Brazilian dance troupe to perform at Reynolds
By Francis Curiel | November 6, 2014The company, made up of eight young dancers from the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, brings its performers’ Afro-Brazilian identities to an international stage.
The company, made up of eight young dancers from the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, brings its performers’ Afro-Brazilian identities to an international stage.
The weekend connects current undergraduates and recent graduates to alumni established in the entertainment and arts industry.
The exhibit "City Under One Roof" captures the sentiment that human lives and their stories are intertwined within their surrounding space.
“It’s too bad Baldwin doesn’t have a dance floor anymore. They’ll have to use the aisles.”
Urinetown tackles questions of the condition of society through both laugh-out-loud comedy and subtler, ironic commentary.
If My Feet Have Lost the Ground invokes puppetry to elaborately portray the complexities of the human experience.
“The hardest words I ever said were, I need to talk to someone about an assault.”
"Get it together and come to my show, because it’s an hour that will save your life. Put that in the paper."
Burnham satirizes societal taboos like race, sex, gender and religion with his comedic videos, songs and stand-up tours.
A local family’s performance art company is tackling the issue of domestic violence through theater.
The North Carolina Museum of Art is currently hosting “Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know,” a weekly film series dedicated to highlighting seminal movies in the film noir genre.
To help maximize your trips to Griffith Theater, here is the scoop on what to watch and what to skip.
Recess chats with the owner of Intrepid Life Coffee and Spirits.
Born out of the student-driven desire to meet and connect with Duke alumni working in arts and medial-related fields, a live Google Hangout will allow students to make these connections.
“Miró was really interested in tapping into the fundamental human desire to create."
Pizzeria Toro is back. After a fire closed the locally renowned pizza restaurant in November 2013, it has reopened with a fresh new vibe and open layout.
The paintings combine images from archival photographs of African-Americans from the early 1900s with styles of traditional Japanese painting.
Adichie is a rallying figure in the ongoing discourse on feminism and its intersection with race and ethnicity.
“It seems he can take any idea and make it beautiful."