AltWeeklies Wire

Len Barron Brings Einstein Back from the Deadnew

Barron has spent the past 20 years trying to exalt Albert Einstein in his one-man show. He just released a DVD, Portraits of Einstein, with clips of his show and other goodies.
Boulder Weekly  |  Dylan Otto Krider  |  11-20-2008  |  Performance

Can the Carolinas' Largest Theater Rise to the Times?new

The timing isn't the best, but the Durham Performing Arts Center is opening at the end of the month.
INDY Week  |  Staff  |  11-20-2008  |  Performance

Dennis Miller's No Help for Florida's Grieving McCainitesnew

If there was one place where disappointed Broward County Republicans might expect to find a little solace the day after Election Day, it should have been at an invitation-only performance by comedian Dennis Miller.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Edmund Newton  |  11-18-2008  |  Performance

Comedian Louis CK Loses Fear of Offendingnew

Every year, Louis CK makes himself create new material, meaning he's always on the lookout for more cringe-worthy territory where he can take audiences.
The Georgia Straight  |  Guy MacPherson  |  11-18-2008  |  Performance

Loose Moose Celebrates 30 Years of Theatresportsnew

Wildly popular worldwide (think of the TV show Whose Line is it Anyway? and you've got it), the home of Theatresports celebrates its thirtieth anniversary.
Fast Forward Weekly  |  Drew Anderson  |  11-13-2008  |  Performance

Obama's Historic Victory and What Kulture Klash 3 Really Meansnew

Is it more than an arts party? Does it have anything to say to arts organizations struggling to attract younger audiences? What does it suggest about 21st-century attitudes about our experience of the arts?
Charleston City Paper  |  John Stoehr  |  11-12-2008  |  Performance

Chris Rock Earns His Comedy Stripesnew

Although there's no profanity from Chris Rock in Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, the comic has fun as Marty the zebra, who finds a herd's worth of others like him.
The Georgia Straight  |  Ian Caddell  |  11-11-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Does Being an Artist Make You a Liberal?new

It's easy to see how the cost of education and a housing crisis affect the health of the citizenry. But reading a novel or watching a play? That's not so easy to see. Hence, we don't hear about it much. Even so, there is a long intellectual tradition of making the case for the arts in politics.
Charleston City Paper  |  John Stoehr  |  10-30-2008  |  Commentary

Abracadabra: St. Louis Has Become a Flourishing Place for Magiciansnew

The city has a thriving magic community, and membership in the International Brotherhood of Magicians is on the rise. The local chapter, or "ring," is now up to 150 people, five times more than the average large city.
Riverfront Times  |  Matt Kasper  |  10-10-2008  |  Performance

Dave Attell Rips Hecklers and Kills with Jokes About Horse Sexnew

He is one of the dirtiest, riskiest and funniest comedians on the scene today. But if you ask Dave Attell what he's trying to be, he says he's just trying to be funny -- dirty and risky are by-products.
New Haven Advocate  |  Erin Lynch  |  09-16-2008  |  Performance

The Dream Nation Marching Unit Does It For The Kidsnew

Dream Nation members refer to themselves as a "community band," part of a long tradition of self-sufficient marching bands in the African-American community that operate on a volunteer basis and raise their own funding independently.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Al Shipley  |  09-02-2008  |  Performance

Comedian Lewis Black Takes on His One-time Hometownnew

Black's come a long way since those first days, the earliest of which include living and working in Colorado Springs for a year. Black, who grew up in Maryland, ran a theater company that worked at Palmer High School, Fort Carson and a couple prisons.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Kirsten Akens  |  08-19-2008  |  Performance

Revenge of the Outcastsnew

In the Internet Age, when everything is democratized, the Fringe Festival is the performance equivalent of blogs: anyone can put up something, leaving it to the audience to be final editor.
Boulder Weekly  |  Dylan Otto Krider  |  08-14-2008  |  Performance

The End of Deliberate Ugliness: How to reclaim the historic role of art in expressing spiritualitynew

Gail Sickel was searching in the 1970s, a dynamic period still roiling with the social and political upheavals of the decade before. The United States was still sunk in the quagmire of a foreign war. Coming of age amid this influence of anxiety, Sickel was part of a boom of young, idealistic Americans searching for new ways to express spirituality. "I was looking for oneness," she says, reflecting on that time. "I was a seeker and eventually I found an experience that was heart-focused." That experience was the Dances of Universal Peace.
Charleston City Paper  |  John Stoehr  |  08-13-2008  |  Performance

Bill Maher: Pointing Out the Truth

The comedian talks about religion, television and why Obama's going to win.
NUVO  |  Marc D. Allan  |  08-08-2008  |  Performance

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