“Don’t Dress for Dinner,” an English adaptation of a French farce, will open next Thursday at the Quogue Community Hall.
“Don’t Dress for Dinner,” an English adaptation of a French farce, will open next Thursday at the Quogue Community Hall.
The Salon Series at the Parrish Art Museum will conclude its spring programs tomorrow at 6 p.m. with an evening of instrumental music and Spanish-language songs from Argentina.
Darcey, a singer-songwriter, and Mark Marino, a jazz guitarist, will perform the duets of Ella Fitzgerald and Joe Pass on Saturday at 8 p.m.
Golden Eagle/Studio 144 will hold its first creative networking night Friday from 6 to 7:30.
Art Barge Reopens; Billy Sullivan at Rental; DeMartis exhibtion; Keyes Art's new East Hampton space; new group shows at Halsey McKay; Stephen Bauman and Carl Bretzke at Grenning, and more.
Reed and Delphine Krakoff's collection, touching on the world of art and design, some with an East Hampton pedigree, will be sold at Sotheby’s.
The Southampton Cultural Center’s Rising Stars piano series will feature a performance by Do-Hyun Kim on Saturday evening.
Mambo Loco, known for its music of Afro-Cuban and Puerto Rican origin, will give a concert at the Southampton Arts Center on Saturday at 7 p.m.
With "Salvation," Joe Pintauro enters the musical theater world with a performance at the Parrish Art Museum on Friday, May 25.
The Bridgehampton Museum’s archives building will be the site of a live-music series called “Summer Songs: The Great American Songbook . . . and Other Stories,” featuring Caroline Doctorow and her band, the Ballad Makers.
Randy Brecker and Ada Rovatti will perform at the Made in New Yokr Jazz Competition on Saturday in New York City.
Music for Montauk will kick off its 2018 season Saturday with “Bach to Brazil,” a free concert featuring the soprano Rachelle Durkin, the guitarist Rupert Boyd, and an ensemble of cellists.
“THINK — Show and Tell Art Exhibition” at Ashawagh; Torreano and Bonevardi at Drawing Room, and more.
“Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” from the National Theatre in London will be screened at Guild Hall on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Paul Moschetta has issued a casting call for a screenplay reading of “Do No Harm,” to be presented at the East Hampton Library on Aug. 5.
Amy Kirwin, who joined the Southampton Arts Center in 2016 as director of programs, has been promoted to artistic director of that institution.
Mixing fashion and art can make for a frothy mélange, but Ms. Watson takes it a step or two further, deconstructing her found pieces so much that they become something else entirely.
Inna Falks will intersperse her concert at the Parrish Art Museum with tales of her life as a child in Odessa.
The Southampton Cultural Center’s 2018 Spring Performing Arts Festival will feature a Chinese face changer as one of its major attractions.
The comedian Joseph Vecsey will host a new All Star Comedy Show at Bay Street Theater Friday at 8.
In Process at the Watermill Center will provide an opportunity on Saturday to see what the three current resident artists, ANTIMETODO, Jarrod Beck, and Bastienne Schmidt, are up to.
A nearly half-century career in garden design will lead Halsted Welles to Carnegie Hall, where his artwork will be featured in a concert with music by Georgia Shreve.
A drip work created in 1949 by Jackson Pollock will be featured in the May 16 evening sale of contemporary art at Sotheby’s in New York.
Louis Schanker, an artist who lived in New York City, East Hampton, and Stanford, Conn., is not as widely known as his famous colleagues.
Placed in the mix of dramas, docs, shorts, and talks at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival, which wrapped up on Sunday, were a couple of small film projects that involved some of the bolder-faced names of East Hampton.
Drew Petersen, a classical pianist who made his debut at Carnegie Hall’s Weill Recital Hall at the age of 5, will perform tomorrow evening at 6 at the Parrish Art Museum in Water Mill as part of its Salon Series.
The Southampton Arts Center will celebrate Cinco de Mayo on Saturday at 7 with an evening of tango, jazz, bolero, and dance.
The Montauk Library will present a free concert of classical music Saturday evening at 7:30.
Max’s Kansas City, the iconic New York City nightclub and restaurant that was a hangout for artists and musicians in the '60s and '70s will be celebrated by the band Cracked Actor Friday at 8 p.m. at the Stephen Talkhouse.
A one-day Crush; Reynold Ruffins at John Jermain; a new poster for the Hampton Classic
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