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This year s Fargo Film Festival features 5 movies with Oscar buzz
Festival staffers talk about some of the titles likely to generate a buzz over the next two weeks as the annual festival streams March 18-28. Written By: John Lamb | ×
Steven Prescod and Robert Tarango star in Feeling Through. Special to The Forum
FARGO The Fargo Theatre won’t be hosting guests for its annual Fargo Film Festival, but that’s not keeping staffers from enthusiastically dishing about their favorite flicks.
Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the festival is rolling out online March 18-28 as the Fargo Theatre has been closed to the public for a year.
The concerto, written in 1753 by Johan Sebastian Bach’s fifth child and second son, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788), sits astride the transition between the Baroque and Classical eras.
“Something you’d expect from a Bach concerto is there, but the drama of it is much more than what one would expect,” said Helm, who will perform the concerto as the final composition of the orchestra’s “All in the Family” program March 11-14 (streaming March 18-23). The concert also includes W.F. Bach’s Sinfonia in F Major (Dissonances) and J.S. Bach’s Concerto for Two Violins in D minor (Double).
Kristina Serafini | Tribune-Review
Carnegie Mellon University School of Drama’s spring plays will be streamed free online, beginning March 10.
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Looking for some live music from a big-time country music star? Trace Adkins is scheduled to play The Palace Theatre in Greensburg in January 2022.
In the meantime, many of the area’s entertainment options remain in the virtual realm. There’s music, magic, theater, film and book talk to choose from, along with opportunities for artists and writers to share their own work.
When M. Bevin O’Gara decided not to renew her contract as producing artistic director at the Kitchen Theatre Company in Ithaca, N.Y., after her initial three-year run ended last year, she knew right where she wanted to head.
“My time in Ithaca was really wonderful,” said O’Gara by telephone recently from her home in Jamaica Plain. “I learned so much at the Kitchen Theatre Company. I was missing Boston, though, so my husband, Thom Dunn, and I decided to come back here to raise our family.”
A Long Island, N.Y., native, O’Gara had previously spent 17 years living and working in greater Boston. During that time, O’Gara served as associate producer with the Huntington Theatre Company, and, prior to that, as an artistic associate at the New Repertory Theatre.