Autoclave
Autoclave (Dischord). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Autoclave (Dischord). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Broadway Shawn Kilgore returns to home base and wows us with a medley of Broadway hits.
With 38 albums under her belt, sixties pop sensation Melanie is still performing.
Gene Kelly and his writing partner Stan Donen create “Singin’ in the Rain” despite disease, disagreement and a collapsing MGM fighting them all the way.
Doctor Demento Covered in Punk (Demented Punk Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
The Feldman clan meets for dinner celebrating 15 years of Brian Feldman making surreal magic.
Brian Feldman calls me from the last functioning pay phone in Orlando and sings me a show tune.
Eleven new short plays by various writers that use every popular first name from the past 20 years.
George Orwell imagined a world were nothing you do goes unreported to a large, heartless, corporate government and its impossible to tell truth from fiction. Welcome to the future, citizen!
Benjy Stone writes for the brand-new media, television, and meets his childhood hero, the drunken Alan Swan. Can Benjy keep Swan sober long enough to entertain America?
Five local critics read some their reviews of past Brian Feldman projects to Brian’s face.
Performance art, Brian Feldman, communication, anniversary Brian Feldman present the 10th anniversary of his big hit “txtshow”
Dick Cavett gets inside the comic mind of Robin Williams, Richard Lewis, Bobcat Goldwait, Gilbert Gottfried and more.
Before Hamlet had his run in with a bad fencing experience, there was some high level hanky panky. Here are the juicy details…
Kevin Kelly walks into a bar and says: “Wow! What a crowd!”
Bruno Schultz’s mystical stories come to life in this furious and high energy production.
Moisés Kaufman takes us into the hellish world of Oscar Wild’s foolish libel trial that sent him to jail for two years
Work place tragedy turns into publishing gold.
All the electricity is gone, but theater soldiers on.
A young prince returns from college to discover both he and his widowed mother are screwed.
John Badham’s 1983 future-tech helicopter thriller, Blue Thunder, with its cautionary tale of militarized police and a surveillance state, still resonates decades later.
What if the miracle of sight came with a curse? The Eye builds its horror from that chilling premise.
With the thirty-fifth anniversary of debut album Whirlpool, UK shoegaze outfit Chapterhouse is back together again and touring the US as part of Slide Away Music Festival.
The Englert theater hosted Little Feat as they embark on their Last Farewell Tour.
Meiko Kaji’s katana is sharp and looking for revenge in Wandering Ginza Butterfly and its sequel, She Cat Gambler, a stylish pair of early ’70s action films.