Daughter of soul singer Donny Hathaway and classically trained vocalist Eulaulah Hathaway, Lalah Hathaway is a contemporary R&B and jazz singer, now part of the...
The National Theatre focuses its Summer Cinema 2010 on the films of Cary Grant, including Charade, Stanley Donen’s 1963 romantic thriller co-starring Audrey Hepburn and...
“The voice of TOTO — the magic of YES” is how this “super-group” of ’80s-era classic rock is billed. TOTO vocalist Bobby Kimball and YES’s...
The original Madonna producer, responsible for “Holiday” — and also notable for early dance-pop numbers from Whitney Houston — Benitez was one of the first...
Despite the time that’s passed since Robert Lopez, Jeff Marx and Jeff Whitty first sent their profanity-spewing puppets on stage to deliver such toe-tappers as...
Tonight, Thursday, Aug. 12, brings Suddenly, Last Summer, the 1959 melodrama and mystery based on a play by Tennessee Williams, with a screenplay co-written by...
Who doesn’t crave a little KISS? The band, not the thing you do with tongues. Well… actually, KISS the band does things with tongues, if...
Siblings Rufus and Martha Wainwright, spawn of Canadian folk legends Loudon Wainwright III and the late Kate McGarrigle, are jointly touring in support of new...
As part of the 11th Annual Mid City Dog Days of August Sidewalk Sale, the Studio Theatre hosts this annual sale featuring items from productions...
Keegan Theatre’s decision to punch up the summer season with Noises Off, packed with horseplay and good humor (including quirky double playbills) is as smart...
For the documentary Winnebago Man, filmmaker Ben Steinbauer went in search of Jack Rebney, unintended star of one of the Internet’s first viral videos and...
The modern family in Lisa Cholodenko’s The Kids Are All Right is more than just funny. They’re also quirky, endearing, flawed, and entirely believable. And,...
Arcade Fire produces swelling, ethereal, heartbreaking dramatic rock, with probing lyrics fraught with concerns over death and dreams, and existential questioning. Tonight, Friday, Aug. 6....
Serenading Louis, Lanford Wilson’s intimate examination of marriage — entrapment — in suburbia, Serenading Louie, from 1970, is building a reputation as a neglected masterpiece....
The new week-long DC Black Theatre Festival showcases the talents of individuals from the D.C. area’s African-American theater community through 70 productions. There are at...