A few weeks ago, months of research and translation came to life for Eleanor Beyreis ’25, when her adaptation of the French play “Gabriel” debuted. But Beyreis’ love for singing, acting and the arts goes back much further.
In “The Wizard of Oz” (1939), beneath a pair of pigtails and a blue gingham dress sat one of Hollywood’s most famous heels, graced by none other than Judy Garland. Dorothy’s most famous accessory (besides Toto), which sold for a …
There are few works as unsettling as “The Republic.” Not because of its complexity or reputation but because it refuses to let us hide from the hardest questions: What is justice? Is it even possible? And what kind of life …
As the Oscars quickly approach, many in the film world are directing their attention to blockbusters like “The Substance” and “The Brutalist.” This week, members of the Bowdoin community got a taste of a very different side of what film …
Last Saturday, a crowd of literary enthusiasts gathered in the entry pavilion of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art (BCMA) for a reception celebrating “Dead Writers,” a podcast created and hosted by Associate Professor of Africana Studies and English Tess …
Last Friday, on Valentine’s Day, two groups kicked off the spring student band scene with performances at the Pub. Far From Juno, a band of juniors, reunited for the first time on stage after three of their members—Reynaldo Fuentez ’26, …
On February 6, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art (BCMA) opened “Poetic Truths: Hawthorne, Longfellow and American Visual Culture, 1840-1880,” an exhibition focused on Bowdoin alumni Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Nathaniel Hawthorne and their influence on the arts. This exhibition, …
On Wednesday, the Music Department and the Department of Classics welcomed Joe Goodkin, a Chicago-based musician and composer of “The Blues of Achilles,” an award-winning musical adaptation of “The Iliad.” The album is a collection of 17 original songs, arranged …
Fernanda Rodas ’27 doesn’t need words to communicate: She has dance.
“Movement has become another language for me,” Rodas said. “It’s fun to use it to regulate my emotions, and it’s also fun to just kind of delve into my …
Aly Spaltro, also known by her artist name Lady Lamb, performed at a rally for the Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) encampment this past week. Spaltro is originally from Brunswick and said the opportunity to connect with this protest …