Sunday, February 17, 2013
Area high school students bring Shakespeare’s work to life through their unique interpretation of his monologues and sonnets. The competition, created by the English Speaking Union, aims to develop students’ speaking and critical thinking skills as they explore Shakespeare.
Previous winners have gone on to win the national competition in New York, where the winner is awarded a full tuition scholarship to the British American Drama Academy’s Midsummer Conservatory Program.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
This annual film series returns for an examination of Kansas City’s own home-grown cinema auteur, Robert Altman.
Often referred to as Altman’s “anti-Western,” this dreamlike story follows bumbling gambler McCabe (Warren Beatty) as he settles into a remote mining town and establishes a bordello with the help of the English madam Mrs. Miller (Julie Christie). His success attracts the attention of a predatory corporation that employs killers as members of its acquisition team.
Rated R; 120 minutes.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Local filmmaker Terence O’Malley employs clips from his latest documentary, Harry & Tom, to show how Harry Truman rose through public service – from county official to president of the United States – with the help of Kansas City’s notorious Pendergast political machine.
An insurance executive by day, O’Malley has produced, written, and directed two previous feature documentaries: Nelly Don: A Stitch in Time about local fashion icon Nell Donnelly, and Black Hand, Strawman, a history of organized crime in Kansas City.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Children and parents are invited to be part of monthly interactive story times presented by the Coterie Theatre. Coterie Theatre artists read from favorite children's books while audience members enjoy an opportunity to "jump into the story" and then participate in an improvised story of their own making.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
1:30pm
Children in kindergarten through eighth grade are encouraged to create their own masterpieces and have good, messy fun during the spring session of the Westport Center for the Arts' "Kids Team Up for Art" workshops.
Local artists will lead participants to focus on both individual skill building and the completion of a group project by the end of the session.
Friday, February 15, 2013
This one-hour production features select Edgar Allan Poe stories (The Pit and the Pendulum and The Tell-Tale Heart) and poems (Alone, The Bells, and The Raven) performed by classically trained actor Hughston Walkinshaw. Composer Rex Hobart accompanies with musical lines and retorts from a reactive electric guitar.
This show contains mature themes and is recommended for ages 13 and above.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Just in time for Valentine’s Day, scholar Marilyn Yalom employs the literature of Moliere, Racine, George Sand, Alfred de Musset, and Simone de Beauvoir to reveal the Gallic evolution of love over the centuries.
She examines how the French invented love, how they have kept it vibrant for over nine centuries, and why the French love
experience is unique.
Yalom has been a professor of French and comparative literature and is senior scholar at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research at Stanford University.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Virgil Thomson (1896-1989) went from playing organ in Kansas City’s silent movie houses to become a fixture of “Paris in the twenties,” a prominent music critic, and a world-famous composer of operas (Four Saints in Three Acts, The Mother of Us All) and movie scores (The Plow that Broke the Plains, The River).
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
In 1860 William Henry Seward was poised to become the Republican nominee for president, only to lose to Abraham Lincoln.
Now, on Lincoln’s birthday, historian Walter Stahr describes how the two put aside their rivalry, with Seward becoming Lincoln’s Secretary of State and closest adviser during the Civil War. He was so important that John Wilkes Booth and his co-conspirators targeted Seward along with the President.
A former lawyer, Stahr is also the author of John Jay: Founding Father.
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Twenty Films Essential to Cinema Literacy
Think you’re film literate? Not until you’ve experienced the masterpieces of world cinema presented as part of this new series. Former Kansas City Star film critic Robert W. Butler (now a member of the Library’s Public Affairs staff) provides opening and closing remarks.