A self-described comedian-activist was one of three protesters whose demonstration against “fascism” in the “art world” interrupted the Metropolitan Opera in Manhattan last week, The Post has learned.
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by One of the protesters, who were arrested and removed from the hall, denounced the billionaire David H. Koch. By Adam Nagourney and Marina Harss A ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Peter Gelb, the Met’s general manager, said a security guard was absent from his post when two people climbed onstage at a performance of “Carmen.” By ...
On Friday, Nov. 21, the Metropolitan Opera experienced a protest during the first Act of “Carmen” that interrupted the performance. According to the New York Times, three demonstrators were arrested ...
Evan LeRoy Johnson, Julie Roset, Ben Brady and Ricardo José Rivera as Count Elemer, Fiakermilli, Count Lamoral and Count Dominick. Photo: Marty Sohl/Met Opera In the first act, Strauss, who relished ...
A year has passed since the death of Northeast Ohio native Eric Carmen, the frontman of The Raspberries and later a solo artist. To celebrate the baby boomer’s solo career, an event that will see the ...
There’s a new Wicked movie coming out on Friday, which means that Ariana Grande and the rest of the cast have spent the last couple of weeks doing press and circling the globe as if they were trying ...
The Fort Worth Opera will debut a new production this weekend, and it will also launch a new pay-what-you-can program. "You can pay $1 or you can pay the price of a normal ticket because we are a ...
“We decided this needed to be the show that Eric would do in 2025 if he were here and had pretty limitless resources,” Knill said. “He would have a full orchestra and perform at a beautiful, ...
Rosa Feola as Countess Rosina Almaviva was the absolute star of the night. The Marriage of Figaro is the most frequently performed opera in the world. It’s a comedy for the masses, intended to infuse ...
This post was updated Nov. 21 at 4:35 p.m. Opera UCLA’s latest production plays to haunt the narrative. Over 70 years since its Venice premiere, Benjamin Britten’s chamber opera “The Turn of the Screw ...
David Edwards has spent over a decade reporting on social justice, human rights and politics for Raw Story. He also writes Crooks and Liars. He has a background in enterprise resource planning and ...
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