Dance documentary Pina returns to Triangle in 3D
By Ted Phillips | March 28, 2013Pina is an example of top-tier dance captured by a masterful filmmaker using budding cinematic techniques.
Pina is an example of top-tier dance captured by a masterful filmmaker using budding cinematic techniques.
"I’m hoping to form a sort of bulwark against an insidious, tame-looking, schmaltz-laden mode of expression that threatens to cover us all...”
This year’s Choreolab aims to expand, deepen and challenge your perceptions of dance.
“It’s supposed to be a snapshot of what it’s like to be a girl at Duke.”
Back when people bought real CDs, half the thrill was looking through the paper album sleeves.
The collages are eerily beautiful, each one a window into an ethereal world of jellyfish horizons and mini-mushroom patches.
“I don’t want people to come in thinking, ‘Oh, it’s a poetry reading.’ They’re coming to a spoken word event where anything could happen."
In this exhibition, the “love” extends beyond our penchants for romantic gimmicks.
This Tuesday, March 5, members of the Duke community are invited to reflectively walk a labyrinth in the Duke Chapel.
"If you laugh, we’re doing comedy; if you don’t we’re doing drama.”
What does the ancient Greece of Plato’s The Republic have in common with the world today?
"It’s just you and a microphone."
Light Sensitive: Photographic Works from North Carolina Collections dispels the myth of photographic realism.
This Valentine's Day, you could sit alone in your room, cautiously avoiding the coconut crèmes in a Russell Stover variety box.
In fact, I heard the older man next to me whisper to his friend, “I hope there are no children here.”
The Miles, a senior distinction project written by and featuring senior Theater Studies Steven Li, centers on finding identities through changing relationships.
A performance that connects to today’s crowd as much as it did 50 years ago.
“This is the company at its most impressive, as part of a history of daredevil dance companies.”
Me Too Monologues has become part of expanding efforts at Duke to create venues for more meaningful exchange between students of different backgrounds.
Recess Arts Editor Katie Zaborsky spoke with Daisey about his approach to storytelling, his work, and the monologue he is bringing to Duke and Durham.