Subscribe to KQED Arts

Subscribe

Subscribe to the KQED Arts feed for daily Bay Area arts coverage.


More from KQED

Performance Review  |  Feb 09, 2010

Ovo is light on storyline, light of heart and light on gimmicks; it's an unfussy Cirque du Soleil that is not afraid to be silly, sentimental or even unimportant. Mostly it's just a lot of fun. By Ben Marks

 

Event  |  Feb 08, 2010

25 Years of Sticking Something New in Your Ear

Earplay opens their 25th season TONIGHT at the Herbst Theater with the Ear and There festival, providing locals a chance to hear brand new ear opening chamber music. By Rik Malone

Truly CA Shorts  |  Feb 07, 2010

Our Lady of Tamale

View Cecil B. Feeder's short film, Our Lady of Tamale, a rockumentary about a Mexican immigrant who found love selling hot tamales in the bars of San Francisco.

Previously in KQED Arts

Music | Feb 06, 2010

Live Music: February 2010

Before the Noise Pop Music Festival takes over Bay Area venues at the end of the month, there are plenty of other great shows hitting the Bay Area. By Ben Van Houten

Theater Review | Feb 05, 2010

So Much For Tradition. Harvey Fierstein Stars in Fiddler On The Roof.

I wish I could tell you that the new national tour of Fiddler on the Roof, which opened Wednesday, January 27, gut-punches us anew with its wrenching depiction of lives at the crossroads of old ideals and new ideas. By Erika Milvy

Pop Culture | Feb 04, 2010

Video of the Week: Procrastination

Johnny Kelly's thesis project proves that you are not alone in your procrastinatory tendencies. You're probably procrastinating right now, aren't you? By Emmanuel Hapsis

Festival Report | Feb 04, 2010

Mostly British Film Festival

The second annual Mostly British Film Festival, starts tonight, Thursday, Feb 4 and runs through Feb 11, 2010. Over the course of seven solid days of programming, a true anglophile may find it difficult to stay away from the lineup for longer than an afternoon matinee. By Jeffrey Edalatpour

The Writers' Block | Feb 03, 2010

Just Kids

Patti Smith reads excerpts from Just Kids, her memoir about life with Robert Mapplethorpe. By Patti Smith

TV | Feb 02, 2010

RuPaul's Drag Race

RuPaul's Drag Race is the television show you don't know you already love. A cross between Project Runway, American Idol, and America's Next Top Model, the show brings the finger snapping, flying weaves, and lip-synch death matches. By Emmanuel Hapsis

Festival Report | Feb 02, 2010

Sundance: Beat Poetry and Utopia in Park City

Of the two dozen some odd movies I plowed through (and sometimes even enjoyed) while at Sundance, two in particular have stayed on my mind. As it happens, they're both experimental nonfiction works from Bay Area filmmakers. That's handy! By Jonathan Kiefer

Event | Feb 01, 2010

The Global Age Project at Aurora Theatre Company

Over four consecutive Mondays in February (starting TONIGHT), Berkeley's Aurora Theatre Company presents staged readings of the four finalists for their annual Global Age Project competition, which highlights new plays that address issues in the global age. By Ben Marks

Event | Jan 31, 2010

The Kids Are Alright: Post-Fifties Musicals and the Rise of Youth Culture

Starting TONIGHT, PFA explores what happened to the movie musical after the rise of rock 'n roll with the series The Kids are Alright: Post-Fifties Musicals and the Rise of Youth Culture. By Tessa Stuart

Gallery Crawl | Jan 30, 2010

Amy Casey

In January 2010 Gallery Crawl visited Michael Rosenthal Gallery in San Francisco to see Ohio artist Amy Casey's latest self-titled exhibition. Casey's latest work explores ideas of rebirth and community survival.

NPR Topics: Arts & Life
  • Portrait hed here

    teaser

  • The Double-Edged Sword Of Devotion: 'Chuck' Vs. The Entitled Fan Base

    An episode of Chuck provides an interesting lesson in the dark side of fandom.

  • How 'Soul Train' Got America Dancing

    The hourlong dance variety show Soul Train was the longest-running syndicated show in history when it signed off in 2006. Adolfo "Shabba Doo" Quinones, one of the program's original dancers, celebrates Soul Train's 40th anniversary with a look back at the show's impact on fashion, dance and culture.

  • What We're Reading, Feb. 9 - 15, 2010

    Three novels of past and present: Lynn Neary reviews the "perfect" novel for our down economy — written before the banks failed. Steve Inskeep reads a tale of political infighting resonant of today, but that follows events in Cicero's Rome. And Alan Cheuse celebrates The Lost Books of the Odyssey, a novel both timeless and very contemporary.

Give now Browse our featured gifts Continue without giving