All Day

Art for the American Home: Grant Wood’s Lithographs

Reynolda House Museum of American Art 2250 Reynolda Road, Winston-Salem

In 1934, the Regionalist artist Grant Wood made an agreement with Associated American Artists (AAA) in New York to create a series of lithographs. Wood, the creator of Reynolda’s iconic 1936 painting “Spring Turning,” ultimately produced 19 lithographs, about a quarter of his mature work. His consummate drafting skills made him a natural for the medium. The AAA produced the lithographs in editions of 250 and sold them for $5 to $10 each. The opportunity to create affordable art during the Great Depression appealed to the artist. This small exhibition will focus on Wood’s narrative lithographs (“Sultry Night,” “Honorary Degree,” “Shrine Quartet,” “The Midnight Alarm”) and still lifes. The colored still life lithographs of fruits, vegetables and flowers represent the fecundity of Iowa’s farmland.

$18

STAY IN THE LIGHT: WORKS BY CHARLES EDWARD WILLIAMS

Cameron Art Museum 3201 S. 17th Street, Wilmington

In Stay in the Light, South Carolina artist Charles Edward Williams draws inspiration from historical photography of the Civil Rights movement, offering a contemporary response to social and political issues of the past and present. His paintings and installation works incorporate a strong use of color and gesture, inviting a focus on human emotion and our connectedness and commonality. Stay in the Light includes new work created for this exhibition, as well as work from Williams’ Sun and Light series. Born in Georgetown, SC, he currently lives in Durham, NC. A graduate of Savannah College of Art and Design, Charles Edward Williams is a supported recipient of the Andy Warhol Visual Arts Grant. He teaches at North Carolina Central University where he is the SunTrust Endowed Faculty Chair and Associate Professor of Drawing and Painting.

$14

From Alpha to Creation: Religion in the Deep South

Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) 750 Marguerite Drive, Winston-Salem

For the first time, the North Carolina Museum of Art (in Raleigh) and the North Carolina Museum of Art, Winston-Salem (formerly SECCA), present a shared exhibition on both campuses, bringing awareness of global artists to audiences across our state. Examining place and theology from North Carolina to eastern Texas, From Alpha to Creation: Religion in the Deep South explores the ideological relationships among various belief systems, highlighting the blending of spiritual practices throughout our daily lives. The exhibition distinguishes itself from antiquated or heavily stereotyped studies of Southern culture that often disregard our complexities. It instead focuses on the spiritual innovations that allow many of us to maintain a dedicated relationship with our religious heritages, from Abrahamic denominations to composite belief systems like Hoodoo. For many artists throughout the exhibition—who originated or worked extensively in the region—the South represents a unique context for religious expression reflected by our racial, political, and economic structures. Opening Reception: Thursday, February 15, 2024 @ 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm | Potter Gallery

Free

Hildur Ásgeirsdóttir Jónsson: Infinite Space, Sublime Horizons

Bechtler Museum of Modern Art 420 South Tryon Street, Charlotte

Born and raised in Iceland, Hildur Ásgeirsdóttir Jónsson (b. 1963) has spent the last 30 years developing a unique practice that melds the disciplines of painting, weaving, and drawing, creating an innovative and labor-intensive body of work that blurs the boundaries between abstraction and representation, and fine art and craft. Based on the captivating landscape and skies of Iceland, her work is deeply rooted in environmental subjects and concerns while also contributing to art historical discourses on landscape painting and postwar abstraction. Organized by the Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art at Pepperdine University, this exhibition will feature large-scale paintings created on a loom and more intimate watercolors and drawings.

$9

On the Horizon: Landscapes from the Collection

Bechtler Museum of Modern Art 420 South Tryon Street, Charlotte

This exhibition features work by nearly twenty artists from the museum's collection that explore diverse approaches to depicting landscapes. Artists like Isabel Quintanilla, Markus Raetz, and Italo Valenti portray idyllic scenes; in contrast, Paul Harcharik explores the grim impact of industrialization. Other artists including Nicolas de Staël, Maria Helena Vieira da Silva, and Zao Wou-Ki push the boundaries of traditional landscapes with wholly abstract compositions. With works spanning over fifty years, On the Horizon: Landscapes from the Collection delves into artists' varied engagements with the natural world and evolving environments.

$9

The Work of Their Hands: American Quiltmaking

Cameron Art Museum 3201 S. 17th Street, Wilmington

The anchor work of The Work of Their Hands: American Quiltmaking is a tulip quilt made 170 years ago by an now unknown, enslaved woman in North Carolina. Through her masterful stitchwork and time-honored design, this unknown artist sewed a story of strength and perseverance.   Spinning forward from this quilt and its practice, The Work of Their Hands:  American Quiltmaking explores the continuing legacy of quilt-making and the evolution of textile art, starting with traditional quilts made for bed coverings to contemporary fabric artworks by artists including Brittney Boyd Bullock, Celeste Butler, Robin Cowley, Michael Cummings, Gee’s Bend quilters, Michael James, Precious Lovell, Katie Pasquini Masopust, Carolyn Mazloomi, Mary Pal, Hattie Schmidt, Beverly Smith, The Advocacy Project, and others.

$15

Arts Access Gallery Opening Exhibition: WOVEN STRANGERS

Arts Access Gallery 444 S. Blount St, Suite 115B, Raleigh

The new Arts Access Gallery is dedicated to showcasing and selling the work of artists with disabilities — the only one in the region. The small, intimate space is the perfect venue to immerse yourself in a rotating slate of different artists throughout the year. Visitors will also get a chance to participate in artist talkbacks and related events. For its grand opening, the Art Access Gallery is hosting well-known Raleigh based artist Jean Gray Mohs’ exhibition “Woven Strangers”. Her 15-piece collection of wood and acrylic art will be available for view beginning March 1. Mohs, who had a double lung transplant, often contrasts materials like maple plywood and waxed thread in her pieces which reflect the interplay of strength and fragility in the face of her chronic illness.

Free

North Carolina Museum of Art: To Take Shape and Meaning: Form and Design in Contemporary American Indian Art

North Carolina Museum of Art 2110 Blue Ridge Road, Raleigh

To Take Shape and Meaning: Form and Design in Contemporary American Indian Art features works by 75 Indigenous artists from over 50 tribes throughout the United States and Canada, including eight from North Carolina. The exhibition, composed exclusively of 3-D artworks, includes baskets made of blown glass, cars transformed into works of art, and cutting

$14 – $20

North Carolina Museum of Art: Community Threads: A Maker Space

North Carolina Museum of Art 2110 Blue Ridge Road, Raleigh

Community Threads is presented in conjunction with Layered Legacies: Quilts from the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts at Old Salem. In this community quilt installation and maker space, visitors are invited to design and create quilt squares of their own design from Friday to Sunday, 10 am to 5 pm. Local artists Aliyah Bonnette, Patrizia Ferreira, and Michelle Wilkie, whose fabric works are on view, will sew the squares together to make one large community artwork. The room is stocked with 10-by-10-inch quilting squares and smaller colored shapes. Visitors can glue shapes to the quilting squares and leave them for our local artists to use. Bonnette, Ferreira, and Wilkie will sew, embroider, and attach all the squares to make one large community artwork. Visit multiple weekends to watch the community quilt progress. You may see your art incorporated and on the walls of the NCMA!  

Gallery C: Best of NC 2024

Gallery C 540 North Blount Street, Raleigh

Gallery owner, art historian, and North Carolina native Charlene Newsom employs her broad knowledge of NC art to curate an extensive collection celebrating the best and brightest NC artists of past and present. The show includes landmark pieces by influential North Carolina artists. Some of the biggest names and most important North Carolina art from the 19th and 20th century are included in this year’s show. This much anticipated Gallery C exhibition occurs every year. This year marks the 21st anniversary! Opening Reception: Friday, April 5, 6-8pm

SECCA: David Gilbert: Flutter

Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) 750 Marguerite Drive, Winston-Salem

SECCA (North Carolina Museum of Art, Winston-Salem) is proud to present Flutter, an exhibition of photography by Los Angeles-based artist David Gilbert, on view in SECCA's Main Gallery. Flutter marks the artist's first institutional solo exhibition, providing the unique opportunity to experience twelve years of Gilbert's work in one setting. David Gilbert (American, b. 1982) creates photographs that flirt with impermanence. The artist constructs playful sculptures, backdrops, and scenes from found materials, photographing them in distinctive views and dramatic natural light. The resulting pictures capture spontaneous moments, paired with lightheartedness and sensitivity. An opening reception with the artist and curator will be held Thursday, April 18 from 6–8pm.

Free

CAMERON ART MUSEUM: Thomas Sayre: Four Walls

Cameron Art Museum 3201 S. 17th Street, Wilmington

Thomas Sayre:  Four Walls features new and never exhibited works by artist Thomas Sayre. Each of the four large-scale pieces in the installation questions the belief systems and symbols that underpin the ideals of church, nation and creation. Made of materials that include tar, smoke, fabric gowns, gunshots, welding material, earth and fire, these works invite visitors to draw close and experience the messiness of making, and by analogy, to bear witness to the ways that life invades, entangles, and tarnishes us. Opening Night with American Artist Thomas Sayre Friday, April 26, 6-9 PM Thomas Sayre Artist Talk Saturday, April 27, 11 AM

$5 – $15

The Beautiful Project: Arts & Activism Apprentices: (RE)CLAMATION

Durham Arts Council 120 Morris Street, Durham

(RE)CLAMATION explores photography as a catalyst for radical healing, inviting viewers to explore the reclamation of self through art as a way to confront harmful experiences, affirm your worth, and reclaim your power! This exhibition is supported by The Durham Arts Council, a division of the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources and is part of The Durham Arts Council Exhibit Program. The Beautiful Project’s (TBP) Arts & Activism Apprentices are a group of trained Black girls and nonbinary youth activists who use photography, visual arts, writing and care to explore cultural activism within their artistry.  As TBP commemorates 20 years of empowering Black girls, gender-expansive youth, and women to assertively claim their own narratives through storytelling, we celebrate the healing power of art.

Ongoing

Good Impressions: Portraits Across Three Centuries from Reynolda and Wake Forest

Reynolda House Museum of American Art 2250 Reynolda Road, Winston-Salem

Portraits are often taken at face value—as accurate representations of a person’s appearance, sometimes removed by decades or centuries. But portraits are often the products of delicate negotiations between artist and subject. Sometimes they flatter, exaggerating the sitter’s beauty or rich attire. Sometimes they capture the subject engaged in his or her occupation, whether pausing during study or painting in his or her studio. Sometimes they celebrate an auspicious occasion, such as a recent engagement or the imminent birth of a child. This exhibition features three centuries of portraits of men and women, Black and White, solitary and companionate, classic and modern.

$18

Intangible Words by Marge Loudon Moody

Bill and Patty Gorelick Galleries, Cato Campus 8120 Grier Road Cato III, Cato Campus, Charlotte

‘Intangible Words’ broadly investigates environments inspired by Moody’s travels and imaginations. Through the use of bright colors, abstract forms and continuous reworking of the composition, Moody creates the “essential” feeling of certain environments. Non-representational imagery utilizes the “essential” nature in order to illuminate the unseen or intangible spirit of the subject. “Subject matter may serve as metaphor for intangible ideas. The work examines boundaries, addresses the fragility of existence, of presence, of absence, and of memory,” says Moody.

FREE

Fragments by Tina Alberni

Bill and Patty Gorelick Galleries, Cato Campus 8120 Grier Road Cato III, Cato Campus, Charlotte

Alberni uses her new exhibition ‘Fragments’ to illustrate the narrative of fragmented lives and irreversible damage both visually and physically. In contrast to the hopeless narrative of destruction, Alberni seeks to use her artwork to create a positive, hopeful spirit for the future. Alberni assembles objects and layers in her work in a brightly colored, harmonious fashion, which invites the viewer in for a deeper contemplation of each composition.

Free

A Celebration of Art featured artists Mario Loprete, Sheridan Hathaway and Andres Palacios

Bill and Patty Gorelick Galleries, Cato Campus 8120 Grier Road Cato III, Cato Campus, Charlotte

Works from the College’s collection exhibit a variety of works from former Central Piedmont students with a special highlight on Loprete, a mixed media artist, and ceramic artists Hathaway and Palacios. “A Celebration of Art” is certain to deliver a diverse selection of 2D and 3D artwork for the 2024 year.

FREE

Land/mark featuring artist Kenny Nguyen

Central Piedmont’s Dove Gallery will host a new exhibition by esteemed Vietnamese artist, Kenny Nguyen. Born in Vietnam, and with a background in fashion design, Nguyen exhibits his work across the US and internationally.

 

As a Vietnamese immigrant now living and working as an artist in the United States, much of Nguyen’s work explores ideas related to cultural identity, displacement, reconciling with the past and the artistic fusion of Vietnamese and American cultures.

 

Nguyen uses silk, in tribute to his Vietnamese culture, deconstructs it into strips, and then dips it in paint. Thousands of these strips creates sculptural works of art that Nguyen calls “deconstructed paintings.” The action of deconstruction and reconstruction, and transformation of the fine silk into a sculptural painting echoes Nguyen’s journey forging his own identity while continuously incorporating all of the unique elements that make Nguyen who he is today.

Free

Yadkin Arts Council: Men in Black

Willingham Theater 226 E. Main St. Yadkin Cultural Arts Center, Yadkinville

Men in Black is a veteran quintet hailing from Stokes County who play a wide variety of rock and roll from the 60’s through the 90’s. The band consists of Keith Farmer on drums, Bob Norris on bass guitar, Jeff Haney on guitar and keyboards, Joe Terrell on guitar, and Brad Dunlap on lead vocals. For this special show they will feature one set devoted to the music of Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers with hits such as I Won’t Back Down, Runnin’ Down a Dream, Refugee, and Free Fallin’. The second set will be a tribute to 60’s rock legends who greatly influenced Petty like The Beatles, Rolling Stones, and Byrds, among others. Men In Black will put a reverent spin on these classic rock favorites and always encourage the crowd to participate in the fun.

$20

Meet the Curator: Nancy Strickland Fields

North Carolina Museum of Art 2110 Blue Ridge Road, Raleigh

Meet Nancy Strickland Fields, director/curator of the Museum of the Southeast American Indian and guest curator of this celebration of contemporary Indigenous art, who leads a tour of To Take Shape and Meaning. Free on Community Days: Saturday, March 2, April 20, 1–2 pm Free with ticket to the exhibition (must register): Saturday, May 18, June 8, 1–2 pm   To Take Shape and Meaning features 3-D works by seventy-five contemporary Indigenous artists from throughout the United States and Canada, including eight from North Carolina. Form and design are two of the oldest elements in American Indian art. Artists use these to create culturally unique characteristics that convey meaning and function in ceramics, weaving, beadwork, and basketry. Tickets go on sale Thursday, February 8, at 10 am for members and Thursday, February 22, at 10 am for nonmembers. Free for Members. $20 Adults, $17 Seniors age 65 and older, $14 Youth ages 7–18, Free for children 6 and under and college students. This exhibit runs from March 2 - July 28, 2024, with additional exhibition programming on the following dates: Community Days 10am-5pm Featuring free exhibition entry and special programming. Saturday, April 20; Sunday, May 19; Sunday, June 16; Sunday, July 21

Free

Masterworks 5: Titan

Whittington-Pfohl Auditorium 349 Andante Lane, Brevard

Darko Butorac, conductor

Olga Kern, piano

Our season finale takes a dramatic turn and features two powerful titans of Western repertoire, both firsts for their composers. Once deemed worthless and unplayable by his mentor, Tchaikovsky’s first piano concerto quickly leapt to international fame and secured its place as one of the most bombastic and popular piano concertos ever composed. A fitting companion indeed for Mahler’s mighty “Titan.” Mahler evokes the “voice of nature” with his first symphony, capturing nature’s beauty with “leisurely” melodies and its fury with “stürmisch bewegt” (stormy motion) for a powerful and emotional end to our season.

Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1

Mahler Symphony No. 1, “Titan”

$12 – $72
Event Series Ripcord

Ripcord

Hanesbrands Theatre 209 North Spruce Street, Winston-Salem

Rivalry and pettiness only ripens with age, and Ripcord is proof that no one does a bet like two elderly women competing for the best room at their senior living facility.  A bet between the two roommates quickly escalates into a game of one-upmanship involving two worthy opponents and deeper truths each wants to keep hidden.

$15 – $27

Flat Rock Playhouse: JERSEY BOYS

Flat Rock Playhouse Mainstage 2661 Greenville Highway, Flat Rock

Oh what a night! We are so excited  to open our 2024 Mainstage Series Series with JERSEY BOYS, The Story of Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons. The Four Seasons story hits all the high notes! Experience the Unforgettable Music and Untold Story of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons. This Tony Award-winning production takes viewers on a journey through the rise and fall of the iconic 1960s rock 'n' roll group. Audiences can expect to be transported back in time as they witness the highs and lows of the band members' lives, their struggles, triumphs, and the timeless music that made them legends. With hits like "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," Jersey Boys is written by Marshall Brickman & Rick Elice, with music by Bob Gaudio, lyrics by Bob Crewe.

$55 – $75

Hope & Lifting

Keppel Auditorium 2300 W. Innes St. Robertson College-Community Center, Salisbury

Our concert opens with Omar Thomas’ Of Our New Day Begun which as Thomas writes “honors the nine beautiful souls who lost their lives to the callous act of hatred and domestic terrorism on the evening of June 17, 2015 while worshiping in their beloved sanctuary, the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church (affectionately referred to as ‘Mother Emmanuel’).”

 

Omar Thomas: Of Our New Day Begun

Felix Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto

Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 4

$15

Holst’s The Planets

Belk Theater 130 N Tryon Street, Charlotte

Journey into the heavens with a program inspired by space including Holst's mesmerizing celestial showpiece, The Planets; Caroline Shaw's The Observatory; and CSO cellist Jeremy Lamb's A Ride on 'Oumuamua, inspired by the first known interstellar object to travel our solar system. 
 

William Eddins, conductor

 

Jeremy LAMB A Ride on 'Oumuamua 
Caroline SHAW The Observatory 
HOLST The Planets

$22 – $132

Justice Theater Project: Blank by Nassim Soleimanpour

Umstead Park United Church of Christ 8208 Brownleigh Dr., Raleigh

With this piece, Blank, Soleimanpour continues his theme of the interconnectedness of the human race and the uniting power of story. But the script is also filled with blanks. While in a typical theatre performance, the audience is a quiet participant in a dark room, this show inverts that power structure, empowering them to shape the story with elements of their own life. While we want all of our stories at The Justice Theater Project to reflect the human experience in the Triangle and beyond, rarely do we get an opportunity like this to hyperfocus on and celebrate the community members in the room. From its very foundation, this piece does not allow any to forget the power theatre has to build empathy and connection--while having a great time! We're so thankful we have such wonderful actors to trust with the stewardship of this experience. Come see what it's all about!

$10 – $20

Carolina Philharmonic: Broadway Brilliance: A Symphony Pops Spectacular

Owens Auditorium Sandhills Community College, 2295 Airport Rd., Pinehurst

Under the baton of conductor David Michael Wolff, The Carolina Philharmonic joins forces with two sensational Broadway stars, Emily Padgett-Young and Josh Young, for an unforgettable fusion of symphonic grandeur and the Great White Way. Backed by the orchestra's exquisite musicianship  their voices will enchant audiences with show-stopping numbers and iconic tunes from beloved hits.   From timeless classics to contemporary chart-toppers, "Broadway Brilliance" promises an exhilarating journey through musical theater's rich tapestry. Captivating melodies, soaring vocals, and electrifying energy transport you into the heart of Broadway's most popular showstoppers.

$10 – $30
Event Series Ripcord

Ripcord

Hanesbrands Theatre 209 North Spruce Street, Winston-Salem

Rivalry and pettiness only ripens with age, and Ripcord is proof that no one does a bet like two elderly women competing for the best room at their senior living facility.  A bet between the two roommates quickly escalates into a game of one-upmanship involving two worthy opponents and deeper truths each wants to keep hidden.

$15 – $27

New Bern Civic Theatre: Cabaret

New Bern Civic Theatre 412 Pollock Street, New Bern

Prepare to be transported to the vibrant and decadent world of 1930s Berlin as the beloved Broadway musical "Cabaret" makes its highly anticipated run at NBCT’s Athens Theatre stage in downtown New Bern. This Tony Award-winning production, composed by John Kander and Fred Ebb, captivates audiences with its exhilarating music, compelling story, and unforgettable characters.

$19 – $29

Green Room Community Theatre: Sister Act the Musical

The Green Room Community Theatre 10 South Main Ave. Bob & Michele McCreary Theatre, Newton

Sister Act is the feel-good musical comedy smash based on the hit 1992 film that has audiences jumping to their feet! When disco diva, Deloris Van Cartier, witnesses a murder, she is put in protective custody in a convent where she helps her fellow sisters find their voices as she rediscovers her own. Filled with powerful gospel music, outrageous dancing, and a truly moving story, Sister Act is a sparkling tribute to the universal power of friendship! 

$8 – $18

Honest Pint Theatre Company: GRAND HORIZONS

Theatre Raleigh Studio 6638 Old Wake Forest Rd, Raleigh

Grand Horizons by Bess Wohl is a heartwarming and hilarious exploration of love and marriage set in a retirement community, where a 50-year-married couple's decision to divorce sends shockwaves through their family, leading to uproarious chaos and unexpected revelations that resonate with audiences of all ages. Of all the titles we wear—teacher, wife, mother, the funny one—it is infrequent that one or all encompass our being. Any role that we put ourselves into, or feel put into, can diminish our sense of self, shallowing the depth of each person’s humanity. A long time of playing your role, and things may become automatic, erased, unrecognizable. Grand Horizons’ Nancy French seeks justice, dignity, and respect to be seen beyond a role— a woman with desires, secrets and dreams. The play asks us to consider what happens when you step outside of your role in a family? Can you be in a family and still be yourself, or do you always have to sacrifice some part of your identity and freedom?

$18 – $25

Flat Rock Playhouse: JERSEY BOYS

Flat Rock Playhouse Mainstage 2661 Greenville Highway, Flat Rock

Oh what a night! We are so excited  to open our 2024 Mainstage Series Series with JERSEY BOYS, The Story of Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons. The Four Seasons story hits all the high notes! Experience the Unforgettable Music and Untold Story of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons. This Tony Award-winning production takes viewers on a journey through the rise and fall of the iconic 1960s rock 'n' roll group. Audiences can expect to be transported back in time as they witness the highs and lows of the band members' lives, their struggles, triumphs, and the timeless music that made them legends. With hits like "Sherry," "Big Girls Don't Cry," and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," Jersey Boys is written by Marshall Brickman & Rick Elice, with music by Bob Gaudio, lyrics by Bob Crewe.

$55 – $75

Fuquay Varina Arts Center: Angel Street

Fuquay-Varina Arts Center 123 East Vance Street, Fuquay-Varina

First produced under the title Gaslight, Angel Street tells the story of the Manninghams. The suavely handsome Mr. Manningham is slowly driving his gentle, devoted wife to the brink of insanity with an insinuating kindness that masks more sinister motives. One of the most brilliant, suspenseful stories in modern theatre.

$12 – $14

Thalian Association Community Theatre: Spongebob the Musical

Main Stage, Thalian Hall 310 Chestnut Street, Wilmington

The stakes are higher than ever in this dynamic stage musical, as SpongeBob and all of Bikini Bottom face the total annihilation of their undersea world. Chaos erupts. Lives hang in the balance. And just when all hope seems lost, a most unexpected hero rises and takes center stage. The SpongeBob Musical is based on the beloved animated series created by Stephen Hillenburg and features a book by Kyle Jarrow, with original songs by eclectic modern artists.

$29 – $42

North Carolina Symphony: with Kristin Chenoweth

Meymandi Concert Hall at Martin Marrietta Center for the Performing Arts 2 East South Street, Raleigh

Kristin Chenoweth joins your North Carolina Symphony for one night only—featuring show-stopping selections from Wicked; Glee; You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown; and more. The Emmy and Tony Award-winning actress and singer dazzles audiences with her powerhouse vocals and delightful stage presence in a magical evening.

Three Bone Theatre: Thoughts of a Colored Man

The Arts Factory at West End Studios 1545 W. Trade St., Charlotte

Get ready for an unforgettable theatre experience full of immense compassion and keen insight. Three Bone Theatre proudly presents the North Carolina premiere and Broadway sensation from 2021: Thoughts of a Colored Man by Keenan Scott II Thoughts of a Colored Man features a slice of life in rapidly gentrifying Brooklyn through seven Black men’s remarkable stories. Woven together with spoken word these men share their dreams, struggles, and triumphs in a world that often refuses to listen to them. Directed by Sidney Horton, and featuring a talented ensemble of Charlotte actors – you won’t want to miss the show critics are calling “the most important play of the 21st century.” Thoughts of a Colored Man contains strong adult language, adult themes around race, and descriptions and depictions of anti-Black sentiments and violence. Recommend for ages 16+.

$15 – $30

Stained Glass Playhouse: Our Town

Stained Glass Playhouse 4401 Indiana Ave., Winston-Salem

In “Our Town,” the residents of Grove's Corners -- a small American town like any other -- go about their daily lives: newspapers are delivered; people go to work; gardens are tended. And a young boy and girl fall in love. Through the experiences and relationships of these unremarkable townsfolk, we discover universal truths, about what it means to be human and the cyclical nature of life. But as life's events unfold, an unexpected tragedy strikes -- and in its wake, one question remains: Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it?

$10 – $20