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The Rare Conductor: Anthony Pappano

Pappano, 65, is a rarity in classical music: a maestro who never went to a music school. Born in England to Italian immigrant parents, then transplanted to Connecticut at 13, he learned through experience (and came away with an accent that remains charmingly jumbled to this day). - The New York Times

Twin Actors Who Ran Underground Theater In Syria Return Home After 14-Year Exile

Hidden from the Assad regime’s secret police, Mohamad and Ahmad Malas performed over 200 plays in their apartment — until they were arrested during the Arab Spring demonstrations and fled Syria. The brothers never imagined they could return home because they never imagined that Assad would fall. And then he did. - The Guardian

Self-Publishing Is Having A Moment

"They want to do things in a time frame that suits them, rather than hope that they will find an agent, and that the agent finds a publisher, and at some point, in the future, that book is published. New writers are saying: ‘I can do something relatively quickly and learn how to be an entrepreneurial, self-starting author.’”  -...

How Have Film Academy Voters Changed What’s Being Voted On For Oscars?

If the old Academy had a terror of making odd choices, the new Academy seems to be looking for ways to be odd. Its membership seems to have become in love with the unexpected gesture of heralding the unheralded because they value the symbolism, not because the work is worthy. - San Francisco Chronicle

How Will We Market The Arts In A Post-Social Media World?

Are we past the point where social media almost entirely drives arts marketing?  While it’s unlikely social media platforms will all collapse in 2025, their ubiquity will almost certainly dissolve significantly in the years to come. - ArtsHub

Viennese Institutions Compete To Celebrate Bicentennial Of “Waltz King” Johann Strauss II

There’s an entire new immersive exhibition dedicated to the composer, another show at the Theatermuseum, the city’s 30+ dance schools, and the venue that the composer’s great-grand-nephew considers most authentic: the House of Strauss, a museum situated inside a restored casino (which in Vienna means a small dance hall). - The Observer (UK)

What Do We Actually Mean By “Free” Speech?

The problem is that the definition of “free speech” has strayed far from its origins in the rights of ordinary folk to speak without interference from higher powers like governments. It has become a vacuous term, a plea to be able to act without any constraints, a dumb binary that either you’ve got or you haven’t. - The Guardian

Spotify Defends Itself: We’ve Helped Make The Music Business Healthy!

"It’s a misconception that Spotify ‘doesn’t pay well’ – as we’ve proved time and time again. The $10B we paid out in 2024 and $60B all time is industry-leading and record-breaking - the largest contribution to the music industry. “The music industry is healthier than ever.” - Music Radar

Bollywood’s Leading Composer Plans Infrastructure In India For Broadway-Style Musicals

A.R. Rahman (Oscar winner for Slumdog Millionaire, which he’s adapting for the stage) is starting with a 3,000-seat theater in his hometown, Chennai, and wants to set up additional venues elsewhere in Tamil Nadu state and, eventually, beyond. - Variety

Remembering The CIA’s Elaborate World War II Book Smuggling Operation

What some in the east suspected, but very few knew for sure, was that the uncensored literature flooding the country wasn’t reaching Poles by chance. It was sent as part of a decades-long US intelligence operation, known in Washington as the “CIA book program.” - The Guardian

Missing Pages Of “The Last Great Yiddish Novel” Come To Light

Chaim Grade was considered one of the greatest novelists in the language, and his last work. Sons and Daughters, was serialized in Yiddish newspapers without ever getting published. After Grade died, his widow obstructed access to his papers. So the discovery of missing material was a big event. - The New York Times

The Science Of Optimism? How, In A Frightening World?

Optimism is, after all, by its nature delusional; ‘realism’ or outright pessimism might seem more justifiable given the troubles of the present and the uncertainties of the future. - Psyche

Universal Studios Is Expanding Like Crazy

When it opens on May 22, Epic Universe will become Florida’s first major new park in a generation — and, Universal hopes, a property that will reverse a longstanding business dynamic with Walt Disney World to the south. - The New York Times

Longtime, Familiar Anchors Are Leaving TV Newscasts. Their Timing Is Not Good.

Lester Holt (NBC Nightly News), Chuck Todd (Meet the Press), Hoda Kotb (The Today Show), Norah O’Donnell (CBS Evening News), Joy Reid and Alex Wagner (MSNBC) — all recently departed. And their successors won’t yet have established credibility with viewers at a time when faith in TV news is ebbing. - Variety

Vertical Choreography, Now On Broadway

“Using ... harnesses, ropes and belay devices, (the Oakland-based company) Bandaloop can take dance’s soaring, ethereal qualities to extremes and bring them to unlikely perpendicular surfaces like the rock face of El Capitan in California or Tianmen Mountain in China.” Or the Nederlander Theater, in the musical Redwood. - The New York Times

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