“The Hound of the Baskervilles” is a rapid-fire three-actor spoof of the Holmes mystery.
Your guide to Asheville's vibrant and diverse movie offerings.
“The Hound of the Baskervilles” is a rapid-fire three-actor spoof of the Holmes mystery.
A solo Michael Lilly is terrific in this unified feat of acting, writing and direction.
Whether you’re a #Fanastasia or not, you’ll fall for Lila Coogan as the maybe-heiress to Russian royalty in this impressively staged musical based on the 1997 animated feature Anastasia.
The NYC-based, Schoolkids Records artist discusses his new album Wherefore Art Thou? Songs Inspired by Nick Hornby's “Juliet, Naked.“
The indie rockers delivered a rare coin flip show where the opener rivals the headliner through notably different means.
Playwright Peter Morgan has a gift for compressing recent history into taut drama, and the NC Stage Co. production gives Frost/Nixon the immediacy and rapid pacing it needs.
The beloved musical receives a faithful, riotous production by a talented Asheville Community Theatre cast and crew.
The hilarious play about a murder mystery well-versed in Murphy’s Law is worth a trip to the Peace Center.
Dar He: The Story of Emmett Till is an astonishing one-man play at North Carolina Stage Co. recounting the notorious 1955 lynching of an African-American teenager with skill, passion and immediacy.
Johanna & Klara Söderberg atoned for their four-year Asheville hiatus with an expanded five-piece sound that nicely filled the brewery’s Meadow space.
At The Grey Eagle on Sept. 21, the creator of 2018’s best album to date discusses the evolution of her music over a year of steady touring.
Flat Rock Playhouse’s new comedy Always a Bridesmaid is a lot of fun, following four close-knit women who make good on a long-ago promise to participate in each other’s weddings.
Asheville Community Theatre does an admirable job with the NC premiere of Marc Palmieri’s play, but the esoteric material and underdeveloped characters prove problematic.
Once the Dublin-set time-travel romance’s concept grows clearer, it becomes quite moving.
Flat Rock Playhouse’s energetic and entertaining Mamma Mia! is sure to delight those who made it the theater’s most requested musical.
Flat Rock Playhouse’s Broadway on the Rock is a speedy and often thrilling tour of nearly 75 years of theater history.
The NYC rockers have one of the year’s best albums in the Danger Mouse-produced Wide Awake, but its sonic richness doesn’t yet translate well to the stage.
Under the direction of Jerry Crouch, Asheville Community Theatre’s production has a down-to-earth quality and a busload of great musical numbers.