Arts & Entertainment
This Week’s Arts Hot Hits & Hidden Jewels (Feb. 25)
Darren Criss, Fantasia Live and much more from CultureCapital.com

NSO Pops: Broadway Today with Darren Criss & Betsy Wolfe
Feb 26-Feb 27. The Kennedy Center.
For more info click HERE.
Broadway powerhouses Darren Criss and Betsy Wolfe team up for a hit parade of fresh favorites from The Last Five Years, The Book of Mormon, Frozen, and more along with songs from Cabaret, Company, and other modern classics.
Carmen: An Afro-Cuban Jazz Musical
Thru Mar 6. Olney Theatre.
For more info click HERE.
Olney turns Bizet’s passion-fueled opera into a sexy, swinging AfroCuban Jazz musical, moving the action from 1820s Spain to Cuba in 1958, on the verge of revolution.
Kabarett & Cabaret
Thru Mar 6. In Series at Source Theatre.
For more info click HERE.
The 1930s Nazi persecution brought a flood of artists to America: Kurt Weill, Marlene Dietrich, Frederick Hollander, Erich Korngold, Arnold Schoenberg, and many others. They, in turn, brought Expressionism and the dark, raunchy world of the Kabarett to this continent. This show features iconic songs like Falling in Love Again and Lola, plus forgotten Berliner and Viennese cabaret gems, and their American ‘offspring,’ such as Speak Low.
Disney Fantasia: Live in Concert
Feb 27. GMU Center for the Arts.
For more info click HERE.
Enjoy favorite scenes from this groundbreaking film and its popular sequel, Disney Fantasia 2000, with a richness of sound that only a live orchestra can provide. Stunning Disney imagery appears on screen above the orchestra as it plays Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker Suite, Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony, Resphigi’s Pines of Rome, and Dukas’s unforgettable The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.
Celebrity News
Madonna announces release date for new album
‘Confessions II’ marks return to the dance floor
Pop icon Madonna on Wednesday announced that her 15th studio album will be released on July 3.
Titled “Confessions II,” the new album is a sequel to 2005’s “Confessions on a Dance Floor,” an Abba and disco-infused hit.
The new album reunites Madonna with producer Stuart Price, who also helmed the original “Confessions” album. It’s her first album of new material since 2019’s “Madame X.”
“We must dance, celebrate, and pray with our bodies,” Madonna said in a press release. “These are things that we’ve been doing for thousands of years — they really are spiritual practices. After all, the dance floor is a ritualistic space. It’s a place where you connect — with your wounds, with your fragility. To rave is an art. It’s about pushing your limits and connecting to a community of like-minded people,” continued the statement. “Sound, light, and vibration reshape our perceptions. Pulling us into a trance-like state. The repetition of the bass, we don’t just hear it but we feel it. Altering our consciousness and dissolving ego and time.”
Denali (@denalifoxx) of “RuPaul’s Drag Race” performed at Pitchers DC on April 9 for the Thirst Trap Thursday drag show. Other performers included Cake Pop!, Brooke N Hymen, Stacy Monique-Max and Silver Ware Sidora.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)














Arts & Entertainment
In an act of artistic defiance, Baltimore Center Stage stays focused on DEI
‘Maybe it’s a triple-down’
By LESLIE GRAY STREETER | I’m always tickled when people complain about artists “going political.” The inherent nature of art, of creation and free expression, is political. This becomes obvious when entire governments try to threaten it out of existence, like in 2025, when the brand-new presidential administration demanded organizations halt so-called diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programming or risk federal funding.
Baltimore Center Stage’s response? A resounding and hearty “Nah.” A year later, they’re still doubling down on diversity.
“Maybe it’s a triple-down,” said Ken-Matt Martin, the theater’s producing director, chuckling.
The rest of this article can be found on the Baltimore Banner’s website.
