Speaker to discuss comic book characters for lecture series
Ramzi Fawaz will speak at 7:30 tonight as part of the Marilyn K. Cory Lecture Series about "The Fantastic Four" and what this comic series has to say about postwar American society.
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Ramzi Fawaz will speak at 7:30 tonight as part of the Marilyn K. Cory Lecture Series about "The Fantastic Four" and what this comic series has to say about postwar American society.
For its final show, the Cave Theatre cast explores the ability of love to overcome secrets and the barrier of time in William Allen Brooks’ play “Hope and Fury.”
It’s the summer of 1936 in a small village in Ireland, and five sisters face the intrusion of the outside world as their isolated safe haven faces industrialization.
In a show emphasizing the importance of keeping an open mind for the arts, the Department of Theatre and Dance is presenting its rendition of “The Music Man.”
Diversity in writing style is the focus of the ninth In Print Festival of First Books, a two-day creative writing event.
In “The 39 Steps,” four actors attempt to tell a story that guest director William Osetek describes as “impossible.”
A one-handed, racist psychopath has searched for his severed hand for the 27 years, and his search brings him to a seedy motel room and two drug dealers.
One comic book creator shows that comic books aren’t just for super heroes or humor — they can be a tool for activism.
Seven colors. Seven parts. Seven visions. In a show that combines dance forms ranging from modern to ballet, Color of Motion explores how color can affect emotion and provoke thought through movement.
Through family secrets and mystery, “Psalms of a Questionable Nature” explores the relationship between two sisters who are complete strangers as they connect over tragedy.
Strother Theatre’s “Frankenstein” began with no set script. More than 40 cast and crew members worked together to transform the original novel by Mary Shelley into a devised piece that tells the story in a new way.
Two people meet at 3 a.m. in a laundromat — they share a last name and have never met before. As the strangers talk among the whirring and clunking of the washers and dryers, they reveal dark secrets.
Comic book artist and theorist Scott McCloud got his introduction to the art from a friend in middle school. He later began to draw superheroes in his spare time.
As the first show for this Cave Theatre series, “Eleemosynary” will begin the all-female season by delving into the complex relationships connecting three generations of women.