You-review-it Monday
For me, “Enter Love” at the Cabaret, Walter Knabe at the Evan Lurie Gallery, and more. And for you?
For me, “Enter Love” at the Cabaret, Walter Knabe at the Evan Lurie Gallery, and more. And for you?
The Indiana Supreme Court will hear arguments this week on whether an Ohio River casino should have allowed a compulsive gambler
to play and lose $125,000 in a single night.
The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra combined magic and music with “Mysterioso.”
At this Rangeline Road cupcakery, it’s the sweet stuff that counts.
Is it freedom-enhancing to defend a veteran’s “right” to commit slow-motion suicide and homicide?
Yes, the IU Hoosiers are better this season. How could they not be?
The artistic head of the Carmel Regional Performing Arts Center has added a Broadway show and a new NYC position to his already busy schedule.
The Percussive Arts Society plans to open an interactive museum at Washington and Illinois streets downtown.
Ohio voters hit hard by the economic downturn have approved casinos on the fifth try by gambling supporters in the past two
decades.
Board president says he quit after Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard declined proposal to shut down historic landmark until
2013 for major renovation.
Ohio voters are poised to weigh in on a ballot question that would authorize casinos in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus and
Toledo.
Did you get to the Indianapolis Art Center’s Day of the Dead? Or stick to “Paranormal Activity” at the multiplex?
Architect and developer Craig Von Deylen hopes to close by next week on the purchase of the Murphy Arts Center in Fountain
Square and is in the process of signing new tenants, including the Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art.
The Indiana-set film has been turned into a musical with Broadway aspirations.
Time for Three becomes Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s ensemble in residence
Augmented reality is, essentially, the melding of our physical world with digital information.
New restaurant serves up pizza, pasta and more.
This week, the young adult best-seller “The Giver” is staged at the Indiana Repertory Theatre. Plus some thoughts on school
field trips.
The civic festival Spirit and Place, which runs Nov. 5-16, has been a fixture of the fall season since 1996, but organizers
are still trying to explain to Indianapolis residents what it’s all about.