The Seattle premiere of Mark Ravenhill’s controversial play.
An unconventional alliance brings music by Italy’s strangest 20th-century master to Seattle.
New York was going to hell, so Radio 4 wrote an album.
The nation’s new favorite sport is headed to Puget Sound. Are we in for a major cultural collision as ‘The Dukes of Hazzard’ race through Ecotopia? Or is it all a part of a corporate-style ‘Dixiefication’ of America?
YO-YO MA AND THE SILK ROAD ENSEMBLE Silk Road Journeys: When Strangers Meet (Sony) World music? Crossover? Forget the categories!…
Seattle Weekly plays Jukebox Jury with the Supersuckers.
The comic threesome Train of Thought sketches out a fun evening. Plus: William Chapman Nyaho and Warabiza.
Nine shops with fall finesse — and clientele to fall for.
Judy Henske, “Big Fat Man” (Fair Star). Marianne Faithfull, “Before the Poison” (Anti-). iTunes Eleni Mandell, “I Love Paris” (iTunes)….
The Coen brothers earn a Hollywood-size paycheck for revamping a classic. So why couldn’t they afford to write a better script?
Fri – Film The quadriplegic rugby players in the inspired documentary Murderball don’t have fully functional arms and legs. But…
AD for the AMA? I was really offended by Nina Shapiro’s cover article “Death by Natural Causes” [June 8]. Shapiro…
Also: Ice Princess, It’s Easier for a Camel, Schultze Gets the Blues, Sky Blue, and The Upside of Anger.
Jamie Foxx steps into greatness portraying the musical legend. So who’s to quibble over a little extra melodrama?
BOLLYWOOD/HOLLYWOOD Opens Fri., Sept. 5, at Seven Gables It took some work to wring such a mirthless send-up out of…
The 5th Avenue Theatre’s Wonderful Town is hokey but hilarious. Plus: Trio Miediaeval, Mark Haim.
Sandra Bernhard Is it too much to hope that Bernhard has already prepared some choice words about the unpardonable political…
Fri – Film Director Claude Berri plumbed his own childhood experiences as a Jew hiding in the French countryside in…
The Battle in Seattle lives on at the intersection of politics and art.
Mainstream men’s magazines answer a rousing call: More cleavage, please!
