Happy (and you know it)
Sweden has a 40-year history of sunny pop music so infectiously happy, it would give Pharrell Williams a sugar high. And it all started with ABBA.
Read MoreEnergy of the Stage
Sweden has a 40-year history of sunny pop music so infectiously happy, it would give Pharrell Williams a sugar high. And it all started with ABBA.
Read MoreThe redesigned and restaged new version of “The Phantom of the Opera” hits the Fox Theatre in October. Tickets are available now.
Read MoreFor the past two weeks, the NBAF’s Brave New Voices Institute has sharpened the creative writing and spoken-word skills of 20 metro Atlanta teenagers.
Read MoreThe second in a series of four Spotlight Series concerts curated by music legend Wynton Marsalis will pair Marsalis’ jazz mentor Jimmy Heath and trumpeter Jeremy Pelt in an Aug. 23 concert.
Read MoreWow! Where to begin? Must-sees in our book include “One Man, Two Guvnors” at Ga Shakes and “That Uganda Play” in the Essential festival. Openings include “Mary Poppins” at Aurora, “Right On” at Horizon and, on Monday, the Weird Sisters “Late: A Cowboy Song.” Just ahead: Serenbe’s “Oklahoma!” and Essential’s “Ravens & Seagulls.” Saddle up, playgoers.
Read MoreSynchronicity Theatre, a professional company devoted to giving women a voice, has its first permanent home in 16 years, at Midtown’s Peachtree Pointe.
Read MoreWhen the Alliance Theatre begins rehearsals for its October staging of “Steel Magnolias,” it’ll do so with some heady talent in the room.
Read MoreThe July lineup for the 26th annual National Black Arts Festival is as hot as the weather, with the launch of its first Spotlight Series featuring NBAF’s 2014 Legends honoree Wynton Marsalis.
Read MoreThe Collision Project began 13 years ago at the Alliance Theatre to give teens an “ownership-authorship relationship” with theater as opposed to the “sit-there-and-watch it” role.
Read MoreThe National High School Musical Theatre Awards’ long winnowing process began months ago with 60,000 students from 1,500 schools. Only 56 — 28 girls and 28 boys — made it to New York and the stage of the Minskoff Theatre.
Read More