Kyle Thomas Hemingway: The ephemera edit

An ongoing digital archive of 1,222 items (and counting) proving that I read, I saw, and I actually paid attention.

  • Nick Cave: Augment

    Now + There (Cyclorama at the Boston Center for the Arts)

    Installation view of Nick Cave, Augment, 2019
  • Jersey Boys

    Book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice / Featuring the music of The Four Seasons / Directed by Kevin P. Hill (North Shore Music Theatre)

    Curtain call at Jersey Boys
  • In the Green

    Music, lyrics, and book by Grace McLean / Based on the life of Hildegard von Bingen / Directed by Lee Sunday Evans (LCT3)

    Curtain call at In the Green
  • Moulin Rouge! The Musical

    Book by John Logan / Based on “Moulin Rouge!” by Baz Luhrmann and Craig Pearce / Directed by Alex Timbers (Al Hirschfeld Theatre)

    Curtain call at Moulin Rouge! The Musical
  • Naked Drag Queens Singing!

    The Kinsey Sicks (The Art House Provincetown)

    The Kinsey Sicks performs
  • The Band’s Visit

    Music and lyrics by David Yazbek / Book by Itamar Moses / Based on “The Band’s Visit” by Eran Kolirin / Directed by David Cromer (Providence Performing Arts Center)

    Curtain call at The Band’s Visit
  • Tea at Five

    by Matthew Lombardo / Directed by John Tillinger (Huntington Theatre)

    Faye Dunaway takes her opening night curtain call
  • Miss Saigon

    Music by Claude-Michel Schönberg / Lyrics by Alain Boublil and Richard Maltby Jr. / Book by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg / Based on “Madama Butterfly” by Giacomo Puccini / Directed by Laurence Connor (Broadway in Boston)

    Curtain call at Miss Saigon
  • The Tokyo Issue

    Kinfolk Magazine

    “On a macro level, Tokyo isn’t a beautiful city. It encompasses a riot of architectural styles in full embrace of kitsch. A postwar wooden yakitori joint might be shoehorned between a newly poured mansion of exposed concrete and a megawatt pachinko parlor of mirror chrome. Add to this lexicon vast forests of neon, fluorescent and LED signs, overlay a spaghetti canopy of power lines, crisscross it all with railways, ring roads and cramped lanes, and you get an idea of the city’s built environment. And don’t forget the people: 13.7 million of them, living in the heart of a greater metropolitan area of 38 million.”

  • The View UpStairs

    Music, lyrics, and book by Max Vernon / Directed by Paul Daigneault (Speakeasy Stage Company)

    Detail of the set