Apache Dropout performs at annual music festival
WIUX and Business Careers in Entertainment Club combined to host Culture Shock Music Festival on Saturday.
WIUX and Business Careers in Entertainment Club combined to host Culture Shock Music Festival on Saturday.
Country music singer-songwriter Willie Nelson returns to the IU Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Fellow singer-songwriter Pegi Young and her band, the Survivors, will open for Nelson.
Each year, the IU Office of Disability Services for Students plans an event in March in recognition of Disability Awareness Month. Originally scheduled for March 26, the event was postponed because of inclement weather. This year, they have organized a concert from 2-5 p.m. April 14 in Dunn Meadow.
Two plays premiered Friday and Saturday night at the Wells-Metz Theatre that were part of “At First Sight: A Repertory of New Plays,” which correlates with the revival of IU’s MFA playwriting program.
"(a love story)” and “Dontrell, Who Kissed the Sea" premiered this weekend at the Wells-Metz Theatre.
“At First Sight: A Repertory of New Plays” will debut Friday at the Wells-Metz Theatre, featuring plays written by students Kelly Lusk and Nathan Alan Davis.
The opening band Thee Open Sex played to a large crowd at The Bishop Bar, setting the tone for main act Jacco Gardner and second opener The Mallard.
Macklemore and Ryan Lewis are headed to Assembly Hall for the official Little 500 concert April 17, presented by Union Board.
The Department of Theater and Drama’s production of “The School for Scandal” began its residency at the Ruth N. Halls Theatre on Friday.
Opening over the land of ancient Egypt, the audience will be introduced Friday to the story of Akhnaten, the pharaoh who worshipped the sun.
Sex Salon starts sex talks throughout town, beginning at the Bishop bar Sunday night.
On Friday and Saturday, Traces, a spectacle performance show, took over the IU Auditorium with its high-flying circus show.
Urban acrobatics show “Traces” will bring its fusion of circus and street performance to the IU Auditorium for the first time 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Theme Harry and the Potters played Rachael’s Café as part of its Valentine’s Day celebration.
At 8:13 p.m., the comedians cleared their throats and entered the room.
Since Friday, IU Theatre’s “Intimate Apparel” has transformed the Wells-Metz Theatre in the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center into early-1900s Lower Manhattan.
IU Theatre will travel back to the 20th century when the theater debuts its latest production, “Intimate Apparel.”The show begins its run at 7:30 p.m. Friday and concludes Feb. 9.
Wedow and the orchestra were preparing for the upcoming performances of Xerxes, an opera by George Frideric Handel debuting at IU this weekend.
Faceless, overstuffed white dolls laid upon crumpled silver Mylar while pink papier-mâché hearts spun overhead.
To an audience that might refer to college as the “good ole days,” Jim Hightower, political radio commentator, spoke on behalf of the WFHB radio station.