Back in the day when Matt Lawlor and Roger Fingar were baby-faced, wide-eyed, devil-may-care punk rockers, going on tour meant quitting your day job and hoping to get hired back a month later.
Back in the day when Matt Lawlor and Roger Fingar were baby-faced, wide-eyed, devil-may-care punk rockers, going on tour meant quitting your day job and hoping to get hired back a month later.
Young, wealthy and headstrong, Manel Àlvarez was living in Carrara, an artsy Italian city just of the Mediterranean coast in Tuscany, embarking on a mission to make it as an artist.
Young, wealthy and headstrong, Manel Àlvarez was living in Carrara, an artsy Italian city just of the Mediterranean coast in Tuscany, embarking on a mission to make it as an artist.
Young, wealthy and headstrong, Manel Àlvarez was living in Carrara, an artsy Italian city just of the Mediterranean coast in Tuscany, embarking on a mission to make it as an artist.
The venerated halls of Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History have housed dinosaur bones, mummies, pristine rare artifacts, and all manner of stately exhibitions in the more than 120 years since its doors first opened.
The venerated halls of Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History have housed dinosaur bones, mummies, pristine rare artifacts, and all manner of stately exhibitions in the more than 120 years since its doors first opened.
Generally speaking, if you’re running a chamber of commerce, a group whose mission is to provide support, exposure and, you know, customers to local businesses, when the businesses in town are jam packed with customers, that’s not as much a problem as a cause for celebration.
Generally speaking, if you’re running a chamber of commerce, a group whose mission is to provide support, exposure and, you know, customers to local businesses, when the businesses in town are jam packed with customers, that’s not as much a problem as a cause for celebration.
Wai Mitzutani, the Juilliard-schooled violinist who has performed everywhere from the New York Philharmonic to the Korean Symphony Orchestra, is ready to let his hair down.
Wai Mitzutani, the Juilliard-schooled violinist who has performed everywhere from the New York Philharmonic to the Korean Symphony Orchestra, is ready to let his hair down.
Despite the bouncy chords, the island strums, the line of instruments, the sheets of notes and the flowing stream of voices echoing in this room, no one here is a musician.
Despite the bouncy chords, the island strums, the line of instruments, the sheets of notes and the flowing stream of voices echoing in this room, no one here is a musician.
Despite the bouncy chords, the island strums, the line of instruments, the sheets of notes and the flowing stream of voices echoing in this room, no one here is a musician.
In 1997, when John Zoltek emerged from an outsized field of candidates and became the first full-time music director with the Glacier Symphony and Chorale, he didn’t see himself in the same spot a full two decades later.
Most of the actors in “The Neverending Story,” the latest production from the Whitefish Theatre Co. that opens this weekend at the O’Shaughnessy Center, weren’t even born when the surreal fantasy tale first came to the big screen in 1984.
Most of the actors in “The Neverending Story,” the latest production from the Whitefish Theatre Co. that opens this weekend at the O’Shaughnessy Center, weren’t even born when the surreal fantasy tale first came to the big screen in 1984.
Most of the actors in “The Neverending Story,” the latest production from the Whitefish Theatre Co. that opens this weekend at the O’Shaughnessy Center, weren’t even born when the surreal fantasy tale first came to the big screen in 1984.
Before he flashes his wide, toothy smile, or greets you warmly with his bear paw of a right hand, 58-year-old Jack Gladstone, 6-foot-2 with a smoothly shaved head, looks like a fighter.
The first time Leslie Clayborn and Brooke Nelson brought a dozen or so of their friends together for a night of wine, cheese, painting and catharsis — shortly after this year’s election — it was supposed to be a one-time thing.