North Carolina native Indigo De Souza played at Thalia Hall in Chicago Thursday night to promote her latest album, “All of This Will End,” released April 28. Indie folk three-piece Sluice opened for De Souza, bringing their? shared North Carolinian heritage to the stage. Before the group’s last song, De Souza took to the stage.
Northwestern’s Opera Projects for Undergraduate Singers (OPUS) will perform “El Barberillo de Lavapiés” in Lutkin Hall this weekend. The story of “El Barberillo de Lavapiés” takes place in 18th-century Spain during the reign of King Carlos III. La Marquesita, a noblewoman, is involved in a plan to exile the prime minister, but she’s engaged to.
Refresh Dance Crew held its seventh annual spring show, “Refresh Undercover,” in the Technological Institute’s Ryan Family Auditorium this weekend. The undercover mission-themed performance had been in the making since fall, with featured choreography from Fall Quarter’s Refusionshaka event as well as some dances from Winter Quarter content videos. Weinberg freshman Sabrina Lam joined Refresh.
In February 1923, Polish-Jewish playwright Sholem Asch’s controversial Yiddish play “God of Vengeance” opened on Broadway, attracting criticism for portraying prostitution, queer relationships and Jewish culture onstage. Two weeks later, the show’s entire cast was arrested on charges of obscenity. Now, a century later, the Virginia Wadsworth Wirtz Center for the Performing Arts is staging.