Monday, June 15, 2026
HomeArts & Culture

Arts & Culture

More Recent Articles

The business of creating / cultivating art

Jules Webster, ceramic artist and owner of downtown emporium, The Art Supply Depo, seems to have the entrepreneurial ambition it takes to run a successful business.

Brains left over

In the business of writing—editing, securing agents and publishing deals—it’s all too easy to lose track of the simple joy of writing.

Mazel tov on the books

What do song parodies, art forgers and Superman all have in common?

Thirteen years of writing

Lovers of the written word, November is yours to celebrate.

Tell-a-thon

The Frogtown Storytelling Guild marks its 13th year of Tellabration featuring stories for grown-ups, ranging from legends to romantic sagas.

Changing history

Jeff Greenfield has worn many hats during his storied career—including speechwriter, essayist, political pundit and television host—but perhaps his favorite occupation is author of alternative histories.

The write stuff

November brings “thirty days and nights of literary abandon,” according to the organization promoting National Novel Writing Month.

Tip your waiter

Edmund Lingan's been a busy boy.

America's favorite family

“The Addams Family,” with their whimsically-spooky theme song and ghoulish skewering of middle American values, has delighted audiences for decades as a comic strip, numerous films, television adaptations and now as a 2010 musical coming to the Valentine Theatre for one night only.

Poison Tongues

Old maids poisoning lonely old men with homemade wine, a brother convinced he’s Teddy Roosevelt and alcohol-fueled plastic surgery: these are just a few of the overarching quirks in the darkly-comedic play “Arsenic and Old Lace,” presented by the Toledo Repertoire Theater this month.

Gotta EAT

Eating disorders, often written off as solely a problem of young women, terrorize many Americans of all ages, genders and races each day. Linda Daugherty’s play EAT (It’s Not About Food) will bring light to these so-called invisible illnesses through a mix of comedy and drama.

Damefight

Jeffrey Albright, the director and a member of the board for The Village Players, saw Lettice and Lovage on Broadway starring its original vehicle, Dame Maggie Smith in the early 1990s.

They're Back

Just on the cusp of Halloween, comes the Latino holiday celebrating Dia de los Muertos (the Day of the Dead.)

Five More

he TMA’s collection of 30,000 plus exceptional works of art, now has five more outstanding pieces. Three of the works purchased through the generosity of the Apollo Society,

East Meets West at the TMA

If you’ve been to the Toledo Museum of Art recently you certainly noticed a distinct Asian theme.

The devil is in the details

The production, titled “For the Devil Tells Me So,” is the brainchild of Glacity Theater Collective’s Assistant Artistic Director Megan Aherne, who wrote the script with colleague Sean Koogan.