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  • AUDIENCE

Alabama Will Open Museum For Remnants Of Last American Slave Ship

ISSUES Posted: March 19, 2020 12:03 pm

“Mobile County, the city of Mobile and the Alabama Historical Commission say work will begin ‘immediately’ on an Africatown Heritage House that will feature artifacts from the slave ship Clotilda … [which] is believed to be the last ship to bring a cargo of captive Africans into slavery in the United States, shortly before the start of the Civil War.” – The Press-Register (Mobile)/AL.com

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ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in The Press-Register (Mobile)/AL.com Published: 03.11.20

How Shakespeare Became An American Gold Standard

THEATRE Posted: March 16, 2020 12:31 pm

The 17th-century puritans who founded the first English settler colonies were “rabidly anti-theatrical”, and colonial insurrectionists rejecting the motherland in the 18th century would not necessarily have embraced the quintessential English playwright. “How Shakespeare won over America in the early 19th century is something of a mystery.” – New Statesman

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THEATRE Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in New Statesman Published: 03.11.20

Egypt’s Oldest Pyramid Reopens After 14-Year Closure

VISUAL Posted: March 13, 2020 3:01 pm

Assembled between 2630 and 2611 B.C. in Saqqara, Egypt, the pyramid, where Djoser and 11 of his daughters were buried upon their deaths, contains roughly 11.6 million cubic feet of stone and clay. Looping through and around the burial chambers is a winding, maze-like network of tunnels that was likely designed to prevent theft but apparently weakened the building’s structural integrity. – Smithsonian

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VISUAL Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Smithsonian Published: 03.11.20

Needed: A Rethink Of The Digital Millennium Copyright Act And Creativity

IDEAS Posted: March 13, 2020 12:29 pm

The platforms are under no legal obligation to proactively seek out infringement and remove it, nor – most annoyingly of all – do they ever have to permanently remove an infringing work. “Notice and takedown” does not mean “notice and stay-down,” which results in an ongoing game of Whack-A-Mole for copyright owners who get a work removed, only to see it pop up again somewhere else on the internet… again, and again, and again…  – Creative Future

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IDEAS Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Creative Future Published: 03.11.20

Ex-President’s Estate Sues Otis College

ISSUES Posted: March 13, 2020 8:29 am

The legal complaint by Bruce Ferguson’s sister, who is executor of his estate, alleges that Otis committed discrimination, retaliation and wrongful termination related to Ferguson’s illness at the height of a power struggle on campus, when faculty members whose jobs were threatened by organizational changes waged a letter of no confidence campaign against Ferguson after his illness became public. – Argonaut News

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ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Argonaut News Published: 03.11.20

UK Finally Makes E-Books Exempt From Sales Tax, As Print Books Are

WORDS Posted: March 13, 2020 6:32 am

“Printed books and newspapers have always been zero-rated for VAT but until now their digital equivalents – such as books from Amazon’s Kindle service or online subscriptions to news websites such as the Times or the Guardian – have been subject to the sales tax.” (Audiobooks will remain taxable, though.) – The Guardian

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WORDS Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in The Guardian Published: 03.11.20

What Happens To ‘The Merchant Of Venice’ When Shylock Is A Woman?

THEATRE Posted: March 13, 2020 6:04 am

Carey Perloff, who directed Seana McKenna in the role last year in Calgary: “I am not always convinced that cross-gender casting helps illuminate Shakespeare; many of the plays focus so specifically on gender that swapping out men for women can sometimes muddy the actual narrative or intent of the play. But in the case of Shylock, who is the ultimate ‘other’ in the play, gender served to crack open the drama in fascinating ways.” – American Theatre

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THEATRE Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in American Theatre Published: 03.11.20

Most Arts Events Canceled In Seattle

AUDIENCE, ISSUES Posted: March 12, 2020 12:28 pm

If the future is unclear for arts organizations, it’s even scarier for individual artists, backstage artisans and stage hands, many of whom survive job to job. Those who are union members may have access to specific emergency funds, but others are left adrift. – KUOW

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AUDIENCE, ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in KUOW Published: 03.11.20

‘You Know, It’s Going To Cost You Something’: Building A New Opera About The Police Shooting Of A Young Black Man

MUSIC Posted: March 12, 2020 12:04 pm

The quote is what composer Jeanine Tesori told bass Ken Kellogg about taking his role (the young man’s father, a police officer himself) in Blue, which Tesori wrote with librettist Tazewell Thompson for Glimmerglass Opera and Washington National Opera. Matthew Guerrieri meets Tesori, Thompson, and Kellogg at a rehearsal. – The Washington Post

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MUSIC Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Washington Post Published: 03.11.20

Warning: US Theme Parks Will Likely Close

ISSUES Posted: March 12, 2020 11:32 am

Amid the worries on Wall Street, stock prices have tumbled for Orlando-based SeaWorld Entertainment, which operates 12 theme parks across the country. The stock, previously trading above $35 per share for several days in February, fell to about $15 Wednesday before the market had closed. – Orlando Sentinel

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ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Orlando Sentinel Published: 03.11.20

Theatres Need To Get Ahead Of This: Cancel Now

AUDIENCE, THEATRE Posted: March 12, 2020 10:28 am

Apparently, the show must go on even if it kills us. While the country is staring down the barrel of a public health catastrophe, theaters are up against a different enemy: their ragged balance sheets. But by staying open, theaters are not just acting shortsightedly. They’re betraying their core constituency, older patrons, who are the group most vulnerable to coronavirus. – Los Angeles Times

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AUDIENCE, THEATRE Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Los Angeles Times Published: 03.11.20

Does Anyone Even Want The Job Of Running The BBC?

MEDIA Posted: March 12, 2020 10:01 am

The deadline for submitting applications has just passed, reportedly with few candidates showing interest in a position seen as a “poisoned chalice.” Right now, a new BBC director general will have to deal with more than the usual number of headaches — and there’s a good chance of getting replaced within 18 months. – The Guardian

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MEDIA Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in The Guardian Published: 03.11.20

What’s In The UK’s First Post-Brexit Culture Budget

ISSUES Posted: March 12, 2020 8:02 am

The next overall budget for the Department for Digital, Media Culture and Sport (DCMS) will increase by £100 million to £1.7 billion; it will include £250 million to support local libraries and museums (which could help reverse the hundreds of library closures due to austerity in recent years), £27 million for maintenance at national museums, £90 million for cultural development outside London, and £25,000 given to every secondary school each year for “arts activities.” – The Art Newspaper

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ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in The Art Newspaper Published: 03.11.20

Vienna’s Albertina Museum Opens New Branch For Modern Art

VISUAL Posted: March 12, 2020 7:35 am

The Albertina Modern — housed in the newly-renovated 1868 Künstlerhaus on the Ringstrasse, the site of the Nazis’ notorious 1939 “Degenerate Art” exhibit — will focus on postwar Austrian art and its connections with modernism in other countries. (Of course, no one is actually allowed to go see it just now.) – The New York Times

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VISUAL Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in New York Times Published: 03.11.20

Just A Couple Of Years Ago, Louis C.K.’s Career Seemed Over. Now He’s Selling Out Theatres.

THEATRE Posted: March 12, 2020 7:03 am

Until late 2017, he was one of the most admired comedians working, seen as something of an auteur of stand-up. Then reports emerged of, er, unprofessional behavior with younger female colleagues; he admitted they were true; and he lost his agent, his movie, and his TV deal. When he began a comeback last year, many observers feared he’d gone over to the alt-right. But he’s now dropped the worst of that material, reports Elahe Izadi, who went to see his show and talk with some of the enthusiastic audience. – The Washington Post

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THEATRE Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Washington Post Published: 03.11.20

Cancel The Concerts And Close The Theatres Now, Says Leading Critic — This Virus Is Too Dangerous

AUDIENCE, ISSUES Posted: March 12, 2020 6:04 am

Justin Davidson: “It’s easy for me to call for a shutdown. I’m not the one who’ll be hemorrhaging millions every night or facing months of unemployment. … [But] the evidence suggests that the choice is not between a shutdown and no shutdown; it’s between shutting things down now, when the disease is still relatively rare in our area, or waiting until more people have died, the virus has propagated further, and the medical system starts to be overburdened.” (Charles McNulty agrees.) – New York Magazine

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AUDIENCE, ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in New York Magazine Published: 03.11.20

Broadway Theatres Ask Actors And Audiences To Stop Gathering At Stage Door

AUDIENCE, THEATRE Posted: March 12, 2020 5:32 am

Neither producers nor performers and crew nor patrons want to suspend all performances until COVID-19 is under control (whenever that may be), so the theatre owners and producers of the Broadway League are “highly recommending that all stage door activities be eliminated for the time being.” And folks are cooperating, mostly. – The New York Times

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AUDIENCE, THEATRE Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in New York Times Published: 03.11.20

One Of World’s Top Art Fairs Quickly Shuts Down After Exhibitor Comes Down With Coronavirus

VISUAL Posted: March 12, 2020 5:05 am

TEFAF, held in the Dutch city of Maastricht and the world’s leading fair for art and antiques, opened last Saturday and closed Wednesday evening (four days early), just hours after an exhibitor was reported to have tested positive for COVID-19. – ARTnews

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VISUAL Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in ARTnews Published: 03.11.20

Arts Activist Named New NYC Cultural Affairs Director

ISSUES Posted: March 11, 2020 3:01 pm

Gonzalo Casals is an immigrant from Argentina who identifies as queer. Since 2017, he has led the Leslie-Lohman, a museum with roots in the L.G.B.T.Q. civil rights movement, diversifying its collection and programming with contributions from the gay community. Mr. Casals previously served as deputy and interim director at El Museo del Barrio in East Harlem, a major center for Latino art and culture, where he stepped in after Margarita Aguilar left amid turmoil. – The New York Times

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ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in The New York Times Published: 03.11.20

Remembering McCoy Tyner

PEOPLE Posted: March 11, 2020 2:29 pm

It’s enough, more than enough, really, for an artist to simply find a voice, to chisel it out of the noise and to keep it ringing clear across a lifetime. Though he tried lots of modes and moods, Tyner began his professional career in the early sixties as a fully formed artist, and his last albums, from the aughts, are not unlike his first. – Paris Review

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PEOPLE Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Paris Review Published: 03.11.20

Sound, Music And Damage To Our Lives

MUSIC Posted: March 11, 2020 2:02 pm

“I know of numerous composers who suffer from tinnitus — that ringing or other sound in the ears which never shuts off. And even violinists tend to end up with hearing damage in the left ear, since that is the one closest to the sound of the instrument. It is, of course, the sounds we don’t make ourselves that we are most disturbed by. Noise from neighbours can be fatal. It is not unknown for disputes to end in murder or suicide.”   – Irish Times

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MUSIC Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Irish Times Published: 03.11.20

Digital Entertainment Surpasses Box Office For First Time

AUDIENCE, MEDIA Posted: March 11, 2020 1:30 pm

Consumer spending on digital home entertainment surged to $48.7 billion last year, up 24% from 2018, according to a new report from the Motion Picture Assn. Worldwide theatrical ticket sales were $42.2 billion, up 1% from the prior year, said the MPA, the Washington-based lobbying group that represents the major Hollywood studios and Netflix. – Los Angeles Times

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AUDIENCE, MEDIA Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Los Angeles Times Published: 03.11.20

‘Merce Cunningham Redux’

AJBlogs Posted: March 11, 2020 11:55 am

James Klosty’s book is big in several ways. (Try lugging it to a sunny spot; it weighs about six pounds.) I’m in love with it. – Deborah Jowitt

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AJBlogs Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Deborah Jowitt Published: 03.11.20

Berlin Closes All Cultural Venues For A Month

ISSUES Posted: March 11, 2020 5:05 am

The shutdown, ordered to prevent the spread of COVID-19, mandatory for all state-owned arts institutions and strongly recommended for others, is in effect at least until after Easter (April 12). – The Berlin Spectator

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ISSUES Published: 03.11.20

Read the story in Berlin Spectator Published: 03.11.20

  • 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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