Here are the top five comment generating posts of the past week:
How the 'Encanto' Costumes Came Together
www.elle.com: There’s no phrase that captures the zeitgeist quite like “We Don’t Talk About Bruno.” For anyone living under a rock—or a magical house, for that matter—the much-memed line comes from Disney’s Encanto, which became a streaming sensation over the holidays and even secured three Oscar nominations. With a soundtrack helmed by Lin-Manuel Miranda and a story to tenderize the toughest of hearts, the film, which centers on a large Colombian family with supernatural powers and the one daughter without them, has become the obsession of toddlers, parents, and TikTokkers alike.‘It’s about subtle, realistic flavor’: ‘Little Women’ costume designers illustrate time periods, character growth
WKUHerald.com: “Little Women,” the Broadway musical, will be performed at Van Meter Hall on April 1-3 as a co-production between the WKU Theatre and Dance Department and the WKU Department of Music. The show tells the story of the four March sisters, centering around Jo, the writer, illustrating how they grew into a post-Civil War America while maintaining their familial bond. The show switches between both the present as well as flashback scenes, which creates the need for costumes to differentiate not only between the characters, but between time periods.Scientists Built an Augmented Reality Tool to Resurrect Extinct Animals for Museums
www.thedailybeast.com: Scientists are working on ways to bring extinct animals like the wooly mammoth or the passenger pigeon back from the dead. But these won’t be animals paraded around in a zoo—for the rest of us in the general public, we won’t be able to glimpse these ancient critters in the flesh. For something like that, we turn to one of the hottest buzzwords in tech right now: augmented reality."The Double Life"
The Theatre Times: There are more people in the world who are either functionally bilingual or multilingual than those who are monolingual. While many English people go through life assuming the world will be translated for them, that there will always be someone nearby who speaks your language, it is more common for people to hop from tongue to tongue as the situation requires.Some Russian performers speak out against Putin and the Ukraine invasion
NPR: In the midst of the Ukraine crisis, a number of Russian performing artists are speaking out against Russian President Vladimir Putin. Many of them come from the worlds of classical music, ballet and theater — revered art forms in a country that prizes its high-arts heritage.
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