Arts & Entertainment
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Classical Beat: Skidding down the slippery slope of funding for the arts
Major donors, nor the government, are the answer to finding support for the arts - individuals are.
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Take Heart: A Conversation in Poetry
Though childhood is sometimes seen as a time of innocent lightheartedness, it has its own sorrows, as Edward Reilly of Westbrook shows in today’s poem.
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Movies: Michael Fassbender continues to look for his big breakthrough
The actor seems to be everywhere, including presently in "12 Years a Slave" and "Counselor."
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Movie Review: ‘The Counselor’
Our counsel: Skip this one
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Society Notebook: Ghoulwill Ball
The witty and wacky were everywhere in evidence at Goodwill’s frightfully fun costume ball, where some of the getups were way over the top – in a good way, and for a great cause.
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Book Signings, Etc.
MICHAEL HOWARD
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
The Underpants at the Saco River Theatre
The 1910 play written by Carl Sternheim opens Nov. 1.
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Audience Calendar
• ART “Piece Work,” 2013 Portland Museum of Art Biennial, recent work by 30 artists, through Jan. 5; “9 Walks,” nine video projections by Amy Stacey Curtis, through Jan. 5; “Redacted,” paintings and drawings by Ahmed Alsoudani, Iraqi artist and MECA graduate, through Dec. 8; “Winslow Homer’s Civil War,” wood engravings and prints, through Dec. […]
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Book Review: Jean Flahive’s ‘Railroad to the Moon’
The Maine author’s new book picks up the story of a Berwick boy fighting in the Civil War
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PublishedOctober 27, 2013
Bill Bryson’s ‘One Summer: America, 1927’ takes you back in time
The popular author started out wanting to write about baseball, but the timeframe itself began to captivate him.
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