by Alex Pearlman in Arts
In celebration of the tenth anniversary of V-Day, a movement and non-profit organization started by The Vagina Monologues author Eve Ensler that raises money and awareness for violence against women and girls, the students of Suffolk University's Masters in Women's Health program performed the Tony Award-winning play on March 7 and 8 in the Donahue Café.
by Clay Adamczyk and Matthew McQuaid in Arts
If you want to see Monets, Sargents and ancient Buddhist statues, then spend 17 dollars and go the stuffy, traditional, Museum of Fine Arts.
The Museum of Bad Art (MOBA), on the other hand, offers an intriguing alternative that substitutes quality for cost.
by Matthew Altieri in Arts
Clarke!, of the Berklee School of Music, is something you wouldn't expect. In fact, the EP The Falling Out produces an entertaining sound that we haven't heard out of a college band in a long time. Least guitarist and singer Devon Geyer has been producing albums since he was seven years old, and his most recent one is about to be available on iTunes.
by Kristin Morrell in Arts
A fun and zany whodunit, the hilarious flagship production Shear Madness is to die for - literally. Playing at the Charles Playhouse II since January 1980, Shear Madness has been performed roughly more than 10,000 times and made it in the Guinness Book of World Records for being the longest-running play in American Theater.
by Juanita Smith in Arts
John Harlin III has always tempted fate just by going to his day job - as a professional skier, surfer and rock-climbing instructor. But in his free time, Harlin likes to take what he calls "an escape from the world" by climbing steep mountains. Harlin's mother worried so much for her son, who was much like his daredevil father, that she made him promise her that he would not climb the Eiger Mountain- especially after his father's death on the steep mountain cliff of the Eiger in the Alps in 1966.
by Eleanor Kaufman in Arts
On the first Friday of every month, the SOWA Artists Guild, located at 450 Harrison Ave, hosts a grand gallery exhibit for the public. Artists open up their individual workspaces for people to explore and observe their work, serving cheese, wine and candy for viewers.