The Moisture Festival, Pat Graney Company, and pianist Mark Salman are not to be missed.
WEDNESDAY READINGS YANN MARTEL It’s no surprise that Martel’s Booker Prize-winning novel, Life of Pi (new in paper), became a…
Also: Dance Cinema, Night and the City, Jonathan Richman, Jonathan Raban.
Fifteen years after leaving the Smiths, Johnny Marr finally speaks up.
Send listings two weeks in advance to visualarts@seattleweekly.com Lectures and Events Artist Lecture: Juan Alonso The Cuban-born Seattle painter (who…
The message is timely, but attention to detail is missing in action in this WWI drama.
Groovin’ to EMP’s gustatory offerings.
Julius Caesar retold in the ’50s, and Martha Graham revived at Cornish.
What’s in, what’s fresh, what’s cooking.
Nick Licata, the Seattle City Council member who seemed least likely to support Referendum 51, has thrown his weight behind…
Three local shops treat hair like an artistic medium. Why settle for less?
‘It is time we got over the delusion that we in this country or state are more deserving of jobs than people in any other country or state.’
Move over, Safeco. The envelopes have been opened and the pigeons debanded, and we’ve tallied all the proposed truthful names…
Wed LIVE MUSIC CAFE VENUS The Get Up at 9 p.m. CENTRAL SALOON Promethean Monk, Northwest Contraband, Trine at 9…
Seattle Weekly plays Jukebox Jury with Kurt Cobain and Jimi Hendrix biographer Charles R. Cross.
Lynne Hershman Leeson San Francisco–based Hershman Leeson is one of those performance artists who delight in making folks squirm. Her…
A few tricks, few treats: The burial business isn’t for the faint of heart.
Upscale adventure has its hazards—or does that just add to the allure?
Sampling Seattle’s most controversial courses.
Brewers’ best
