The times we live in are cold and alien. The sky is grey, and the warm sparks of comfort remain distant. While the times may be rough, and appetites for normalcy rampant, LPC’s performance of “Romeo and Juliet” may help a charming…
This year the Video Music Awards were different than they have been in any year in the past. Due to the coronavirus, the VMAs had a different audience this year than you normally would see.
Instead of having a large crowd of…
Update 9/21/2020:
Digital performances of “Romeo and Juliet” will take place on Oct. 2, 3, 9 and 10. Performances will start at 7 p.m. and run for 75 minutes.
Tickets are available for purchase here
The LPC Performing Arts Center is…
COVID-19 has been a tremendous problem for the performing arts department. Normal theatrics have become impossible. The statewide shutdown has prevented nearly all normal activity for the LPC Performing Arts Program. However, the students and instructors of Performing Arts are busily working…
The Las Positas College Theater Arts program is on a roll.
After the rousing success of last semester’s “Evil Dead: The Musical,” the program has tackled something a little more traditional, yet still unique with “Stage Door.”
It is a good production of a…
In many ways, the new streaming culture has created a golden age for documentary filmmaking.
Nearly every week, new and fascinating documentary features and series will drop and hold the national attention via Netflix, Hulu or Prime, often igniting renewed discourse around issues…
Color me shocked — the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences actually chose to award their Best Picture award to a movie that really deserved it, Bong Joon-Ho’s “Parasite.”
For an awards ceremony on the brink of complete irrelevancy that celebrates an…
The newest offering of the DC Comics extended movie universe is kinda like when you were a kid and one of the other kids poured ketchup and candy and soda and salt and crunched up chips on their plate of leftover school…
As a longtime horror-nerd, I’ll admit I scoffed a little when I first saw a flier for “Evil Dead: the Musical.” I wondered how could any such production do justice to one of the most iconic film series in all of horror…
With the release of Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman,” film fandom has arrived at a crossroads. In typical Scorsese fashion, the film is a monumental work — deliberately told, elegiac and epic in length. It’s sweeping and much more sorrowful than Scorsese’s previous…