Art and the City: Dallas dance troupes step closer to post-pandemic future dallasnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dallasnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Outdoor Art Heist at ATTPAC isn t the smooth criminal it wants to be
Outdoor Art Heist at ATTPAC isn t the smooth criminal it wants to be A scene from the original
Art Heist in Vancouver.
Art Heist has devised yet another way to consume culture in a safe setting. Canadian theater artists TJ Dawe and Ming Hudson developed the 90-minute show for last year s Vancouver Fringe Festival, framing it as an outdoor walking tour in which small masked audiences move from actor to actor as the story advances. It s currently being presented by the AT&T Performing Arts Center, in front of and around the Winspear Opera House in Sammons Park, after first stopping in San Antonio, Austin, and Houston. Groups depart every half hour and follow guides in the form of FBI agents and insurance investigators.
The Dallas Opera cancels two vocal recitals due to a positive COVID-19 test dallasnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dallasnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Dallas Opera Returns Live To The Winspear On March 31
The Dallas Opera returns to Winspear with new “Welcome Back” Song Series.by BWW News Desk
The Dallas Opera announced today that it will be launching a new, three-event Welcome Back Song Series in the Winspear Opera House commencing March 31, 2021.
The company s first event in the Winspear since it was forced to cease live performances in February, 2020, because of COVID-19, the new series will feature four celebrated opera stars in three unique events: bass Morris Robinson on Wednesday, March 31; soprano Leah Crocetto and mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton on Saturday, April 3; and countertenor John Holiday on Friday, April 9.
‘It’s as bad as it sounds’: Pandemic cost Dallas arts $95 million in 2020
Other grim figures include the disappearance of 1,000 jobs and 3 million in ‘lost or deferred attendance.’
A ghost light illuminates a darkened stage at the empty Music Hall at Fair Park in Dallas, Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021.(Juan Figueroa / Staff photographer)
Arts organizations within the city of Dallas have lost more than $95 million during the pandemic, suffered a stunning drop of more than 3 million in “lost or deferred attendance” and seen the disappearance of more than 1,000 jobs, according to a startling new survey released this week and shared first with