I’m living in a bottle episode
By Courtney Dantzler | October 19, 2020Still, if I was the star of a TV show, I wonder how low its ratings would have plummeted during the past eight months of the pandemic.
Still, if I was the star of a TV show, I wonder how low its ratings would have plummeted during the past eight months of the pandemic.
As the Duke community continues to practice social distancing this fall, DukeCreate will offer free workshops in a wide range of arts practices, including dance, visual art, music, film and creative technology.
Organized by the Cinematic Arts at Duke, Screen/Society is a beloved film programming body in the Triangle area.
This past March, the student filmmakers of Anytown, USA, a continuing education class at the Center for Documentary Studies, were scheduled to travel to the small eastern North Carolina town of Windsor.
As each day of the coronavirus pandemic passes by, I find myself gravitating toward classic Hollywood movies, imagining what life would be like on the silver screen rather than behind my computer screen.
I think out of all of Disney’s properties, I found comfort in the fantasy of Winnie the Pooh because, to me, it seemed like all of the characters could actually exist.
Among the canon of soft-rock singer-songwriters of the ‘60s and ‘70s, Carole King seems out of place.
If you peer into the glass windows connecting the Rubenstein Arts Center to the outside world, you might notice an arrangement of six armchairs, each connected to its own pair of headphones and microphones, facing outward into an otherwise open space.
There’s an expressive quality unique to the human voice that complements the dramatic elements of opera.
It’s bookbagging season again! Before you blindly try to navigate through the class search tab on DukeHub, don’t fear – Recess is here.
Courtney’s glass owl, named Philip (after Philip Glass).