Velvet-throated songstress Nina Simone hypnotized audiences with her signature renditions of standards from the American songbook. But on September 15, 1963, a devastating explosion in Birmingham, Alabama rocked our entire nation to the core, and from the memory of the four little girls that were lost in this unimaginable tragedy, came “Four Women”—along with Simone’s other activist anthems like “Mississippi Goddam,” “Old Jim Crow” and “To Be Young, Gifted and Black.” Through storytelling and song, Nina Simone: Four Women reveals how this iconic chanteuse found her true voice—and how the “High Priestess of Soul” defined the sound of the Civil Rights Movement.
Videos
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Jane Lynch’s A Swingin’ Little Christmas featuring Kate Flannery, Tim Davis, and the Tony Guerrero Quintet
Keswick Theatre (12/2 - 1/2) | |
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MJ The Illusion
Bristol Riverside Theatre (1/14 - 1/18) | |
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The Nursery by Clifford Odets
The Sam Theater at The Flea (9/24 - 9/24) | |
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Isaiah Collier & Keyon Harrold
Zellerbach Theatre (1/24 - 1/24) | |
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Alarm Will Sound with Bora Yoon: American Stories
Zellerbach Theatre (3/13 - 3/13) | |
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Arden Children’s Theatre Presents: The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales
The Arden Theatre Company (4/8 - 5/31) | |
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Blind Summit Theatre: The Sex Lives of Puppets
Harold Prince Theatre (2/4 - 2/7) | |
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SISTER ACT
venice island theater (6/5 - 6/7) | ||
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