Sign In:


Arts & Entertainment

  • Published
    November 21, 2010

    Theater Review: Prepare for debauchery at USM students’ ‘Wild Party’

    The University of Southern Maine’s School of Music is having a three-day party at Corthell Concert Hall on the Gorham campus. The party began Friday night and will wrap up early this evening. It’s a scandalous party, filled with sex, alcohol, drugs, profanity and violent crimes of passion. No need to call the police, though. […]

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Classical Beat: Beating the drum for Bartok, Crumb

    It is not very often that I look forward to any concert with the anticipation I have for tonight’s program at Bates College’s Olin Hall. It includes two seldom-heard masterpieces of 20th-century music written for my favorite instruments — one of them played by a man who premiered the work. Wu Han, pianist and co-artistic […]

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Art Dispatches

    HARPSWELL Open houses will be held at businesses next month Eighteen studios, shops, galleries and eateries in Harpswell, including the islands, peninsula and Cundy’s Harbor, will celebrate the holidays with community open houses from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 4-5 and 11-12. Harpswell is also celebrating the reopening of the historic Cribstone Bridge. Visitors […]

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    In the Arts: Exhibits touch on art themes influenced by Islam

    I have a chronic attachment to the architecture and art of Islam. It is a welcome infection that came from stamp collecting. Although my philatelic days are long behind me, I still respond to those tiny pieces of gummed paper that were issued by Tripolitania, Tunis, Transjordania, Persia and other half-imaginary lands. Their Arabic script […]

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Art Review: Follow ‘MAPS’ on a journey of wit, grace and beauty

    I worked for several years at the largest art library in America — Columbia University’s Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library. Consequently, I haven’t enjoyed the art of “altered books.” I know most “altered” books were scheduled to be recycled or incinerated, but on a gut level, this twangs my heartstrings in a minor key. […]

  • advertisement
  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Taste & Tell: Whaddapita! makes a big, bold Greek statement

    With completely friendly service full of enthusiasm for the offerings, ordering a meal at Whaddapita! is easy enough to do. Add to that welcome, nicely grilled chicken and pork laced on sticks, a spicy sauce that really heats up your mouth, creamy tzatziki that cools it down, and delightful freshly made fries, and you have […]

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Arts Planner

    This week • Folk music icon Arlo Guthrie brings his “Journey On” tour to the Center for the Performing Arts at Newton Hall, Kents Hill School, Readfield. Guthrie will perform at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. The concert will be the second in the Aleigh Mills Concert Series, which supports the Aleigh Mills Scholarship Fund. The scholarship […]

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Book Review: Fisherman’s tales rich with the flow of life

    All great fishing stories are never about just fishing. This is certainly true for Maximilian Werner’s “Black River Dreams,” a collection of essays on fishing, primarily fly-fishing. It is more memoir than a mere collection of pieces. It begins and ends with stories set in Maine, the first when Werner was a boy of 11 […]

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Book Review: Four tales of horror, one gem by King of genre

    He jams terror and gore into a small package that outshines his longer work.

  • Published
    November 14, 2010

    Author Q&A: Tackling one of life’s mysteries

    Renowned writer Thomas Powers reaches back in time to study the events surrounding the notorious killing of the great Sioux warrior Crazy Horse.