Wish Come True
The Japan Society continued its Yukio Mishima Centennial Series with a newly commissioned dance work titled “The Seven Bridges (Hashi-zukushi)” based on Yukio Mishima’s short story by that name originally published in 1956.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
A rehabilitated 117-year-old power plant situated on the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn, once a toxic waste site, now houses an amazing new contemporary arts hub—Powerhouse Arts. The 170,000 square foot campus opened its doors in 2022 with the mission to support art-makers with the necessary facilities for fabrication, workshops, public programs, and live performance. As of this fall 2025, Powerhouse has launched a bold international festival, Powerhouse: International; conceived, curated, and directed by Tony Award-winning producer and former BAM artistic director David Binder. During these times of contraction from drastic federal budget cuts to the arts and humanities in the United States, it feels revolutionary to welcome artists from around the world to experiment, provoke, connect, and transform with boundary-pushing work. The festival offers performances in theater, music, dance, as well as installations in its spacious Grand Hall, whose interior graffiti-covered brick walls literally shout with fearless creative energy.
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The Japan Society continued its Yukio Mishima Centennial Series with a newly commissioned dance work titled “The Seven Bridges (Hashi-zukushi)” based on Yukio Mishima’s short story by that name originally published in 1956.
PlusLondon is a changed city this week. The cold front has come, and daylight hours have plummeted. The city is rammed with tourists, buskers, and shoppers.
PlusThe Royal Ballet’s new restaging of “Everywhere We Go”—the Sufjan Stevens-scored ballet that secured Justin Peck his appointment as resident choreographer at New York City Ballet in 2014—challenges the company’s dancers to adopt a specifically American brand of pizzazz.
PlusQuadrophenia is about young men . . . and I do weep for young men still, because we are still struggling,” Pete Townshend—80 years old—playfully told Stephen Colbert while promoting the latest incarnation of the Who’s 1973 rock opera and 1979 film: “Quadrophenia: A Rock Ballet,” which ran last weekend at City Center.
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