Skip to content

Local Entertainment

Nightmare really just a slow, bad dream

The fate of the Nightmare on Elm Street series is a good comparator with its main character and anti-hero Freddy Krueger — just when you think that it’s finally dead and gone and everyone can be happy, it pops up again, seemingly sustaine

No more baby steps

ArtWalk is back and a good way to describe it is that it's starting to burst at the seams, much to the delight of many outside of the art world. Businesses are noticing too.

Mystery dance at festival spurs children's imaginations

Once upon a time, in a town similar to yours and mine, a workaholic cobbler did not know magical creatures were stalking him.

The Gift haunts theatre patrons

Laughter relaxes the audience and creates a light-hearted unifying mood. The Gift, now playing at the Old Cycle Building on 118 Avenue, is not one of these shows.

Local Spotlight

What does an artistic director do when he creates a cash cow that boasts packed houses night after night? He finagles it into the next season, and that’s exactly what the Citadel Theatre’s Bob Baker did with Beauty and the Beast .

2011 celebration wants your help now

Everybody knows about St. Albert’s whole-hearted dedication to community support.

StArts Festival looking for one-act plays

Are you a closet playwright? Do you have several scripts tucked in your desk that might benefit from a workshop reading? If so, the St. Albert Cultivates the Arts Committee wants to see your dramatic gems.

It's fun but as frivolous as you can get

At first I thought that The A-Team movie somehow came to theatres earlier than its advertised release date of June 11.

Children's Festival needs volunteers

Snap on your seatbelts. The Northern Alberta International Children’s Festival is about to spring into warp drive. Or at least that’s the way it feels down at volunteer manager Nina Browton’s desk.

The art of design

It's called industrial decay, a trendy look that at first glance is incongruous with a glossy design exhibit. Once a row of tidy offices, the fourth floor of Edmonton's Birks Building is completely gutted, the L-shaped room a massive demolition scar.
push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks