Arts Olympus, an international non-profit arts organization committed to promoting unity through art, will hold four days of free public intercultural events hosted aboard the world's most famous ship, The Queen Mary, taking place June 17-20, 2010, in Long Beach, Calif., where The Queen Mary is docked.
Arts Olympus, an international non-profit arts organization committed to promoting unity through art, will hold four days of free public intercultural events hosted aboard the world's most famous ship, The Queen Mary, taking place June 17-20, 2010, in Long Beach, Calif., where The Queen Mary is docked.
Arts Olympus, an international non-profit arts organization committed to promoting unity through art, will hold four days of free public intercultural events hosted aboard the world's most famous ship, The Queen Mary, taking place June 17-20, 2010, in Long Beach, Calif., where The Queen Mary is docked.
The Desert AIDS Project is hosting the 16th Annual Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards on February 27 at Palm Springs Convention Center. The evening is hosted by Richard Chamberlain and Stefanie Powers.
The Desert AIDS Project is hosting the 16th Annual Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards on February 27 at Palm Springs Convention Center. The evening is hosted by Richard Chamberlain and Stefanie Powers.
Fences, August Wilson's powerful story of a fractured African-American family in 1950s Pittsburgh, comes to South Coast Repertory's Segerstrom Stage January 22 through February 21.
Fences, August Wilson's powerful story of a fractured African-American family in 1950s Pittsburgh, comes to South Coast Repertory's Segerstrom Stage January 22 through February 21.
Charles Conrad, a distinguished acting coach who has trained some of theater and film's most celebrated performers including Susan Sarandon, Jack Nicholson, Kim Basinger, Dennis Quaid, Michelle Pfiedder, Diana Ross and Robert Duvall, died from kidney failure on October 29 in Port Townsend, Washington. He was 84.
When the first act of Warren Manzi's PERFECT CRIME ends, the audience sits in stone cold silence. The silence lasts for a few moments after the houselights are brought up and when the audience does finally react, they are abuzz about the convolutions of the plot that is unraveling before them. According to actor Robert Emmet Lunney it's 'hopefully because the audience is thinking; maybe even perplexed.'