‘In Conversation’ returns this spring to unite hearts through art
By Stephen Atkinson | February 1, 2021Art can quicken your pulse — literally.
Art can quicken your pulse — literally.
While they may not be able to understand the Coffeehouse experience this year, there is hope that these upcoming events — and the passionate students managing them — can preserve the culture of Coffeehouse.
These workshops have found their success in the past by providing programs with students’ specific interests in mind, but no idea is off the table when it comes to DukeCreate.
Despite the immense challenges posed by the pandemic and the lack of in-person concerts, Small Town Records’s artists, producers and personnel have continued to do what they love and have a variety of projects slated for the spring semester.
The audience may not yet know the how or why, but there is obviously something wrong in Westview.
The entertainment industry, after facing unprecedented setbacks due to the pandemic, will look to this year as an opportunity to bounce back and make up for the fairly limited 2020 release schedule.
In Emerald Fennell’s 2020 thriller-comedy “Promising Young Woman,” Cassandra “Cassie” Thomas (Carey Mulligan) spends her weekends pretending to be blackout-drunk in nightclubs in an attempt to see which fedora-clad horndog will try to drag her to bed.
Authentic tapas, delicious Italian pasta, delicate French cuisine and hefty American burgers: these foods from around the world can be found not far off Duke’s campus in downtown Durham.
Titled “45 Portraits in 45 Days,” Hock’s exhibit features the portraits of Duke Hospital essential healthcare workers who have sacrificed so much in pursuit of caring for those afflicted by COVID-19.
“Soul” may be a Pixar film, but it deals with one of the most pressing anxieties for modern adults: What does it mean to follow your dream, to find your soul, your spark, in a world where dreams are, all too often, deferred?
This year, however, I found myself isolated from my other family members, leaving me with more down time. Naturally, I spent all this extra time watching new TV shows and listening to new music.
The most incredible part of “Ratatouille: The TikTok Musical” is how fortuitously the show and its ragtag origins embody the morals of “Ratatouille’s” underdog story.
Finally, my time had come. I had secured a pint from the underground and highly sought after ice cream operation, Don’t Tell Mother.
Mikel Jollett’s “Hollywood Park” shows that a family is not only a concept but also an experience, which requires work and communication.
The Recess editors share their best pop-culture selections of 2020.
Disney Investor Day 2020 gave fans more than enough content to look forward to in the coming years, but does the entertainment powerhouse’s unmatched influence spell the end for any meaningful competition?
He went into digital marketing. She’s getting her master’s in psych. Could I make it any more obvious?
Do you ever wish you could reach through your phone and grab what’s on the other side of the screen? If you’ve never felt that way, just wait until you check out @DCfoodporn.
When I watched the French-language film a second time this summer, I realized distressingly that I, like the film’s troubled protagonist Delphine, was locked in stasis, waiting for a God-sent green ray to shine life into my listless days.
I did not plan to read a book about an epidemic during a pandemic. But that all changed very quickly when I traveled through wor(l)ds presented in “Fevers, Feuds and Diamonds,” written by Duke alum Dr. Paul Farmer.