Lou Harry
Articles
Indy Fringe 2011 part 1: A pair of gender benders
“No Gender Left Behind” and “Screw You Review: Deja Vu” take very different looks at what it is to be a man or a woman.
DINING: Broad Ripple’s new binary eatery hides in plain sight
Third in a month-long series of reviews of new arts district eateries. This week: 10-01 Food & Drink.
LOU’S VIEWS: Summer movie rewind
Thoughts on “The Help,” “Crazy Stupid Love,” “The Tree of Life” and other summer releases.
Ticket giveaway: “Dracula” at Indiana Repertory Theatre
Chime in with your favorite vampire below and you could win four–count 'em, four–tickets to see the Indiana Repertory Theatre’s opening night performance of “Dracula” on Sept. 9. Details on the show here. Bats thats not all. You and your guests also will be invited to the opening VIP reception prior to the show. Good luck.
A&E road trip: Warhol musical “Pop!” at Studio Theatre
In Washington, Warhol and his Factory crew break into song, with mixed results.
A&E road trip: Arena Stage’s “Oklahoma!” in D.C.
Proving once again that Rodgers and Hammerstein’s show is more than a collection of hit songs–when in the right hands.
LOU’S VIEWS: The best games from GenCon
For years, I’ve been telling Hoosiers that GenCon isn’t just for hard-core game geeks committed to multi-hour games of World of Warcraft or Dungeons and Dragons. For every elf-costumed, sword-wielding aficionado, there’s also someone who just likes to play games socially with friends.
DINING: When boy meets soy at Indiana State Fair
It’s the Year of Soybeans, which means different things to different vendors.
Ticket Giveaway: Dig-In
Win tickets to the now-annual downtown food event–plus a cookbook from Regina Mehallick.
Faust-ian question: Does public art have a shelf life?
The removal of James Wille Faust’s airport “Chrysalis” raises questions of public art’s permanency.
You-review-it Monday
For me, the weekend included seeing David Hyde Pierce, playing lots of games, and seeing the apes rise.
REVIEW: David Hyde Pierce and Michael Feinstein open the Tarkington
The new 500-seat theater completes Carmel’s Center for the Performing Arts.
LOU’S VIEWS: The artists of summer
Baseball and football are both celebrated in shows at the National Art Museum of Sport.
DINING: Carmel’s new Detour dares diners to overdo it
Second in a month-long series of reviews of new arts district eateries.
Libman leaves as Center for the Performing Arts boss
Claims “personal reasons.” Frank Basile takes over temporarily.