Farce of the Week: Present Laughter
In Present Laughter, Noel Coward makes fun of himself as a vain (and aging) leading man.
In Present Laughter, Noel Coward makes fun of himself as a vain (and aging) leading man.
Michelle Johnson was an Aida to remember in this updated version of the classic opera.
New York chamber orchestra The Knights made beautiful music with and without pipa virtuoso Wu Man on Saturday.
This new production of Aida sets the story of a general and the slave he loves in the contemporary world of the Arab Spring.
Playwright James Still has written his latest work, a drama set in Venice, while in residence at UCSB.
The program for Joshua Bell and Sam Haywood’s recital on Wednesday, February 20, included works by Schubert, Strauss, Prokofiev, Fauré, and Sarasate.
The World Is Not My Home: Danny Lyon Photographs is a retrospective that includes a stunning portfolio that was shot in 1963 while Lyon worked for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
The Lobero Theatre is well over 80 percent of the way toward funding a major renovation project set to take place between June and December 2013.
Nine gorgeous new compositions from a distinguished Santa Barbara musician.
Colin and Eric Jacobsen of the string quartet Brooklyn Rider have assembled an independent symphony orchestra.