Gathering together to experience live performances or on-screen offerings is the heart and soul of what we do here at The Music Hall. Read More
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Most articles about her open with some variation on “Before Marilyn Monroe, there was Jean Harlow.” It’s true. Harlow was Hollywood’s first bombshell, a platinum blonde in skintight satin who steamed the screen in a run of glossy MGM pictures in the 1930s.Read More
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A busy literary season means more than just great authors on the stage. It also means great parties! Thanks to our Writers on a New England Stage Series Sponsor, Tuscan Market, and our generous guests, we conclude each WNES event with a post-show reception.Read More
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We’re so focused on literature right now even the shows are about books! This month we jump back into our School Days Series with two productions, both based on beloved children’s stories.Read More
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Booker Prize-winning author and Ireland’s First Fiction Laureate Anne Enright comes to the Loft for an intimate discussion of her latest novel Actress.Read More
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Clark Gable began the 1930s as a wannabe, but ended the decade as a “King.” Initially, he played tough guys, generating screen sparks with Joan Crawford, Norma Shearer and Jean Harlow. By 1939, he ruled Tinseltown in the role that was cast by popular demand: Rhett Butler in Gone With the Wind.Read More
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The bestselling author Erik Larson returns to Writers on a New England Stage on March 26 with his latest, The Splendid and the Vile.Read More
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A phrase that gets used often about the book Little Women is “much-loved.” And that’s fine, as far as it goes. But saying that Louisa May Alcott’s story of the four March daughters making their way through their teen years in Civil War-era Concord, Massachusetts is much loved is like saying that Elvis has loyal fans. The reality is much richer.Read More
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