Word: bernstein
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Ellsworth Kelly's French period in "Reconsidering Kelly: The Early Years." The Fogg and Sackler Museums have combined force to offer this day-long series of lectures on Kelly's drawings, colleges and paintings from 1948 to 1957 and their impact on his future career. Lecturers include Roberta Bernstein, SUNY Albany; Yve-Alain Bois, Harvard University; Benjamin Buchloh, Barnard College and Columbia University Art Museum; John Elderfield, Museum of Modern Art; James Meyer, Emory University; Joan Ockman, Columbia University; and Eric Rosenberg, Tufts University. Lecture Hall, Sackler Museum. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 2 to 5p.m...
...spite of some minor technical difficulties (the stage broke), the Dunster House Opera (DHO) gave a sell-out performance of Leonard Bernstein's opera/musical version of Voltaire's Candide last weekend. The cast, particularly Joseph Nuccio'00 had a great deal of fun with an already witty, sarcastic and sexually infused libretto. Audience laughter often echoed the mirth of the lighthearted and light-footed cast...
...Beverly Hills native and the oldest daughter of screenwriters Phoebe and Henry Ephron, the filmmaker attended Wellesley before entering a career as an East Coast journalist and, eventually, a famously bad marriage to Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein. It is not surprising, given Ephron's history, that her heroines typically have a passionate connection to words. Ryan was a writer in When Harry Met Sally and Sleepless, and is a bookstore owner in Ephron's new e-mail love story. "Romantic comedies are always about words," Ephron reminds. "People hate each other because of what they say or love each other...
...last ballet was a terrific end to an already fun evening of ballet. Fancy Free, choreographed by Jerome Robbins with music by Leonard Bernstein, is an enchanting mix of old and new dance. It was premiered in April 1944, and tells the story of three sailors on shore leave on a hot summer night in New York City during World War II. It tells a fun story of chasing pretty women, drinking and generally enjoying N.Y.C...
...Wolfe's early journalism, in which he allowed his subjects to embarrass or hang themselves through their meticulously quoted words. Witness Radical Chic, Wolfe's witheringly objective account of a 1970 fund-raising party for the Black Panthers held in the exquisite Manhattan apartment of the composer Leonard Bernstein and his wife Felicia, during which the journalist detailed both the revolutionary rhetoric and the passing of hors d'oeuvres. Something of the same take-no-prisoners ethos ruled Bonfire. So what has changed during the past 11 years? Has Wolfe mellowed...