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Local theaters play an instrumental role in the theater ecosystem in the face of financial hardships.
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JAG Productions, a Black theater company based in the Upper Valley, shares work that reflects and deconstructs racial, gender, sexuality and class hierarchies. After months of fundraising and planning, the company a new artist showcase called JAG Underground.
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Lyric Theatre Company opens its 50th season this week with a production of The Prom. The company operates out of South Burlington with a focus on community, volunteerism and diversity.
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Facing a long-term budget shortfall amid low enrollment, Vermont State University this week announced a series of faculty buyouts. Vermont Public's Mary Engisch spoke to a Performance Arts and Technology professor who accepted one.
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Emmy Award-winning actor and Norwich resident Gordon Clapp shares details from his life and his one-man show about poet Robert Frost being produced in Middlebury this weekend.
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Heat, poor air quality, rain and flooding affected New England summer theater this year — including in Weston.
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Rob Mermin talks about why he wrote "Act 39," a true story of what happened when his friend used Vermont's medical aid in dying law.
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"Coming back from not being able to do anything, it felt amazing to step back onto stage... it was really wonderful to be able to say "We're back. We're sharing stories and experiences together — laugh with us."
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As part of our Summer School series, reporter Erica Heilman sat down with Vermont actress Maren Langdon Spillane to learn how to perform Shakespeare, and more importantly, how *not* to.
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There aren’t many all-Black burlesque shows, especially in Vermont. But last weekend, a Black-owned theater company called JAG Productions and King Arthur Flour presented “Life in Sepia - Vermont's Black Burlesque Revue.”