April 14, 2021
  • One Of Australia’s Most Popular Soap Operas Roiled By Accusations Of On-Set RacismApril 14, 2021
  • Firsts: Chicago Art Institute Appoints New Board ChairApril 14, 2021
  • How Big Tech Has “Weaponized” Design PatentsApril 13, 2021
  • What The Closing Of The Arclight Theatres Means For Movie TheatresApril 13, 2021
  • Awards Shows Used To Be Ratings Gold. Now They StruggleApril 13, 2021
  • What TikTok Has Taught Us About LearningApril 13, 2021
  • How Did A Cranky Old Scholar Come To Own An Indigenous Language?April 13, 2021
  • How NFTs Fit Into The Performance Art TraditionApril 13, 2021
  • ‘I’m Just Free, Now That I Don’t Have To Worry About Fees’: Frank Gehry At 92April 13, 2021
  • FilteredApril 13, 2021
  • Raising the flagApril 13, 2021
  • How Social Media Has Collapsed Our Expression Of Thoughtful IdeasApril 13, 2021
  • A Year Into The Pandemic, Dancers Talk About How They’ve Adjusted Their Movement And Approach For Online PerformanceApril 13, 2021
  • New Director Of Pompeii Talks Culture Of ArchaeologyApril 13, 2021
  • A Lawsuit About AI And Intellectual Property Law Now Involves R2D2 And WALL-EApril 13, 2021
  • Two Beloved California Movie Theatre Chains To CloseApril 13, 2021
  • Singing By Hand: How To Translate Songs Into American Sign LanguageApril 13, 2021
  • When 1970s Boston Was A Hotbed Of Contemporary MusicApril 13, 2021
  • The Saga Of The Jefferson Davis Chair Comes To An End (And No, It Wasn’t Really Used As A Toilet)April 13, 2021
  • Nature Documentaries Are A Lot More Like Porn Than You’d Like To ThinkApril 13, 2021
  • The Surrealists Would Have Loved TikTokApril 13, 2021
  • Where Second City’s New Chief Means To Lead The Improv InstitutionApril 13, 2021
  • Is The CEO Who Saved Waterstones Turning Around Barnes & Noble, Too? Well, He Says SoApril 13, 2021
  • New Turn In Saudi Arabia-vs.-Louvre ‘Salvator Mundi’ Drama (It’s Still About Spite, Though)April 13, 2021
  • Fabio Luisi, Dallas Symphony Music Director, Takes A Third OrchestraApril 13, 2021
  • Benin Bronzes Are Not Safer Held In The West, Say ResearchersApril 12, 2021
  • Top Music Industry People Weigh In On The State Of StreamingApril 12, 2021
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  • Snapshot: Nat Cole plays “Just One of Those Things”
    Nat Cole plays Cole Porter’s “Just One of Those Things” on The Ed Sullivan Show. This episode was originally telecast live by CBS on April 13, 1958: (This is the latest in a... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-14
  • Almanac: Somerset Maugham on literary productivity
    “His fertility was of course amazing and fertility is a quality to be praised in an author. It denotes physical energy, a gift a writer can as little do without as a... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-14
  • Benchmarking? Maybe Not
    Benchmarking equity may not be effective. If it is attempted, it must be approached cautiously so as not to cause more harm than good.... Read more
    AJBlog: Engaging Matters Published on: 2021-04-13
  • Lookback: the thirty-day song challenge
    From 2017: In the wake of the thirty-day movie challenge comes a new meme that I find—perhaps not surprisingly—irresistible. As before, I’ve opted to do it in a single sitting, so here goes: 1.... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-13
  • Almanac: Somerset Maugham on posterity
    “There is one very good thing to be said of posterity, and this is that it turns a blind eye on the defects of greatness.” Somerset Maugham, Don Fernando Continue reading Almanac: Somerset... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-13
  • A Gripping New Version of The Rite of Spring
    Igor Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring might at first glance seem an unlikely candidate for keyboard transcription. It calls for a huge orchestra, colorfully deployed. But the percussive ferocity of the writing, its sheer... Read more
    AJBlog: Unanswered Question Published on: 2021-04-12
  • Taking a Break
    Back soon.... Read more
    AJBlog: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-04-12
  • This Blogger Needs to Take a Break
    We weep to leave behind the sun lightly pencilled in, nothing left of the eternal. ... We are still only little animals.... Read more
    AJBlog: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-04-12
  • Filtered
    As I hear my student playing the piano through Zoom, just for a moment, I think I am hearing Paderewski in 1912. The sound is imperfect. At moments it drops out. There... Read more
    AJBlog: PianoMorphosis Published on: 2021-04-12
  • Raising the flag
    The Teachout Museum, my collection of midcentury-modern American art and its forerunners here and in Europe, contains two prints by American impressionists who were active around the turn of the twentieth century,... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-12
  • Just because: Somerset Maugham is interviewed in 1965
    Somerset Maugham is interviewed by Alan Pryce-Jones in 1965 for Wisdom, an occasional series of TV profiles of older “cultural icons” that aired on NBC from 1952 to 1965: (This is the latest in... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-12
  • Almanac: Somerset Maugham on simplicity in literary style
    “To write simply is as difficult as to be good.” Somerset Maugham, Don Fernando Continue reading Almanac: Somerset Maugham on simplicity in literary style at About Last Night.... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-12
  • Marshall Marcus Talks the UN and Arts Organizations
    Marshall Marcus, Secretary General of the European Union Youth Orchestra, shares about the connection between the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the mission of arts organizations.... Read more
    AJBlog: Aaron Dworkin Published on: 2021-04-10
  • Doubting Thomas: Greenville County Museum Sells “Alma’s Flower Garden” in a Non-Transparent Transaction
    Taking a page from the problematic playbooks of the Berkshire, Everson and Baltimore museums, the Greenville County Museum of Art (GCMA), South Carolina, has become the latest poster child for deplorable deaccessions.... Read more
    AJBlog: CultureGrrl Published on: 2021-04-09
  • Rich Allen’s Film Dances to the Music
    'Lost in Lydia City': Four minutes of pure sad funny nostalgic joy.... Read more
    AJBlog: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-04-09
  • Underground: To a Remaindered Poet
    An ancient shadow led the exiled Dante through the hell of his neurotic soul. Yet you, oh poet, are silent about your escape and slipped into the brown hide of a bookseller... Read more
    AJBlog: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-04-09
  • Three’s company
    In today’s Wall Street Journal I review webcasts of Yours Unfaithfully (by the Mint Theater Company) and Trying (by North Coast Repertory Theatre). Here’s an excerpt. *  *  * Miles Malleson is one of... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-09
  • Replay: Steely Dan appears on The Late Show
    Steely Dan’s two appearances on The Late Show with David Letterman, performing “Josie” in 1995 and “Cousin Dupree” in 2000: (This is the latest in a series of arts- and history-related videos that... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-09
  • Almanac: Edward G. Robinson on screen acting
    “You know, I’ve always figured the waiting is what they pay me for. The acting I do free.” Edward G. Robinson (quoted in Charlton Heston, In the Arena) Continue reading Almanac: Edward G.... Read more
    AJBlog: About Last Night Published on: 2021-04-09
  • Gone But Not Forgotten The Pyramid Club on the Lower East Side
    Gone, finished, closed, shut forever. Though less well known than CBGB, Webster Hall, The Palladium, the Continental, it gave birth to much LES culture. Over the last few years, the Pyramid Club... Read more
    AJBlog: Straight|Up Published on: 2021-04-07

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