Arts Review
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PublishedMay 30, 2021
Feel-good fishing story has just the right touch to lure audiences
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PublishedMay 30, 2021
‘River Voices’: In a new volume of essays, the Presumpscot gets its due
Artists and others describe the 25-mile-long river from the varied lenses of science, history and literature.
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PublishedMay 30, 2021
Theater review: At Portland Stage, the audience decides ‘Where We Stand’
Tracey Conyer Lee plays the Man, an outsider trying to gain the trust of the community.
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PublishedMay 23, 2021
Paranoia lurks in suspenseful ‘who-wrote-it?’
The new novel by Jean Hanff Korelitz, the author behind "The Undoing," is a sharp and twisty tale of literary paranoia.
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PublishedMay 23, 2021
Concert review: Celebration of the blues a powerful end to PSO’s digital season
Nothin' But the Blues is streaming through June 11.
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PublishedMay 23, 2021
Art review: Skowhegan school’s influence, adventurousness on display
The Maine Jewish Museum shows works in many media by the art school's alumni.
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PublishedMay 16, 2021
Portland Ballet performs before a live audience with ‘Momentum’
The production of 'Momentum: 3 Dances for Moving Forward' at the Westbrook Performing Arts Center featured two pieces choreographed by artistic director Nell Shipman that began and ended the evening.
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PublishedMay 16, 2021
In the 19th century, an unlikely man ignited a movement to protect animals from mistreatment
'Traitor to His Species" tells the story of Henry Bergh, who believed that when we abuse animals, we also harm ourselves. He was accused of 'benevolent balderdash,' but his ideas live on.
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PublishedMay 16, 2021
When the sun never set on the British Empire and London never slept
Simon Heffer's encyclopedic book about Victorian and Edwardian England offers a fascinating perspective on the present.
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PublishedMay 16, 2021
Art review: Ogunquit Museum opens with three thought-provoking shows
The temporary exhibitions are on view into July.
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