Miami University theater department presents ‘Into the Woods’
Miami University’s theater department presented its annual spring musical from May 1-7. This year, students performed “Into the Woods.”
20 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Miami University’s theater department presented its annual spring musical from May 1-7. This year, students performed “Into the Woods.”
When I was in elementary school, I began writing for the first time on my white Microsoft laptop. I would sit criss-cross-applesauce on my couch and rapidly type fictional stories about the life I wish I had. I had an expansive imagination and a strong inclination to daydream instead of living in reality.
On Wednesday, April 29, people gathered in a Shideler Hall lecture room to watch “Bittersweet: Black College Life at a Predominately White Institution.”
Every semester, the dreaded time for course registration haunts the lives of already stressed college students.
Stage Left, a theater organization on campus fully led by Miami University students, presents a musical every semester. This spring, they performed “Be More Chill” over the weekend of April 24-26.
Miami University’s Vision Dance Company (VDC) is a student-led organization on campus bringing dancers together to choreograph and perform. Established in 2001, they are “Miami’s most versatile dance organization.”
Attending a college-level basketball game and seeing seas of empty seats and silent crowds is not the usual experience one would recount. Yet this is typical of attending a Miami University women’s sports game.
Director Kristoffer Borgli did not miss when he titled this movie “The Drama” — because there is certainly drama.
From cable television to YouTube Shorts, late-night shows have touched audiences everywhere.
Season four of “Bridgerton” was released in multiple installments, but was available in its entirety on Netflix by Feb. 26.
On Saturday, Feb. 28, the laughter and shouts from Pearson 128 could be heard throughout the building.
In 1958, a National Culture Center was created in our nation’s capital. In 1964, the building became a standing memorial for the assassinated president, John F. Kennedy, due to his aid in the program’s funding. This year, President Donald Trump officially closed the building for two years of “renovation.”
February is Black History Month. It’s always important to highlight movies, music, books and art that celebrate black culture and heritage. With the Academy Awards season also rapidly approaching, there is a standout film that sits at the intersection: Ryan Coogler’s “Sinners.”
Chick-fil-A officially opened in Armstrong Student Center in the fall semester of the 2025-2026 school year. It replaced the old location of Delicious Without, an allergen-friendly dining option. These healthier options are still available in the dining halls, despite the main location’s closure.
It is not novel news that Miami University is planning to demolish Millett Hall and build a new recreational arena elsewhere. A fact that is again — not new, but still alarming — is the plan is to build this new arena in place of Cook Field.
The monstrous green stereotype of “Frankenstein” is efficiently disproven in Guillermo del Toro’s 2025 reimagining. However, as beautiful as this movie was, I struggled to see through the glaringly-obvious male lens it was filmed through.
Growing up, a core location in my life was the local public library. My grandma would pack a bag and let my brother and me roam free through the shelves. The kids’ section had puzzles and puppets. I would find a book about fairies or princesses, nestle into a beanbag and immerse myself in the fantasy world.
Educational environments are currently under attack. Recently, under President Donald Trump’s administration, monumental changes to academic policies and student treatment have occurred. A specific example is the new guidelines regarding sexual misconduct cases within a school.
Popular culture is an entity that is continuously evolving as time goes on. Music has a tremendous influence on culture, and they often change together.
Our phones are the killers of conversation.