Love of music drives faculty performances at fundraiser
By Brad Dountz | March 7, 2018Musical Feast helps raise money for scholarships, but almost no one is as excited as the faculty members performing.
Musical Feast helps raise money for scholarships, but almost no one is as excited as the faculty members performing.
Student Health Services is holding a video game, cosplay and mental health mini convention this week, complete with game stations, prizes and a panel of professors and local community leaders.
Arts and Culture writer Taylor Washington analyzes the nominees for some coveted Academy Awards; Washington offers who she thinks will win, who should win and who she wants to win.
USC student Claire Albrecht shares her experience performing the Bernstein MASS last year, adapted for her drum corps competition season.
The USC School of Music brings 250 performers — including singers, instrumentalists and a professional actor from Seattle — together to put on Leonard Bernstein's monumental MASS.
Director David Britt tackles the Vietnam War and pays tribute to the unsung American servicewomen who volunteered in his upcoming stage production.
Indie Grits Labs has broken off from The Nickelodeon to bring films, art projects, workshops and festivals to the Columbia community.
Even though society has taken important steps towards better body positivity, we still struggle to really accept ourselves. Read more for some practical everyday tips that will help you love and appreciate your body.
Fourth-year dancer Elaine Miller talks upcoming spring concert and reflects on her years at USC.
After a gun violence tragedy, communities often try to come together through artwork, but how effective is it?
Four teachers of the School of Music form a string quartet to perform the classics as well as modern string music.
Both entertaining and culturally significant, "Black Panther" lives up to its hype.
The Lexington County Chili Cook Off helps bring people together with chili and good times.
Legal marijuana is now a reality, so certain television shows have made it a point to make it a part of their content.
M.F.A. acting candidate Kimberly Gaughan investigates classic Hollywood glamour and its connections to Nazi Germany in her solo performance of a work she wrote and directed herself.
"Blade Runner 2049"'s box office failings have made its director claim that he will never make a film like it again. Now, the question is: What lesson will studio executives take away from the project?
Trustus Theatre hopes to uplift and entertain audiences Feb. 16 through Feb. 17 with its second rendition of "LOVE IS LOVE IS LOVE."