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(01/09/08 9:39am)
Do you sing in the shower? Were you rejected from the Dodecs after staying up until 3 a.m. through a long and arduous audition process? Have you sung in a band, for your friends in a karaoke bar or just for yourself in front of a mirror with your hairbrush?
(10/04/07 5:22am)
Friday Night Rock is known for providing a venue for fans of alternative and experimental music. They have booked bands like the obscurely-named "Menomena," "Frog Eyes," "Holy Fuck" and "The Dirty Projectors." Friday Night Rock's upcoming show, however, features artists with relatively tamer titles and presumably tamer musical styles: Denison Witmer and Marla Hansen.
(09/27/07 6:05am)
Manhattan-based theater company The Civilians bring loss into the limelight with their production of "Gone Missing." The performance is a series of stories about lost objects and the gravity they have in people's lives. For one character, the loss of a necklace may really means loss of a mother's approval, and for another, a loss of a Gucci high heel may mean the beginning of a determined crusade to recover it. The troupe will perform Friday and Saturday night at 8 p.m. in the Moore Theater; tickets are available at the Hopkins Center box office.
(03/05/07 11:00am)
"Life is good in Soweto, because we stay in love and peace. So let's dance with happiness."
(02/20/07 11:00am)
Spoken word, an art form whose medium is simply voice, is coming to Dartmouth on Feb. 20 at Moore Theater. The event, which is part of Dartmouth's celebration of Black History Month, will be hosted by SoulScribes, and will feature professional spoken word artists Bryonn Bain, Jason Carney and Staceyann Chin.
(02/12/07 11:00am)
Empty Bowls is a fundraising project that donates its proceeds to organizations that fight hunger. This term, proceeds will go towards local organizations the Listen Center, Haven and Willing Hands, and to New York's City Harvest. Funds are raised at a simple dinner of soup and bread which is provided by the Hanover Inn and served in the handmade ceramic bowls. Ticket buyers pay $10 to partake in the dinner, and keep the bowl as a reminder that hunger and empty bowls still exist. The project was started in 1990 by two high school potters from Michigan and has grown over the past 15 years into an international anti-hunger organization.
(02/01/07 11:00am)
On Thursday, Friday and Saturday, three juniors will perform the lead roles in the ensemble play "Betrayal," written by Harold Pinter.
(01/24/07 11:00am)
Yes, that's right -- the title and prompt for each one-hour show is determined entirely by the audience. Not even the performers themselves know how the story is going to unfold. All they know is that they'll be starting with an opening number.
(11/07/06 11:00am)
Catherine Tudish came to Dartmouth along with the Class of 2010 this September as the newest faculty member in the creative writing department. Her course, an advanced seminar for fiction writing, has gotten rave reviews from students.
(10/23/06 9:00am)
At 8 p.m. on Oct. 21, applause swelled inside Spaulding Auditorium as Anoushka Shankar settled onstage and began to tune up. The enormous 20-fret instrument rose taller than the renowned sitarist herself.
(10/17/06 9:00am)
Those who recognize the name Scott McCloud probably do so because of his cult-classic, superhero comic book series "Zot!," or perhaps his series of comic theory books, "Understanding Comics, Reinventing Comics," and "Making Comics" are familiar. He has lectured at Pixar, Microsoft, The Smithsonian Institution, Harvard University and MIT, and soon he will be coming to Dartmouth College with his presentation "Comics: A Medium in Transition."
(10/02/06 9:00am)
This past Friday, the crowd buzzed eagerly in the Moore Theater while waiting for the first showing of SITI Company's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." As the audience filed into their seats, they were greeted by a simple but dreamlike backdrop of grey and white clouds and Puck (Jeffery Frac) playing a few chords on ... wait for it ... a banjo.