Protesting A Scottish Hollywood

An ambitious plan to build a Scottish Hollywood has been hit by opposition. “A Glasgow businessman has submitted a scheme for a £250m national film studio in rural Perthshire that would attract big-budget films and big-name actors. But the 300 residents of Aberuthven are far from star-struck. They fear the studio with its plans for a timeshare and new housing will quadruple the size of the community and ruin their tranquil way of life.”

Spanish Theatre Censored In Australia

A Spanish theatre company was forced to censor part of its show in Australia. “The play opened to boos from the audience at its Australian premiere in Melbourne last week when it was announced that scenes had been censored to gain an R-rating from the Office of Film and Literature Classification (OFLC). The scenes, depicting explicit sex acts, were pixelated or obscured by bright lights.”

In RoadTrip: Of Orchestras And Big-Name Soloists

Violist Sam Bergman and the Minnesota Orchestra play the legendary Musikverein in Vienna: “When the marquee sports the name ‘Joshua Bell,’ you can be sure of a full house, but you can also be sure of an audience that has come exclusively to see Josh play, and you therefore have some work to do to convince them to take an interest in whatever else is on the program.”

Making Lear Work For Christopher Plummer

The Stratford (Canada) Festival production of King Lear is much anticipated on Broadway, where’s it has sold $2 million worth of tickets before opening. But there was one big hurdle in making the show work in New York. She show stars Christopher Plummer, 76, who “is only able to perform the emotionally and physically taxing role of Lear for five shows a week. It’s a real stretch to make revenues match expenses when the whole company is being paid for eight shows a week but only performing five. “It was very clear that Christopher was not in a position to do more than five performances a week. The advantage is that Christopher is at that rare moment when he’s able to do Lear.”

Architects And The Public Imagination

“Denver, like much of the rest of the country and even the world, obviously has become swept up in the swelling enthusiasm for good design, a trend reflected in everything from Target’s sale of objects by name designers to blow-by-blow coverage of the redevelopment of the World Trade Center site. Clearly, fueling part of this interest has been the rush in the past couple of decades by art museums to construct signature buildings by established and up-and-coming architects.”

In Praise Of Ashton

Frederick Ashton created the English ballet style. “Probably no other 20th Century choreographer rivals Balanchine for longevity, output and stylistic innovation. Both were born a century ago this year, both died in the 1980s and both boast incomparable legacies, masters of just about every aspect of their fields.”

Is This Who We Are?

A new book paints an unflattering picture of Americans: According to statistics the author has collected, only 48 percent of American adults understand that the earth orbits the sun yearly. A mere 15 percent of Americans aged 18 to 24 can find Iraq or Israel on a labeled map, and 11 percent can’t find the United States. Americans consume a ton of ice cream apiece in the course of a lifetime, spend more on fast food than on higher education, discard 20 billion diapers annually, and develop 9 square miles of rural land every day.”

Bostons’ MFA Goes To Vegas

Why is Bostons’ Museum of Fine Arts doing, traveling a show to the casinos of Las Vegas? “What even the critics can’t deny is the appeal of the paintings. So far, the Bellagio’s Monet show has been a smash, drawing 18,000 people in the 10 days after its Jan. 30 opening. At that pace, and with its $15 ticket price, the MFA could earn even more than $1 million – the total figure hinges on attendance – by the time the show closes in September.”