Scene from September 5: An early 1970s newsroom crowded with anxious male journalists.

The 2024 Philadelphia Film Festival presents Tim Fehlbaum’s September 5 and Sean Baker's Anora

The 33rd Philadelphia Film Festival kicks off with two great new movies

The Philadelphia Film Festival kicks off its 2024 screenings with September 5 and Anora, two great films sure to draw a lot of buzz as they head into their upcoming releases. Stephen Silver reviews.
Stephen Silver

Stephen Silver

Reviews 5 minute read
Show logo: title in black letters on beige field with a black & white illustrations of Bassichis & Maya at left.

The BSR Podcast: Season 9, Episode 3: Morgan Bassichis presents Can I Be Frank? at the Wilma

Exploring the life of historic queer comedian Frank Mara

Podcast host Darnelle Radford sits down with Morgan Bassichis, the creator of a new show about comedian Frank Maya, one of the first openly gay performers on mainstream airwaves like MTV. Can I Be Frank? comes to Philly Oct 25-26, 2024.
Darnelle Radford

Darnelle Radford

Podcast 1 minute read
19 smiling Latine people of different ages sing, scattered in front & inside a colorful two-level set like rooms of a house.

Teatro Esperanza presents Tanaquil Márquez’s Nichos

Capturing Philly’s Mexican American experience

An ambitious, sold-out world premiere at North Philly’s Esperanza Arts Center combines real-life stories from Mexican American locals and their families with rich, fantastical cultural elements. An Nichols reviews.
An Nichols

An Nichols

Reviews 4 minute read
Franco’s piece, described in text below, is installed on the wall of a white gallery with a scuffed floor.

The Institute for Contemporary Art presents Where I Learned To Look: Art from the Yard

Art without walls

A new exhibition at Philly’s ICA explores what artists express in work made for the outdoors, from shrines to found objects to decorated cars, and a mirrored orb by Jeff Koons. Pamela J. Forsythe reviews.

Pamela J. Forsythe

Reviews 5 minute read
Meyer, in alluring makeup & silver bodysuit, washed in electric blue light, considers a pair of Barbie dolls he holds upright

EgoPo Classic Theater and Abrahamse & Meyer Productions present Tennessee Williams’s The Knightly Quest

Reviving a modern queer fable

To kick off the “B-Side” series of its current Queer Revolutions season, EgoPo welcomes longtime collaborators Abrahamse & Meyer Productions with The Knightly Quest, a relatively little-known piece by Tennessee Williams. Melissa Strong reviews.
Melissa Strong

Melissa Strong

Reviews 4 minute read
Benner, a man in his late 30s in a black button-down, smiles proudly while pointing to a mural that says your voice has power

Philly artists get out the vote with To the Polls 2024, now on view in Love Park

“If you are voting, you are hoping for the future.”

Prolific curator and Streets Dept blog founder Conrad Benner is back with To the Polls 2024, a bi-annual nonpartisan project from Mural Arts urging Philadelphians—who may decide this Presidential election—to vote. Alaina Johns visits.
Alaina Johns

Alaina Johns

Features 4 minute read
A stylish, simple bronze chair with front and back legs like an Afro pick, with the handle forming the chair’s back.

The Wexler Gallery presents Jomo Tariku’s Juxtaposed

A fresh take on old and new art

Ethiopian American artist and design star Jomo Tariku, whose work spans from the PMA and the Smithsonian to Marvel’s onscreen Wakanda, gets his first-ever solo show at Fishtown’s Wexler Gallery. An Nichols reviews.
An Nichols

An Nichols

Reviews 4 minute read
Sitting on a chair in the studio with a mirror behind him, Corella gestures to one side with a severe, focused expression.

Angel Corella opens up about his new Le Corsaire and 10 years at the helm of Philadelphia Ballet

“A star of his generation in dance”

Ten years ago, when Angel Corella became artistic director of Philadelphia Ballet, the company needed new ideas. As the premiere of his revamped Le Corsaire approaches, he speaks with Camille Bacon-Smith about what he brings to the company, and what’s next.

Camille Bacon-Smith

Camille Bacon-Smith

Features 6 minute read
14 period musicians & vocalists perform on a chancel with a flying Renaissance Cupid projected large on a curtain behind them

Piffaro and TENET present Triomphi: Petrarch’s Triumphs Expressed in Music of the Italian Renaissance

A musical tribute to the founder of humanism

In a glorious season opener, Renaissance band Piffaro and the vocalists of TENET explored the musical world of the great poet Francesco Petrarch, including his unfulfilled lifelong love (concert streaming November 1-14). Gail Obenreder reviews.
Gail Obenreder

Gail Obenreder

Reviews 5 minute read
A group of musicians, dressed up, in laughter, spread out over a long, wide white couch, bright windows behind them

BSR Classical Interludes, October 17-31, 2024

More classical music in the Philly area

Offerings from Pyxis Piano Trio, Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, Jasper String Quartet, and more round out the rest of the month. Gail Obenreder previews.
Gail Obenreder

Gail Obenreder

Previews 3 minute read
Droxler, a white man in a plaid button-down, sits on a couch looking slightly afraid, holding a fringed blanket above him

Hedgerow Theatre presents Dave Droxler’s Robin & Me: My Little Spark of Madness

A marvelous madcap journey in time

This solo show from Delco native Dave Droxler mixes his real-life childhood in the Philly burbs with his love for a slew of comedians, especially his imaginary friend and real idol Robin Williams. Erin Dohony reviews.
Erin Dohony

Erin Dohony

Reviews 3 minute read
Three characters, mouths agape—maybe singing. Aprons and food service attire, hold a tray with three cups, milk, and pitcher

Theatre Horizon presents Jonathan Larson's tick, tick…BOOM!

In Norristown, Larson lives

Jonathan Larson’s early 90s one-man show continues to find new life in light of his legacy with a production by Theatre Horizon. Stephen Silver previews.
Stephen Silver

Stephen Silver

Reviews 3 minute read
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The three pose in front of Aztec mural

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, October 17-23, 2024

Halloween laughs, WEIRDO Fest, Undue Burden, and NICHOS this week

PHILADANCO!’s new show, Crossroads Comedy Theater gets hilariously spooky, a new accessible workshop series at Painted Bride, and Esperanza Arts Center opens its new show NICHOS. Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 4 minute read
Lutz in character on stage, hands folded, seated. Background is dimly lit, Lutz’s face stern

The Strides Collective presents Matt Shvyrkov’s Confabulation

Having a lot of character

The Strides Collective presents Matt Shvyrkov’s Confabulation, a frequently engaging portrait of misfits that seems at odds with its overly ambiguous structure. Kiran Pandey reviews.
Kiran Pandey

Kiran Pandey

Reviews 4 minute read
4 actors of different races and genders crowd around Lexi Thammavong at center, who holds an iPhone, looking worried.

1812 Productions presents This Is the Week That Is 2024

Outdated election-year satire

1812’s popular political satire revue This Is the Week That Is returns to Plays & Players to take on the 2024 election in its 19th edition. But out-of-touch sketches offer mostly limp laughs. Josh Herren reviews.
Josh Herren

Josh Herren

Reviews 2 minute read
In colorful pants and a bright yellow jacket, Merci performs stand-up comedy in her role, the mic in one hand.

Philadelphia Theatre Company and Edgewood Entertainment present Erlina Ortiz’s La Egoísta

Who gets to be selfish?

In Erlina Ortiz’s La Egoísta, now getting its Philly premiere at PTC, two very different sisters (one an irreverent comedian and the other a devoutly Christian bank employee) navigate the demands of career and caretaking. Krista Mar reviews.
Krista Mar

Krista Mar

Reviews 3 minute read
Show logo. "Frankenstein" appears above in glowy white letters, with two male actors in black below.

The BSR Podcast: Season 9, Episode 2: Widener U and Lone Brick Theatre Company's Frankenstein

Hear all about a limited engagement of an imaginative new take on Mary Shelley

Podcast host Darnelle Radford sits down with Dave Ebersole and Mick Loro, who share about their new adaptation of Frankenstein, onstage at Widener University Oct 10-20, 2024.
Darnelle Radford

Darnelle Radford

Podcast 1 minute read
A blocky, colorful illustration of two black-haired women back to back, one with an IV bag and one holding a mic.

The BSR Podcast: Season 9, Episode 1: Erlina Ortiz on the Philly premiere of her La Egoista

Philly playwright Erlina Ortiz talks with Darnelle Radford about her new show

Erlina Ortiz's new play, La Egoista, gets its Philly premiere at Philadelphia Theatre Company. She sat down with podcast host Darnelle Radford ahead of the October 9, 2024 opening.
Darnelle Radford

Darnelle Radford

Podcast 1 minute read
A woman in a turquoise dress with patterns with her arms out, five hoop rings linked from hand to hand behind her

The BSR Weekly Arts and Culture Roundup, October 10-16, 2024

OURfest, Indigenous Peoples Day, Confabulation, and more

Celebrating Indigenous Peoples Day in Philly all weekend, Confabulation by Strides Collective, and block parties for the vote. Kyle V. Hiller rounds up.
Kyle V. Hiller

Kyle V. Hiller

Previews 4 minute read
Hernandez as Cyrano, with a very large nose, turns sadly away while Miller passionately kisses Bridge, in a ruffled skirt.

Quintessence Theatre Group presents Edmond Rostand’s Cyrano de Bergerac, adapted by Martin Crimp

A classic tale with contemporary flair

Quintessence kicks off its 15th anniversary season with a bold adaptation of Cyrano, casting the charismatic yet insecure hero as a defiant poet fighting against mediocrity and bourgeois conformity. Josh Herren reviews.
Josh Herren

Josh Herren

Reviews 2 minute read
The costumed actors pose in a line with serious faces, X holding papers while others fall through the air around them.

Philadelphia Artists’ Collective presents August Strindberg’s The [Happy Hour] Dance of Death

Back to PAC’s creative roots

Philadelphia Artists’ Collective continues its history of inventive productions by staging August Strindberg’s Dance of Death at the Franklin Inn Club, with a chance for the audience to mingle with the actors in character. Cameron Kelsall previews.
Cameron Kelsall

Cameron Kelsall

Previews 3 minute read
Show logo. Company, title, and author in white over a roaring grizzly bear rearing out of flames, and a brown-wrapped package

Fever Dream Repertory presents Steve Yockey’s Mercury

A queer, occult delight

Fever Dream Repertory, a new local company, lands at Plays and Players for the Philly premiere of Mercury, a pitch-black horror comedy that evokes Hitchcock’s comedy and a queer and bloody Twilight Zone. C.M. Crockford reviews.
C.M. Crockford

C.M. Crockford

Reviews 3 minute read