Issue 4353. Last Updated: 03/19/2010

09/06/2002

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Much in Store on Bolshoi's Two Stages

The inauguration of a new second stage, the return of three important works long absent from its operatic repertoire and guest appearances by nine foreign opera and ballet companies feature among the highlights of the Bolshoi Theater's 2002-03 season.

Citywide Culture Festival

40 music and dance troupes from all seven federal Russian districts will be on hand to entertain the 150,000 people expected to attend the ten-day All-Russian Festival of National Culture.

Book Fair Fun for Kids, Adults

Moscow's 15th annual international book fair will help mark International Children's Book Day on Saturday with both musical and theatrical performances and a 200-kilogram cake.

She Staged the Bolshoi's Season Opener

Beginning its 227th season on an unusual footing, the Bolshoi Theater has engaged American Francesca Zambello to direct Giacomo Puccini's final opera, ""Turandot.""

When the Characters Don't Live Up to The Craftsmanship

With an audience base about as broad as the Russian steppe, Boris Akunin's ""Erast Fandorin"" at the National Youth Theater is one of those shows that simply cannot miss.

He's the Town's Telephone Torch Singer

If you turn right after exiting the Dobryninskaya metro station, look up and listen carefully you may just hear the faint sound of singing: Andrei Istokov is hard at work.

Cook's Corner -- Watermelon Pudding

Have more watermelon than you know what to do with? After reading this week's exciting installment of Cook's Corner, you'll know how to put it to use.

Bead of the Adria Lives Up to Its Name

Situated on one of the most breathtaking stretches of coastline along the Adriatic Sea, the ancient city of Dubrovnik was once hailed as ""an imagination etched in stone.""

'Mad House' Brings Chechnya to Festival

As the struggles between Russia and Chechnya hit the headlines again, director Andrei Konchalovsky's latest film calls on moviegoers to feel the tragedy of the war and the desire for escape.

Venice Sees Premiere of Film About Post-Soviet Dark Side

Lukas Moodysson's ""Lilya 4-Ever,"" a film about child abuse, prostitution and suicide, could make Eastern European girls dreaming of a better life in the West think twice.

City Grill Better Than Ever After Makeover

City Grill has re-opened its doors after almost a year's renovation. With a new look and a new menu, the restaurant had changed in every way apart from its name.

Loss and Love: A Familiar Tale, Retold

Fairy tales, which end in comfort -- the listener drifting toward sleep, the characters sent off to the land of happily ever after -- originate in darker emotions: dread, loneliness, the primal fear of being left behind.


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