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(10/09/13 12:54am)
It’s been 36 years since Stephen King published his famous hotel horror story, “The Shining.” After global acclaim and a successful movie adaptation lauded for Stanley Kubrick’s precise direction and Jack Nicholson’s maniacal performance, it seemed as though the story of the Torrance family and the Overlook Hotel had settled in with the classics. Its characters were frozen right where King seemed to want them, leaving the viewers to imagine their fates after escaping the burning Overlook Hotel. But King apparently couldn’t put the story to rest just yet, bringing them back with the sequel, “Doctor Sleep.”
(09/24/13 7:36pm)
On Friday night, the University Programs Council put on an improv comedy show in Newcomb Ballroom featuring two of the University’s groups — the Whethermen and Amuse Bouche — as well as the Upright Citizens Brigade, a nationally renowned ensemble whose notable alumni include Amy Poehler and Horatio Sanz.
(09/10/13 11:13am)
The old photograph hanging in the Fralin Museum wouldn’t seem special on its own. It’s just a 1930s group shot: a bunch of people on a ship deck, gathered around a lifebuoy that reads “SS Europa.” They are actually the African-American cast of a 1932 film, “Black and White,” en route to Moscow for filming. It’s the only thing in the exhibit “In the Shadow of Stalin” – which will be on display in the museum until Dec. 22 – that feels real.