Singing, speakers highlight Buskirk-Chumley MLK celebration
Projected on the screen, lyrics to “Lift Every Voice and Sing” led the full Buskirk-Chumley audience in song as every audience member stood up together.
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Projected on the screen, lyrics to “Lift Every Voice and Sing” led the full Buskirk-Chumley audience in song as every audience member stood up together.
Dr. Raymond Wise greeted each of his students by name as they entered rehearsal — often accompanied by a hug, always with a smile.
Four musicians gathered around a small table over a bottle of merlot Tuesday night, discussing chord changes and passing the melody between each other as they worked with their sound.
An orange circle of light cut through the pitch blackness of the stage, revealing one dancer in a loose yellow-orange silk garment. As she moved to the eerie choral music filling the hall, she was joined by six more dancers, three in the same color and five in blue.
The note on Adult Mom’s Bandcamp page for their last album, last year’s “Momentary Lapse of Happily,” reads, “I wrote this record after 3 consecutive breakups that forced me to become a being other than myself, and soon, I was myself again.”
A 19-foot tall unfolding dollhouse complete with a staircase makes up only one piece of the set for Cardinal Stage Company’s production of “Mary Poppins.”
The devil Mephistopheles, Roman emperors Nero and Caligula, Ivan the Terrible, the Biblical Haman, Lucrezia Borgia and Simon Legree all meet in hell to form a plan to destroy Christmas in Norman Corwin’s “The Plot to Overthrow Christmas.”
Barefoot in white lace tops, leggings and braided ponytails, five dancers walked out onto the dark floor to begin the contemporary dance senior showcase, “Moving Through” on Friday night.
Audience members were led by the hand toward craft tables by campers in ponytails, knee-high socks and fluorescent orange Camp Blue Triangle T-shirts. They were then silently guided to make their own “God’s eyes” using pre-glued Popsicle sticks and yarn.
A warm yellow spotlight shone through the fog onstage to represent the rising sun in the opening scenes of a dress rehearsal of IU Theatre’s production of “Antigone.”
Not every musical or play cast has the opportunity to work with the writer to finalize the script of the show. This special experience is what University Players’ Virginal Works program offers to student actors and writers every year.
Voice actors wiped away fake tears, opened and closed invisible doors and gestured with their hands Wednesday night, even though the audience, who will tune in after Thanksgiving break, will not be able to see any of it.
When Grammy Award-winning artist Macy Gray stepped onto the stage of the Buskirk-Chumley Theater on Tuesday night in a long, flowing red and yellow skirt and blue glittering pumps, the audience whooped and hollered its appreciation. Five members of the band the Way stood behind her on the stage.
Pink and green, gray with silver beading, coral and blue, burgundy with gold and green glitter, and even black and white polka dots with a floral border were different designs of saris presented at the sari fashion show Saturday night.
Instead of storing her excess possessions in an unused closet or attic, Barbra Streisand made her basement into a fake shopping mall.
There was no introduction when Yo-Yo Ma walked onto the stage Wednesday night with his $2.5-million, nearly 300-year-old cello in hand. But every person in the full auditorium knew exactly who it was, and he smiled out at a sea of clapping hands.
World-renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma will return to the IU Auditorium at 8 p.m. today.
The Grammy award-winning Soweto Gospel Choir greeted its audience Friday in the IU Auditorium by saying hello in four of the 11 official languages of South Africa.
The curtain rises on a clean-lined, geometric cityscape under glowing lights and a bright pink sunset. This pretty picture is not even close to the harsh reality of what it takes to make a living as a dance hall hostess in the Fandango Ballroom.
Tell an entertaining and complex story in three minutes or less.