Entertainment
Magic At Dallas Love Field
Dallas Love Field’s Lead With Love last week presented its first live show in addition to its podcast. The show featured tricks by award-winning magicians Dal and Cinde Sanders on the airport’s performance stage.
(Read time: 1.5 minutes)
Fun Facts for Friday! Fall Food Festivals for You!
Food festivals are back for fall. Don’t miss these.
(Read time: 5.1 minutes)
Turtle Creek Chorale: ‘Broadway’s Back, Baby!’
The Turtle Creek Chorale is gearing up for Broadway’s Back, Baby!, a the chorus’ first performance dedicated to hits from Broadway in more than a decade.
(Read time: 3.2 minutes)
Finally, a Friday Food Round Up
Want to know where to grab grub this weekend? Kersten Rettig has some recommendations.
(Read time: 7 minutes)
Dallas Comedy Club: New Joke Joint Opens This Week
Will the new Dallas Comedy Club be awesome, you ask?
(Read time: 3.9 minutes)
Dallas Does Dante
September marks the 700th anniversary of the death of Dante Alighieri, and SMU is hosting a Dante Festival through Sept. 2.
(Read time: 4.1 minutes)
State Fair COVID-19 Safety Guidelines
With about 30 days to go until the opening of the fair, the State Fair of Texas publicized its latest COVID-19 health and safety guidelines this week.
(Read time: 2.5 minutes)
‘Real Housewives of Dallas’ Not Returning In 2022
Real Housewives of Dallas won’t be returning next year, Bravo confirmed. The franchise debuted in 2016.
(Read time: 1.7 minutes)
Henry Ossawa Tanner Exhibit Comes to DMA
The Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) will display two works by American artist Henry Ossawa Tanner, including The Thankful Poor.
(Read time: 4.1 minutes)
Crevoshay’s Nature-Inspired Creations to Open at Perot
Showcasing the jewelry creations of renowned designer extraordinaire Paula Crevoshay, The Shape of Matter – Through An Artist’s Eye exhibit will open at the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in October.
(Read time: 2.2 minutes)
Dallas Museum of Art Organizes Retrospective for Artist Octavio Medellín
The Dallas Museum of Art is organizing the first-ever museum retrospective for Octavio Medellín (1907-1999), an influential Mexican American artist and teacher whose work helped shape the Texas art scene for six decades.
(Read time: 4.7 minutes)