A comedy not to bicker about
"She should rest in peace!"It's an unusual comment to hear, regardless of context, but it's one uttered regularly by 73-year-old Abe Dreyfus in the Brandeis Players' production of Marhsall Karp's Squabbles.
"She should rest in peace!"It's an unusual comment to hear, regardless of context, but it's one uttered regularly by 73-year-old Abe Dreyfus in the Brandeis Players' production of Marhsall Karp's Squabbles.
Sitting in the Laurie Theater in Spingold awaiting the start of Brandeis Theater Company's next theatrical venture, I became anxious thinking of the possible ways in which either the players, the production or the audience might miss the mark.
Upon hearing news of the cancellation of the 65th Golden Globe Awards show, among the array of emotions and variations of betrayal that had befallen the American public, one thing was clear: 2008 would lack a Sunday evening's worth of entertaining, mildly intoxicated celebrities brought together to be praised for their cinematic/television efforts by the ever-ominous "Hollywood Foreign Press." I could make snide remarks about the progression of the grief caused by the Golden Globes' absence-my denial is really heartbreaking-but the truth of the matter is that past the vain spectacle of couture dresses, rare jewels and generally shiny things, there is some substance to the event.
Boston’s West End: The spirit of a neighborhood destroyed
Jewish students are not a monolith. Brandeis must stop treating us like one.
Doxxing has no place at Brandeis
A local Waltham organization works to uphold democracy
Paige Bueckers: A Special Talent