Kyle Thomas Hemingway: The ephemera edit

An ongoing digital archive of 1,364 items (and counting) proving that I read, I saw, and I actually paid attention.

Collection

Boston

  • Vivaldi Virtuosi

    Handel and Haydn Society (NEC’s Jordan Hall)

  • Meet Vera Stark

    by Lynn Nottage / Directed by Summer L. Williams (Lyric Stage Company of Boston)

    “After years of neglect, someone saw fit to pull me out of a dusty old trunk.”

  • Lewis Black: The Rant Is Due

    Wang Theatre

  • The Sleeping Beauty

    Choreography by Marius Petipa / Music by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (Boston Ballet)

  • Stones in His Pockets

    by Marie Jones / Directed by Courtney O’Connor (Lyric Stage Company of Boston)

  • Così fan tutte

    Music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart / Libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte / Directed by Sir Thomas Allen (Boston Lyric Opera)

  • Beethoven Symphony No. 7

    Handel and Haydn Society (Symphony Hall)

  • All Kylián

    Choreography by Jirí Kylián (Boston Ballet)

  • Thoroughly Modern Millie

    Music by Jeanine Tesori / Lyrics by Dick Scanlan / Book by Richard Morris and Dick Scanlan / Based on “Thoroughly Modern Millie” by Richard Morris / Directed by Michael Susko (The Boston Conservatory)

  • The Lover

    by Harold Pinter / Directed by Olivia D’Ambrosio (Bridge Rep)

    “Frankness at all cost is essential for a happy marriage.”

  • Stravinsky and Haydn

    Boston Symphony Orchestra

  • Haydn in Paris

    Handel and Haydn Society (Symphony Hall)

  • Purcell The Indian Queen

    Music by Henry Purcell / Based on The Indian Queen by Sir Robert Howard (Handel and Haydn Society)

    Bass-baritone Jonathan Best delivering “The Frost Scene”
  • Verdi Requiem

    Boston Symphony Orchestra

  • Other Desert Cities

    by Jon Robin Baitz / Directed by Scott Edmiston (Speakeasy Stage Company)

  • Bach Christmas Oratorio

    Handel and Haydn Society

  • Our Town

    by Thornton Wilder / Directed by David Cromer (Huntington Theatre Company)

    “Oh, earth, you’re too wonderful for anybody to realize you.”

  • Handel Messiah

    Handel and Haydn Society (Symphony Hall)

    The view from backstage of the sold-out audience
  • The Nutcracker

    Choreography by Mikko Nissinen / Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (Boston Ballet)

    Curtain call at The Nutcracker
  • The Postcard Age

    Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

    Jean-Gabriel Domergue, L’Hiver Ă  Monte-Carlo, 1937