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The set with lighting for “Hills on Fire” in the Black Box Theatre. The lighting design for the show is by Jordan Lindquist, a UF lighting design junior.
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The set with lighting for “Hills on Fire” in the Black Box Theatre. The lighting design for the show is by Jordan Lindquist, a UF lighting design junior.
The set with lighting for “Hills on Fire” in the Black Box Theatre. The lighting design for the show is by Jordan Lindquist, a UF lighting design junior.
A UF student decided to save money by turning to something greener after seeing thousands of dollars spent on new theater set materials each year.
Peter Carpenter will officially start his new role as director of the UF School of Theatre + Dance on July 1.
Peter Carpenter dances during a performance. Carpenter, chosen to be the new director of the UF School of Theatre + Dance, has experience in both fields.
Peter Carpenter will officially start his new role as director of the UF School of Theatre + Dance on July 1.
NEW DIRECTOR enters stage right.
Tom Miller, who held an exorcism for Richard Spencer at his open mic show last year, is writing a love letter to Gainesville in his newly finished screenplay, “The Tabernacle of Hedonism.”
Two hours prior to the conclusion of the most highly-anticipated series finale on television, a Broadway star was introduced on the Phillips Center stage as a “slayer of high notes, breaker of music chains and house of Chenoweth.” She opened her set with an operatic version of the “Game of Thrones” theme song, which elicited chuckles from the audience.
Evergreen Cemetery’s first burial was a 10-day-old baby.
Interested in becoming a part of one of the largest independent student-run newsrooms? The Alligator is looking for its next team of reporters, editors, photographers, copy editors, audience engagement strategists and more to move the newspaper forward.
Gainesville is growing and shows no signs of stopping.
Gia Gunn strutted off the stage at the Phillips Center for the Performing Arts Saturday night. Her gold-beaded outfit sashayed from side-to-side as she danced up the aisle.
Several March For Our Lives groups and the Florida Coalition to Prevent Gun Violence are in Tallahassee today to protest a bill that could allow school teachers to be armed.
Mohamed DaCosta, a former UF West African Dance professor, organized this performance at the School of Theatre and Dance in the Fall. The show happened about four weeks after DaCosta resigned and the new professor took over.
Update: UF spokesperson Steve Orlando confirmed that Mohamed DaCosta is no longer being paid by the university after he submitted his resignation in November. Orlando also DaCosta was hired in October 2002. The records show DaCosta advised he was hired as a faculty member in 2003. We will continue to update the article as new information becomes available.
A woman employed by an oral surgeon was accused on Friday of embezzling more than $150,000 from him.
Cast and crew scurry around the Squitieri Studio Theatre at the Phillips Center as they prepare for their final dress rehearsal. In one corner, actors rehearse their fight scene over and over until the assistant stage manager says it looks perfect. In the back of the theatre the lighting directors run through their cues. The chaotic energy in the theatre comes to a halt when a voice yells “places.”
The building at 25 Southeast Second Place now houses the Hippodrome State Theatre, but began its life as a federal courthouse and post office in 1911.
Pillared with ornate corinthian columns and a unique neoclassical style of architecture, the Hippodrome State Theatre, located at 25 Southeast Second Place, is considered one of the most beautiful buildings in Gainesville. The building was not always a theater, though. For more than 100 years, it has accumulated stories that make it a historical marker of the city.