Issue 4351. Last Updated: 03/17/2010

03/08/2002

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A Ballet Festival to Agitate Souls

St. Petersburg's ballet lovers are eagerly anticipating a 10-day visual spectacular as the Mariinsky Theater's Second International Ballet Festival opens next week, determined to build upon the impressive success enjoyed by last year's debut.

Punkish Poetry

Natalya Medvedeva, a poet, writer and singer who has been called a Russian Patti Smith, has long been known as a musical force to be reckoned with for her self-described ""punk-cabaret hooliganism.""

Merrymaking For Maslenitsa

Maslenitsa is one pagan holiday that's still celebrated in Russia today, a festival that defies winter cold and marks the coming of spring. During the week of Maslenitsa people eat piles of hot, buttery bliny, which represent the golden sun of spring.

Outgoing Director Sees Lenfilm's End

Film maker and outgoing Director of Lenfilm Viktor Sergeyev speaks to The Moscow Times about planned reforms of Russia's film industry, which, in his opinion, will lead to the industry to ruin.

Rock, Punk and Prosthetic Cuban Music

Guitarist Marc Ribot played a stripped-down experimental solo concert at Shestnadtsat Tonn in January, and now he returns to Moscow with his popular band, Los Cubanos Postizos, to offer a rhythmic and danceable set based around Cuban traditional music -- with a drop of punk.

On Pins and Alleys, a City Bowls

Long gone are the days when the only after-work entertainment options available in Moscow were a few beer bars and an odd movie or concert. Exotic restaurants and modern entertainment facilities offering many ways to spend your time and money have become very popular among Muscovites and visitors as well.

Low-Tech Stress Relief at Siwa Oasis

In a remote corner of Egypt where the last of a string of oases borders the vast Sahara desert, you can pay $400 a night to stay in a room with no electricity.

Maine Farmhouse Reveals 500-Year-Old Nuremburg Chronicle

Barrie Pribyl knew she had something special when she took the old book out of the farmhouse and loaded it into her car. What the Maine book dealer didn't know right away was that she had the ""Nuremberg Chronicle,"" a 500-year-old history of the world considered a milestone in the history of printing.

Cook's Corner -- Kalashnikov Chicken

This tasty dish is redolent with the flavors of the Caucasus. Enjoy it with a glass of Georgian red wine and declare your loyalty to the land of your choice.

Last-Minute Shopping for Ladies' Day

A warning to all those men who have been ""too busy"" or could not be bothered to buy March 8 presents for their better halves, female colleagues and relatives: Do not harbor any hopes for mercy.

Chekhov Art Theater Kills With Goodness

The Chekhov Art Theater has been busy this year. The season is only a little more than half completed but the playhouse has already unveiled a staggering seven new shows and one major revival. For good measure, it has also christened a new small performing space.

Mariinsky's 'Kitezh' and 'Walküre' Golden

At seven o'clock on Sunday evening, conductor Valery Gergiev raised his baton in the Bolshoi Theater on an epic work of opera, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's ""The Legend of the Invisible City of Kitezh and the Maiden Fevronia.""

Sholk Offers a Feast From The East

Given the popularity of the Yakitoria restaurant near Belorusskaya metro, where starving sushi-seekers line up outside waiting for space even on the coldest winter nights, sooner or later somebody had to see the sense in opening another stylish Eastern eatery right next door.

Treat Her to Three Days of Clubbing

Long weekends are usually a chance for the family man to spend time with the kids or an opportunity for workaholics to fill the spare days with crossing things off the to-do list.

Global Eye -- Government Protocols

The Reverend Billy Graham has -- not to put too fine a point on it -- has lent his ""moral authority"" to various presidents and sucked from the teat of U.S. power for decades.


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