Ahead of tonight's brand new episode, The CW has announced that The Flash will be losing two original cast members next season as both Tom Cavanagh and Carlos Valdes have decided to exit the series.
Beyond International Jazz Day. Phoenix musicians weight in on igniting the jazz gene Ed Masley, Arizona Republic
Doc Jones was in New Orleans for the first International Jazz Day, April 30, in 2012.
“They had 7,000 people out there at about 8 o’clock in the morning,” he says. “A phenomenal sight.
A year later, Jones a music educator, who plays saxophone and keyboards organized the Valley s first International Jazz Day, held at Cityscape.
It s Jones hope that a day set aside to recognize the genre could help elevate its profile and attract new audiences in an era where its mainstream popularity has been eclipsed by hip-hop, R&B and rock.
The seventh season of
The Flash is practically ending every chapter on a cliffhanger, and the latest one, “Growing Pains,” which aired last week was no exception. Now, the network has released a batch of photos from the upcoming episode, titled “The People V. Killer Frost,” which, as its name suggests, will put Caitlin Snow in the limelight.
The COVID-19 pandemic and its restrictions developed a tricky situation for the crew behind the series. For one thing, the first three episodes of the hotly anticipated season 7 basically resolved the previous run’s overarching narrative, concluding everything in an explosive outing a couple of weeks ago that should’ve otherwise been the finale last year.
PITTSFIELD â After losing all or much of last season because of the coronavirus pandemic, the leaders of five major Berkshire performing arts organizations say they plan to bounce back this summer with a creative mix of indoor, outdoor and virtual programming that they believe will help them remain long-term, viable members of the local economy.
âI see this summer as an experiment in many different ways that will inform how we come back,â said Pamela Tatge, executive director and artistic director of Jacobâs Pillow Dance Festival in Becket.
The leaders or representatives of the Pillow, Barrington Stage Company, Berkshire Theatre Group, the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Williamstown Theatre Festival took part in Fridayâs discussion, a virtual town hall that was moderated by 1Berkshire President and CEO Jonathan Butler.
Artistic Directors Mandy Greenfield of Williamstown Theatre Festival, Kate Maguire of Berkshire Theatre Group Kate and Julianne Boyd of Barrington Stage Company; Alexandra Fuchs, chief operating officer of the Boston Symphony Orchestra; and Pamela Tatge, director of Jacob s Pillow Dance, joined 1Berkshire CEO Jonathan Butler for a virtual town hall on Friday. I think that we as arts organizations are back with this kind of ferocity because we know we have a responsibility to make space for that, for artists, for audiences, for people who have to reconnect with what it means to be alive, she said. This is a part of human health and well-being, we have to be back this summer, we have to continue to tear a path forward and we have to do it for as broad and diverse of a community of both artists and audiences as we can all push ourselves to do.