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Jul 24, 2007

Zehra Fazal Shines @ The Fringe Festival

“If I do my job as an actor, you won’t notice that I’m South Asian or that I’m a woman, or even that I’m playing one of the most controversial political figures of all time. I’m portraying a person at a crossroads struggling with a difficult decision.” So says Zehra Fazal (pictured right) of her striking portrayal of Adolf Hitler in her self-produced, one-woman adaptation of Yukio Mishima’s play, My Friend Hitler, currently running at…

Jan 16, 2007

Smoking Ban Roundup: Good News, Bad News

Two weeks into the D.C. smoking ban, and we’ve got news, both good and bad, to report. Smoking Bans are Fleeting: This month’s issue of The Atlantic brings us news that will be music to the ears of the District’s disgruntled smokers. According to the magazine, smoking bans have a long and rich history — and are usually overturned. Whether Pope Urban VIII’s proclamation of a worldwide smoking ban in 1624 or Adolf Hitler’s German…

Aug 18, 2006

Overheard in D.C.: Calling All History Majors

In light of this momentous weekend in movie history, we here at DCist would like to take a brief look back at some of the seminal events in moving pictures. Ever since the dawn of the 20th century, the transmission of images on celluloid has captivated people around the world. Silent films, such as Georges Melies’ Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon), Sergei Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin and Charlie Chaplin’s varied oeuvre…

Jul 17, 2006

Reader, Meet Author

MONDAY Politics and Prose welcomes Ali Ansari, who will be discussing his book Confronting Iran. We’ve not read the book, but we’d hazard a guess that the strategies offered by the author get a good deal more nuanced than something along the lines of whining “We got to get them to stop doing this shit.” 5015 Connecticut Avenue, NW., at 7 p.m. TUESDAY It’s not said often enough, but historical accounts of great naval battles…

Jun 27, 2006

Nothing To Re-Arrange In Picasso’s Closet

Plenty of writers have pondered what would have happend if the rule of Adolf Hitler had taken a different, perhaps even more horrific turn (Phllip Roth’s The Plot Against America comes to mind). The latest in this sort of “What If?” series comes from playwright Ariel Dorfman (most famous for Death And The Maiden, his meditation on vengeance), who has re-imagined the life of artist Pablo Picasso to have ended decades earlier, by the hands…

 
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