Stories

Why We Were Fascinated By Maggie Smith

"Her astonishing range, as borne out by a stage and screen career that traversed generations, genres and culture levels, had one common denominator: a reverence for the written word. Her gifts — and they were rightly legendary — turned dialogue on the page into verbal music." - Los Angeles Times

Syntax Makes (Almost) All The Difference

"If a change of style is a change of subject, as Wallace Stevens averred, then a change of syntax is a change of meaning. Word order is, if not all, then nine tenths. I exaggerate, but I do so advisedly, as a corrective to the overemphasis on word choice." - The Hedgehog Review

End Of An Era: UK Car Makers To Stop Putting CD-Players In Cars

The tyranny of choice can make the comparatively limited days of the in-car CD player, or multi-disc changer, if you were fancy, seem highly attractive. Hold on to them if you’ve got them: from now on, car manufacturers in the UK will no longer include CD players on new models. - The Guardian

What It Means To Write A Play In The Age Of AI

"In the midst of all this, what does it mean to be a writer trying to write in the way that I want to write? What would the new technologies mean for writers like Saul Bellow or Philip Roth, who I adore, and for the richness of their language?" - The Atlantic

Francis Ford Coppola Self-Financed His $120-Million “Megalopolis.” It Just Bombed Its Opening Weekend

The major studios wouldn’t touch “Megalopolis,” the ambitious passion project from octogenarian Oscar-winner Francis Ford Coppola. Now it’s clear why. - Los Angeles Times

Endangered Indigenous Languages Are Getting A Boost On Social Media

Never before have Indigenous nations and communities had so many tools for revitalizing their languages. - The Walrus

National Black Theatre Prepares to Move Into Building Worthy Of Its Work

CEO Sadie Lythcott says, "Our artistic ambition was always stifled by the space that we had." Come 2027, NBT will move into a block-long complex with two theaters, a set-building shop and affordable artist housing, all on 125th Street in Harlem. - The Guardian

Does AI Understand Language Or…

The downside of these machine-learned embeddings is that, unlike in a game of 20 Questions, many of the descriptions encoded in each list of numbers are not interpretable by humans. - The Atlantic

Here’s The 2024 Class Of MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellows

Figures from the arts include poet Jericho Brown, violinist Johnny Gandelsman, media artist Tony Cokes, filmmaker Sterlin Harjo, cabaret artist Justin Vivian Bond, writers Juan Felipe Herrera and Ling Ma, multimedia artist Ebony G. Patterson, choreographer Shamel Pitts, visual artist Wendy Red Star, and young people's lit author Jason Reynolds. - NPR

When Disney Tried To Build An American History Theme Park

Disney's America was intended to have nine sections, from a Colonial-era Presidents Square and an Indigenous village to Ellis Island and a 19th-century factory town to a Civil War fort and a Depression-era family farm. But, for example, Ellis Island was going to have Muppets. - The Conversation

Pompidou Revives Plan For Outpost In Jersey City

Under the Pompidou’s new plan, the museum will be sited in a new location and backed by a different financial arrangement. - ARTnews

By Age 25, She Had Choreographed For Commercial Dance, West End Musicals, Pop-Star Tours, and National Ballet Companies

Emma Portner is now almost 30, and the National Ballet of Canada has brought a major work of hers on tour to London. Yet the piece which really established her career, and which still gets her engagements, is a 3½-minute video to a Bruce Springsteen cover. - The Guardian

Cell Phones Keep Interrupting Philadelphia Orchestra Concerts. Do The Orchestra’s Own Policies Bear Part Of The Blame?

"(Management) has invited the problem at least partially by asking audiences to ... engage with their cell phones during visits. Tagging the ensemble on social media has long been encouraged. Signs at one recent performance asked patrons to bypass printed programs and instead read their program notes online." - The Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

Bringing South Africa’s Unique Street Dancing To The World’s Stages

Pantsula is a dance style developed in the country's black townships by Africans who combined the tap dancing they saw in American movies with traditional movement. Vusi Mdoyi grew up doing pantsula and, in 1994, co-founded the company Step Afrika!, which professionalized the form. - The New York Times

Judge Denies Convicted Armorer For “Rust” A New Trial

Hannah Gutierrez-Reed was convicted of manslaughter for the accidental shooting of the film's cinematographer by star Baldwin, who presumed that a prop gun would not contain live ammunition. After charges against Baldwin were vacated last week, Gutierrez-Reed's attorneys asked that her case be similarly dismissed; they were denied. - The Hollywood Reporter

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