La Excelencia brings salsa dura to Hopkins Center tonight
The Bronx salsa band La Excelencia will perform tonight in the Hopkins Center, bringing new life to traditional salsa music.
The Bronx salsa band La Excelencia will perform tonight in the Hopkins Center, bringing new life to traditional salsa music.
Artist-in-residence Laylah Ali's ink drawings displayed in the Jaffe-Friede Gallery in the Hopkins Center depict power struggles between cartoon-style characters that resemble aboriginal and Native American art.
Finally, a new blog is asking this imperative, long-standing question: Is Ryan Gosling cuter than a puppy?
Shot completely in black and white, Michel Hazanavicius's silent film "The Artist" depicts the advent of talking films from the perspective of two diverse actors, the silent superstar George Valentin (Jean Dujardin) and talkie upstart Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo). The most powerful actor in Hollywood when the story begins in 1927, George extends his largesse to offer Peppy a supporting role in one of his silent films.
On Friday evening, the Spaulding Auditorium stage in the Hopkins Center will host Wu Man, a Grammy Award-nominated virtuosic musician who plays the pipa, a traditional Chinese string instrument.
There is nothing quite like the experience of reading a novel so enthralling that it propels you to stay up all night furiously flipping through its pages, preoccupies you throughout the school day and motivates you to rush back to your dorm room and neglect your homework until you have devoured every last word.
Disembodied tongues and garishly grinning teeth may not seem like a typical image to accompany a meal, but students eating in Courtyard Cafe at the Hopkins Center have recently become used to the view.
ADITI KIRTIKAR / The Dartmouth At first glance, the intricate detail of the exhibit on display in the Barrows Rotunda of the Hopkins Center is nothing short of overwhelming.
Courtesy of musicmanage.org To the universal acclaim of its audience, "David Newsam and Friends" performed on the intimate, stained glass-illuminated stage of Rollins Chapel on Sunday in a concert that featured a series of duets and collaborations inspired by Latin American influences. The concert began with a short introduction of the program by David Newsam, a music professor at the College and a professional guitarist.
Based on the 1974 British spy novel, "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" examines the world of espionage during the 1970s, when Cold War tensions are running high.
The Metropolitan Opera in New York City and the National Theatre in London are respectively 270 and 3,000 miles away from Hanover, but faculty, students and local residents can watch performances from the comfort of the Hopkins Center thanks to the broadcasting services each company offers. The Metropolitan Opera production of "The Enchanted Island," which aired over the weekend in Loew Auditorium, marked the beginning of the high-definition transmissions offered this term. The opera is a pastiche devised and written by film director Jeremy Sams, consisting of the musical compositions of Handel, Vivaldi and other Baroque composers. The production blends the storylines of Shakespeare's "The Tempest" and "A Midsummer Night's Dream" to create a unique new story. While students may see the opera as an aloof, high-cultured institution, these broadcasts make the productions more accessible to the casual opera-goer. In a further attempt to increase accessibility, "The Enchanted Island" does away with the language barrier the librettos are all in English. Although Sams' contemporary production is a departure from the traditional scheme for operas, the two other operas being streamed at the Hopkins Center this term are decidedly more orthodox. Richard Wagner's "Gotterdammerung" (Feb.
Over the past year, actor and comedian Kyle Mooney has been gaining what can be referred to as nothing less than a cult following for his "man-on-the-street"-style interviews.
Correction Appended### The 2012 Sundance Film Festival which opens today in Park City, Utah will feature a nominated short film scored by Dartmouth's own Larry Polansky, a composer and a professor of music at the College.
Courtesy of the Hopkins Center On Tuesday, Tayo Aluko performing as Paul Robeson in his one-man play "Call Mr. Robeson: A Life, with Songs" took to the Hopkins Center's Warner Bentley Theater stage carrying a chair on his back, accompanied by soft pangs of a reverberating piano that supported his deep baritone vocals.
If there is any question as to who had the most remarkable success story of 2011, one need not look further than The Weeknd, a 21-year-old Canadian recording artist whose real name is Abel Tesfaye, who recently released his new mixtape "Echoes of Silence." Tesfaye's debut R&B mixtape "House of Balloons" secured a solid spot on many "Best of 2011" lists, and his follow up mixtape "Thursday" similarly garnered universally strong feedback. With the release of "Echoes of Silence" on Dec.
Courtesy of the Hopkins Center As the lights dimmed and dancers filed on stage, an enormous overhead view of a brain lit by neon hues transformed the backdrop of the Hopkins Center's Moore Theater during the world premiere of Brain Storm, an Everett Dance Theatre production performed on Jan.
This winter, moviegoers can rinse their eyes of mainstream cinema with the EYEWASH film series, a unique film experience that film curator and film and media studies professor Jodie Mack likens to the cinematic version of attending a live concert.
This term, a group of Dartmouth students will learn how to bind delicate pages between leather covers, use equipment such as shears and printing presses and develop the skill of fine hand lettering and ornamental penmanship through the library's Book Arts Program, which seeks "to promote an understanding of the art and history of the printed and written word," according to the class and workshop program's mission statement. Students in the program, which is available to those with all levels of experience, will receive instruction in the Letterpress and Bindery Studios.
Yomalis Rosario / The Dartmouth Sally Pinkas, the pianist-in-residence at the Hopkins Center for the Arts, performed three piano trios alongside violinist Saul Bitran and cellist Jan Muller-Szeraws, featuring compositions by Antonin Dvorak, Dmitri Shostakovich and Beethoven on Tuesday night. Pinkas, who is a music professor and has been in residence for over fifteen years, first arrived at Dartmouth when she was in her mid-20s, and the Spaulding Auditorium stage has now become her home.