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Victoria Looseleaf

Victoria Looseleaf

Victoria Looseleaf is an award-winning international arts journalist, having contributed many hundreds of articles to the Los Angeles Times, KCET Artbound, Dance Magazine, Performances Magazine and the New York Times, among other outlets. In addition, she publishes a blog, The Looseleaf Report, adjudicates dances festivals, and frequently moderates pre-concert talks. Looseleaf has also filed datelines from around the world, including such cultural hotspots as Abu Dhabi, Vienna, Tel Aviv, Buenos Aires, Berlin and Amsterdam. Her novella in verse, "Isn’t It Rich?" is currently being adapted for the stage.

Victoria Looseleaf
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Sarah Elgart's site-specific projects in Los Angeles have transformed bus terminals, airports, and museums into veritable action paintings.
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The inaugural exhibition of the Los Angeles Poverty Department is the first in a series of shows about activist initiatives that have, over the years, preserved Skid Row.
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The Heidi Duckler Dance Theatre launches its 30-year anniversary celebration with a re-imagining their car-centric work, first performed in 1992, as "Parts and Labor, Redux."
Sussan Deyhim, a performance artist and activist born in Iran and living in exile for 30 years, premieres a new performance, "The House is Black," at Royce Hall on January 23.
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To celebrate the 10-year anniversary of Walt Disney Concert Hall's organ, the L.A. Philharmonic will hold a number of concerts this season to highlight the 40-ton instrument.
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An underground actress, writer, and figurative painter, Mary Woronov reflects on her career, including her influential time with Andy Warhol.
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CEO and President of Los Angeles Opera Christopher Koelsch is helping to establish the organization as a leading arts institution for the 21st Century.
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The ancient Greek drama "Persians," staged at the Getty Villa's amphitheatre through Sept. 27, resonates with today's audiences tuned to the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East.
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Mike M. Mollett, a part of the Los Angeles art scene for some 40 years, founded L.A. Mudpeople, a troupe that appears on walkabouts in diverse parts of the city.
Taylor Negron, a character actor and comedian best known for his roles in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High" and "The Last Boy Scout," died of cancer on Saturday. He was 57. We profiled Negron in May when his paintings were on view in a solo exhibition at ...
The L.A. Dance Project, founded by Benjamin Millepied, take to the recently refurbished stage of the Theatre at the Ace Hotel for three nights beginning Feb. 20.
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"Play Dead," written by Todd Robbins, who has ingested some 5,000 light bulbs over the course of his career, and Ilusionist Teller, currently runs at the Geffen Playhouse.
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