Extracurriculars

Listings by category: Seasonal Theater Film Libraries Exhibitions Nature and Science Music Seasonal • March 18, at 2 p.m....

Listings by category:



Seasonal

• March 18, at 2 p.m.
www.boxoffice.harvard.edu; 617-496-2222
Jane Goodall speaks at Sanders Theatre, receives an award, and then signs copies of Dale Peterson’s Jane Goodall: The Woman Who Redefined Man.

• March 25 at 2 p.m.
www.boxoffice.harvard.edu; 617-496-2222
Sanders Theatre
Longfellow Bicentennial Gala
The Boston Landmarks Orchestra celebrates the poet’s 200th birthday with Julian Wachner’s setting of “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere” (see page 84).

• May 3-6
www.fas.harvard.edu/arts; 617-495-8699/76
It’s the annual Arts First undergraduateperformance fair. Composer John Adams ’69, M.A. ’71, is the Arts Medalist.

 

Theater

The American Repertory Theatre
www.amrep.org; 617-547-8300

• Through March 24
The Dickens classic, Oliver Twist.

 


Film

The Harvard Film Archive
https://hcl.harvard.edu/hfa; 617-495-4700
Visit the website for complete listings.


• March 16-21
March Rhapsody: Selected Films of Ann Hui (a Hong Kong filmmaker).


• April 20-21
The Night of Truth, by Burkina Faso director Fanta Régina Nacro, who will be present to receive an award for her work.

 

Libraries

www.hcl.harvard.edu/libraries

Houghton Library 617-496-3359

• Through April 1
Leonard Bernstein’s Boston explores the composer’s local roots.

• Through April 24
Public Poet, Private Man: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow at 200 highlights the poet’s effort to expand the international dimension of American literature.

Pusey Library 617-495-2413

• Through March 15
Shorelines: Mapping Coastal Massachusetts traces the cartographic history of the region, including some crude early drawings of the land.

• Through April 27
Demons, Fairies, and Clowns: The Spell of Victorian Pantomime. Artwork, manuscripts, prints, and programs illustrate age-old traditions.

 

Exhibitions

Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology
www.peabody.harvard.edu; 617-495-1027


• Opening April 11
Vanished Kingdoms: The Wulsin Photographs of Tibet, China, and Mongolia, 1921–1925

• Continuing: Imazighen! Beauty and Artisanship in Berber Life, which features artifacts from this North African population that have never before been displayed.


Harvard Museum of Natural History
www.hmnh.harvard.edu; 617-495-1027

• Continuing: Echoes in the Ice: Collages of Polar Explorers. Artist Rik van Glintenkamp depicts Arctic and Antarctic explorations over four centuries.

Fogg Art Museum
617-495-9400/9422

• Opening April 7
The Last Ruskinians: Charles Eliot Norton, Charles Herbert Moore, and Their Circle explores John Ruskin’s influence on a select group of American watercolorists.


Sackler Museum
617-495-9400/9422

• Through April 8
Cultivating Virtue: Botanical Motifs and Symbols in East Asian Art. Learn why the pine, bamboo, and Chinese plum are referred to as “Three Friends of Winter” in Chinese art and literature.

 

Nature and Science

The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
www.cfa.harvard.edu/events.html; 617-495-7461
Phillips Auditorium, 60 Garden Street
Stargaze and learn about the planets on the third Thursday of every month (March 15 and April 19). Free and open to the public.

 

Music

Sanders Theatre
www.boxoffice.harvard.edu; 617-496-2222
All concerts begin at 8 p.m.

• March 16
Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum celebrates its thirty-fifth anniversary with a program of twentieth-century American choral works.

• April 21
The “Pre-Frosh Special Concert” of Renaissance and recent folk music, as well as Harvardiana, showcases the Harvard Glee Club, Radcliffe Choral Society, and the Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum.

• April 27
The 150-voice Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus presents “War and Repentance,” featuring Arnold Schoenberg’s Kol Nidre and Ralph Vaughan Williams’s testament to peace, Dona Nobis Pacem, which includes a setting of texts by Walt Whitman.

 

Events listings also appear in the University Gazette.

Most popular

Two Years of Doxxing at Harvard

What happens when students are publicly named and shamed for their views?

‘Passengers’ at A.R.T. Blends Acrobatics with Einstein’s Relativity

Review: Quantum mechanics meets circus arts at the American Repertory Theater’s performance

Peabody Museum Removes Native American Funerary Objects

Responds to federal rules requiring tribal consultation and consent

Explore More From Current Issue

Book cover of "Black Moses" by Caleb Gayle with subtitle about ambition and the fight for a Black state.

Civil Rights in the American West

A new book chronicles one man’s quest for a Black state.

Johnston Gate

Your Views on Harvard’s Standoff, Antisemitism, and More

Readers comment on the controversial July-August cover, authoritarianism, and scientific research.

Brandon Terry, wearing a blue suit, standing before The Embrace, a large bronze sculpture of intertwined arms in Boston Common.

A New Narrative of Civil Rights

Political philosopher Brandon Terry’s vision of racial progress