Discover and connect with journalists and influencers around the world, save time on email research, monitor the news, and more.
Recent: |
|
Past: |
|
The Missouri History Museum also offered “A Walk in 1875 St. Louis." → Read More
Amy Kaiser's chorus is distinguished by its nimbleness. → Read More
Pixar film has plenty to keep younger set entertained. → Read More
Exhibit will include pavilion designed by Gyo Obata → Read More
Brett Dean's "The Lost Art of Letter Writing" unlikely to stand the test of time. → Read More
Wehrenberg Theatres will build a 500-seat Imax theater at the Ronnie's 20 Cine on South Lindbergh, according to chief operating officer Bill Menke. To accomplish that, the company will tear down two existing auditoriums, and build a screen that's 44 feet tall by 80 feet wide. "We've got the pricing," said Menke, "and we've got a plan submitted for the construction permitting." Construction is… → Read More
Carl Nielsen's Symphony No. 3 finally makes it to St. Louis → Read More
President and CEO of Wehrenberg Theatres was a dedicated supporter of the Salvation Army. → Read More
Soprano Mary Wilson is in dazzling form → Read More
It's October, and that means that the Cardinals are playing in the post-season. The members of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, second to none in their Cardinals spirit, can be → Read More
Visitors have to solve the puzzle in an hour or less. → Read More
Redemption and hope triumph, along with Beethoven and Wagner. → Read More
Soprano Christine Brewer and organist Paul Jacobs have a fine new recording → Read More
From a two-faced calf to unusual art, it's believable → Read More
Richard Strauss (1864-1949) was the heir to Richard Wagner's mantle as an opera composer, and a witty, insightful orchestral writer who honed the art of the tone poem and made it sparkle. On Friday night at Powell Symphony Hall, his genius was on full display. St. Louis Symphony Orchestra music director David Robertson chose two works of Straussian genius and one interesting rarity to fill the… → Read More
Mo Republican Party vice-chair and a friend eschew tables for art. → Read More
The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra president-CEO proves that practice pays off → Read More
Wells Fargo Advisors gives $100,000 for arts and management education → Read More
This is the way the world ends: not with a bang, not with a whimper, but with some of the most glorious music ever composed. Well, that’s the way the world ends when Richard Wagner is in charge. On Friday night, Union Avenue Opera opened its production of Wagner’s “Götterdämmerung (The Twilight of the Gods),” the fourth and final opera in “Der Ring des Nibelungen.” This production brings to a… → Read More
For years, a certain segment of the population observed its holiday surroundings — famous monuments, famous works of art, famous tourist destinations — primarily through the lens of a camera. Then came the selfie, which enabled them to be a part of the picture without involving an outsider. Then, following logically, came the selfie stick. Now the selfie stick is being removed from the equation… → Read More