The Show Must Go On: Hamilton Arrives on Disney+
Hamilton revolutionized modern-day theater.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Independent Florida Alligator's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
156 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Hamilton revolutionized modern-day theater.
Eating crackers in bed always leads to crumbs by your feet, even if you think that you’re eating them carefully.
NEW YORK (AP) — The entertainment industry prepared Thursday for an unprecedented shutdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus, canceling upcoming movies, suspending all Broadway performances and scuttling concert tours until it's safe to welcome crowds back.
Oprah Winfrey, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Whoopi Goldberg, Steven Spielberg, Gloria Steinem and Diana Ross are among the celebrities Scott Sanders calls his peers and friends.
A UF master’s student has co-founded a Twitter-trending LGBTQ+ campaign in response to a Supreme Court case.
“The Book of Mormon” is coming to Gainesville this January, and a lucky few have the chance to win cheaper tickets in a lottery.
The Hippodrome Theatre and the UF School of Theatre and Dance are partnering to present “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time,” a former Broadway show and recipient of five Tony Awards.
As football fans gear up for the University of Florida vs. University of Miami game on Saturday, one man took it upon himself to remind UM fans that Gainesville is Gator Nation.
Kristin Chenoweth, the 50-year-old Emmy-winning and Tony award-winning actress and singer, performs a Gator Chomp Sunday evening while wearing a Florida Gators T-shirt during the beginning of her show at the Phillips Center for the Performing Arts. About 1,300 people watched as the Broadway star performed, sharing quirky personal anecdotes between songs.
Kristin Chenoweth, the 50-year-old Emmy-winning and Tony award-winning actress and singer, performs a Gator Chomp Sunday evening while wearing a Florida Gators T-shirt during the beginning of her show at the Phillips Center for the Performing Arts. About 1,300 people watched as the Broadway star performed, sharing quirky personal anecdotes between songs.
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.
Her vocal range: chilling. Her stage presence: electric. Her performance at the Phillips Center: intimate.
Doris Day, the sunny blond actress and singer whose frothy comedic roles opposite the likes of Rock Hudson and Cary Grant made her one of Hollywood’s biggest stars in the 1950s and ’60s and a symbol of wholesome American womanhood, died Monday. She was 97.
On Friday, Gainesville residents are invited to reconnect with their inner child in the national tour of “Finding Neverland.” Before the show, actress Emmanuelle Zeesman gave us a sneak peak into a show she said is one of a kind.
A yellow sponge in square pants helped Adamu Pastor learn English as a child in Cameroon.
Ah, the bye-week blues. Nothing but golf courses and hours on the consoles playing Black Ops or Fortnite.
Like many people, I want to be in the room where it happens. Or, to be more accurate, the theater where it happens.
“Between Riverside and Crazy” premieres at the Black Box Theatre on Friday night with UF student actors performing alongside a professor who has stretched their acting capabilities.
“Between Riverside and Crazy” premieres at the Black Box Theatre on Friday night with UF student actors performing alongside a professor who has stretched their acting capabilities.
The community band formed by a UF summer program performed one last free show Wednesday.