Arts & Events

Arts & Events

West Coast talents featured at the Blue Mouse

The Blue Mouse Theatre on Proctor hosted an informal music festival on April 11 of three talented musical groups, each of whom showed off their unique styles through a variety of musical genres and pieces. The first act, What She Said, introduced themselves as Puget Sound’s “only all-women a cappella group.” What She Said’s first piece was a cover of Alicia Keys’s “Fallin’,” arranged by Stephanie Gates, in which the deep, soulful voice of soloist Jennifer Kullby balanced nicely with the lighter background singers and the rhythm vocalists. Following this,...
Arts & Events

Paul Fritt’s organ-building celebrated April 27

A free concert honoring the achievement of Paul Fritts ’73 will be held Sunday, April 27 at 2 p.m. in Kilworth Memorial Chapel. Fritts earned the “Outstanding Music Alumnus” award in 2013 for his work in organ-building and design. Accomplished university organist Joseph Adam will perform the concert. The Twenty-third Annual Bethel Schneebeck Organ Recital will include works by Heinrich Scheidemann, Francois Couperin, Johann Sebastian Bach, César Franck and Maurice Duruflé. Adam has performed in numerous cathedrals—including those in the Netherlands, Vienna, England and Washington, D.C.— earned many awards—including first...
Arts & Events

When Pigpen turned into a germaphobe

Last week’s STF show, Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead, blew audiences away with its original portrayals of every form of teen angst possible. Written by Bert V. Royal, and directed by senior Zoe Drew-King, Dog Sees God transformed the beloved Peanuts comic strip characters into their most troubled high school selves. From Charlie Brown, called CB and played by senior Billy Krolik, to Schroder, called Beethoven and played by senior Blake Erickson, each of the well-known characters saw their childhood quirks developed into near neuroses. The entire...
Arts & Events

Marvel’s Captain America packs in the action

The world has begun to calm down after the events of 2012’s The Avengers and Steve Rogers/Captain America (Chris Evans) will finally have a chance to explore the brave new world of the 21st century, after having been frozen in ice since the end of the Second World War. In theory. In Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Rogers is instead embroiled in a net of political intrigue and espionage that quickly takes a deadly turn. Unsure who to trust within the government organization S.H.I.E.L.D., he must rely on super-spy Black...
Arts & Events

Senior Theater Festival shows a new play every weekend

The Senior Theatre Festival is an annual festival of performances put on by students, featuring the Theatre major’s senior directors. This year, the festival, which began on April 4, will consist of Yellow Face, written by David Henry Hwang and directed by Jenna Gerdsen; Dog Sees God, written by Bert V. Royal and directed by Zoe Drew-King; True West, written by Sam Shepard and directed by Joseph Raya-Ward; How I Learned to Drive, written by Paula Vogel and directed by Gaby Gutierrez; and The Skriker, written by Caryl Churchill and...
Arts & Events

Last night’s Underground Sound performance

The voice of one of Puget Sound’s very own a cappella groups, Underground Sound, brought a free concert to the student body in Kilworth Memorial Chapel on Thursday, April 10 at 7:30 p.m. The students prepared for this performance for the entire semester while under the instruction of sophomores Lisa Hawkins and Daniel Wolfert, co-directors of the group. The students of Underground Sound made their concert truly unique from past performances. “Every song, with the exception of our ‘tradition song’ that we sing every spring, arranged by one of our...
Arts & Events

Catch American Hustle on campus this weekend

ASUPS begins the second half of the semester with a bang, presenting “American Hustle” as its first campus film following spring break. Imagine you’re in the late 1970s, early 1980s New Jersey. You’re a con-artist in the prime of your life, at the height of your career. The film begins here. “Some of this actually happened,” the opening credits say. The film follows the story of Irving Rosenfeld, played by Christian Bale, and his partner in crime Sydney Prosser, played by Amy Adams. Together Rosenfeld and Prosser con people out...
Arts & Events

KUPS celebrates 45 years

This week 90.1 KUPS The Sound celebrated its 45th anniversary on the airwaves by hosting a number of entertaining and engaging events both on and off campus. On air since the fall of 1968, KUPS has been and remains a strong fixture of campus life, at the same time maintaining a strong and welcome connection with members of the greater Puget Sound area. I sat down with general manager Kim Clancy and marketing director Rafi Ronquillo to discuss the events of this past week and to get a better understanding...
Arts & Events

Noah: A different story than what you have heard before

Genesis 6:9—“This is the account of Noah and his family.” As a summary, these words describe director Darren Aronofsky’s film Noah even better, perhaps, than the Genesis story itself. Noah is constantly and intimately concerned with the relationships between Noah (Russell Crowe), his wife Naameh (portrayed masterfully by Jennifer Connelly), their three sons Shem (Douglas Booth), Ham (Logan Lerman), and Japheth (Leo McHugh Carroll), and their adopted daughter Ila (Emma Watson). Over the course of the film, this family unit—as well as Noah’s place in the ancestral chain of his...
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