News at Adelphi
- Arts & Culture
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University Professor Paul Moravec's Oratorio "Sanctuary Road" Released on CD and Streaming Platforms
Published:Sanctuary Road—an oratorio by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer and ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ Professor of Music Paul Moravec, with librettist Mark Campbell, based on the writings of Underground Railroad organizer William Still—will see its first recording released on CD and streaming platforms via Naxos Records on January 10.
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The ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ Performing Arts Center hosts Queer Eye's Karamo Brown and designer Isaac Mizrahi
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Adams ’08 is getting incredible praise as Mozart in Amadeus, and Luke Hofmaier ’12 just received a best actor nomination from the prestigious Berkshire Theatre Critics.
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Adjunct professor James Joseph O'Neil ’88 and Samuel Adams ’08 are starring in the new production of the play Amadeus at the Folger Theatre in Washington D.C., says Folger Shakespeare Library.
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Bestselling authors Jacqueline Woodson '16 (Hon.) and Alice Hoffman '73, '02 (Hon.) published their latest in a succession of critically acclaimed works. They are joined by Deborah Serani, PsyD, senior adjunct professor in the Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology, whose first work of fiction was also released.
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All the colors of the world come to life on Adelphi's silver screen during two separate film festivals: the International Immigration Film Festival in late October, and the Foreign Language Fall Film Festival in early November. All screenings are free and open to the public.
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Dr. Weida's research examines the intersections between textiles and feminism in many art movements.
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ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ has been nominated in 10 categories in the annual Bethpage Best of Long Island competition.
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Were you unable to get tickets to author Tara Westover, PhD's sold-out lecture and book signing? Catch up with our coverage of what the bestselling author shared about Educated: A Memoir, this year's Adelphi Community Reads selection.
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Ruth Militrano '19 won't let her past define her future.
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Provost Steve Everett, DMA, connects music composition to computer literacy and how technology shapes cognition.
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Across campus, Adelphi students and staff are busy preparing for this signature event.
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Our faculty, students, leadership and staff are active participants in the greater Long Island region, rolling up their sleeves and offering their expertise to solve problems, provide services and improve the lives of our neighbors (including oysters). Another benefit? Valuable, hands-on experience for our students.
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Jon Contino '05: Drawing His Own Conclusions
CategoriesPublished:Jon Contino '05 made his mark with branding strategies and logo creation. Now he's branching out with a new book, new business ventures and designs for the future.
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Music students Dori-Jo Gutierrez and Kevin Lubin turn Walt Whitman's poetry into song for the poet's 200th birthday celebration.
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Shoshanah Tarkow '06 is combining her love of poetry, immersive theater and technology to bring Walt Whitman's famous poetry to life at this year's Fall Arts Festival on Wednesday, October 2.
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Pale Blue Dot(s) is a playwright, written by Erin Mallon '02 and commissioned by Adelphi's Department of Theatre. It's a story of “inspiration, joy and wonder," according to Associate Professor Margaret Lally, who is directing the show and worked closely with Mallon in developing the project.
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Jonathan Larson Legacy Concert event starring Andy Robinson is featured by Broadway World.
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The 12th season of the ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ Performing Arts Center (Adelphi PAC) in Garden City, New York, kicks off this month with 25 cultural events taking place through December. Favorites among the community, Adelphi PAC performances include theater and a variety of styles of dance and music.
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It's been a great year for Mirirai Sithole '12. In February, we caught her performance in a featured role in the surreal drama/comedy Russian Doll, starring and co-produced by Orange Is the New Black's Natasha Lyonne.
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Honors College students are required to attend three cultural events each semester. That’s easy with New York City in close reach.
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Senior Lila Woodbridge worked with Joan L. Schimke, associate professor of communications, on a documentary short about the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire screened at Cinema Village in Manhattan.
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Jac Bernhard '16 Gives a "Screamo Version of a Robert Frost Poem" on Late Night with Seth Meyers
CategoriesPublished:Robert Frost's poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is rather angst-y as it is. Wait till you hear it put to music by an emo band. Or, at least, a fictional emo band.
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This year marks the bicentennial birthday of renowned American poet Walt Whitman. In celebration of Whitman's life and creative works, a group of ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ music, theater and visual arts students will perform and display their artwork during the Walt Whitman Bicentennial Birthday Weekend event on Sunday, June 2, from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
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Chuck D '84, '13 (Hon.), Returns to Adelphi to Talk Hip-Hop History and Getting His Start at Adelphi
Published:Famed rapper, activist, artist and cultural theorist Chuck D '84, '13 (Hon.), received a hero's welcome when he returned to his alma mater April 15 for a conversation on the Westermann Stage in the Concert Hall at the ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ Performing Arts Center with University Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion Perry Greene, Ph.D.
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This month, representatives of Bridges to Adelphi will be going around campus to educate others about the program as well as sponsoring events that draw attention and awareness of neurodiversity.
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Public Enemy's Chuck D '84, '13 (Hon.) will be talking about the history of hip-hop April 15, 2019.
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12,000 Voices, a reading of 12 Angry Men by all women to support a national initiative encouraging voter registration on April 6, is highlighted in Newsday article.
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There's a weekend full of music—from inspiring young playwrights to 1960s northern soul to the edges of the universe—in store at the ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ Performing Arts Center.