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  • DARRYL MAXIMILIAN ROBINSON SHARES A CLASSIC DYLAN THOMAS POEM BEFORE THE HISTORIC VISTA MOVIE THEATRE AT SUNSET AND HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD IN LOS ANGELES!

    Darryl Maximilian Robinson, a 51-year-long American stage performer whose local Los Angeles theatre award honors include a 2013 Kentwood Players' Marcom Masque Theatre Award nomination for Best Actor In A Major Supporting Role for his critically-praised performance as the historic Black educator and orator Booker T. Washington in a revival of the musical "Ragtime" at The Westchester Playhouse, a 2015 / 2016 Emmanuel Lutheran Actors Theatre Ensemble-ELATE Season Ticket Holder Best Actor Award nomination for his performance as the debonair, but aging leading man Ernest in Tad Mosel's classic one-act drama of Life In The Theatre "Impromptu" at The Lincoln Stegman Theatre in North Hollywood, California, and, most recently, a 2024 Broadwayworld Los Angeles Award nomination for Best Supporting Performer In A Play for his portrayal of Chicago Newspaper Reporter Roy V. Bensinger in The Culver City Public Theatre revival production of Ben Hecht's and Charles MacArthur's "The Front Page" presented outdoors at The Carlson Memorial Park in Culver City, recently performed and recorded a classic work by the late and acclaimed Welsh poet Dylan Thomas at a historic Los Angeles movie house.

    Built in 1922 / 1923 by architect Lewis Smith, The Vista Movie Theater at Sunset and Hollywood Boulevard near both the Los Feliz and East Hollywood neighborhoods of Los Angeles has a more than 100-year history as a venue to enjoy films on its handsome screen in a building that features Spanish Misson-style architecture on its exterior and Egyptian Revival-themed decor within its interior.

    Originally named the Lou Bard Playhouse ( as when it opened on October 9, 1923 it also featured on stage live vaudeville and music acts as well as silent movies ), The Vista Movie Theatre has a vast, storied background in film and entertainment history, and is one of the last remaining cinematic houses from the silent film era which still stands in Los Angeles.

    And since 2021, The Vista has had the distinction of inspired new ownership. Surviving a complete shut down during the height of The Covid-19 pandemic, this currently 400-seat gem of a venue is now under the leadership and operation of Academy Award-winning Screenwriter and Oscar-nominated Director and Producer Quentin Tarantino.

    Having made the decision to visit this famed venue for the first time to see the new hit horror film "Sinners," veteran and award-winning stage actor and Excaliber Shakespeare Company Los Angeles Archival Project Founder, Artistic Director and Producer Darryl Maximilian Robinson ( winner of a 2022 Making The World Happening Award for his numerous online theatre-related offerings during the Covid-19 pandemic from Allevents.in ) took a moment before entering this legendary architectural space to add a new edition to his video collection of "street-theatre" style recordings of classic poems and speeches and shares a recitation of Welsh Poet Dylan Thomas' earliest published work: "The Song of The Mischievous Dog." It marks the first public presentation by his multiracial theatre and video group The Excaliber Shakespeare Company Los Angeles Archival Project this year.

    Ably assisted by talented and aspiring Actor, Photographer and Videographer Tywayne Burns, a newcomer to ESC, Darryl Maximilian Robinson is pleased to share this new April 27, 2025 recorded presentation of this Dylan Thomas work written when the Welsh literary master was only 11 years old and which was the very first of his poems to be published.

    Darryl Maximilian Robinson's "street theatre"-style rendition of Dylan Thomas' 'The Song of The Mischievous Dog" can currently be viewed on YouTube.

    Enjoy.

    https://youtu.be/UdxE_-bdzH0?si=j7D-0AQG6ywwwQwq

    https://theatreblogofdarrylmaximilianrobinson.blogspot.com/2025/04/darryl-maximilian-robinson-presents.html

    https://www.performingartslive.com/Events/Darryl-Maximilian-Robinson-In-Video-of-Dylan-Thomas-The-Song-of-The-Mischievous-Dog-at-The-Vista-Theater-YouTube-com
  • This is the first time Navarro has reached the quarterfinals at one of the tennis majors, while Gauff's loss was the latest in a string of exits by top-seeded women at the tournament.
  • Lara Downes is among the foremost American pianists of her generation, a trailblazer both on and off the stage, whose musical roadmap seeks inspiration from the legacies of history, family and collective memory. As a chart-topping recording artist, a powerfully charismatic performer, a curator and tastemaker, Downes is recognized as a cultural visionary on the national arts scene.
  • President Trump named Fox News personality Jeanine Pirro as the interim top prosecutor in Washington, D.C., to replace Ed Martin.
  • For 15 weeks this summer, Shaboozey's "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" had the No. 1 song in the country, but a new song breaks its streak this week. Plus, pop fans mourn Liam Payne.
  • Millions are preparing to fill out their NCAA tournament brackets, pondering deep questions such as, "Can Kentucky really run the table?" and "Which No. 5 seed will beat a No. 12 in the first round?"
  • The lawsuit from three senior and lauded FBI agents at the bureau says the Trump administration demanded loyalty for those staying at the bureau.
  • As we count down to the new year, we asked our readers what they thought were the top political stories of 2021. Here's what they picked.
  • In this course, we will trace the roles of women in country music’s first half century, from its first interpreters in the 1920s to the 1970s.
    Week 1: The 1920s & ‘30s
    Women tentatively began making country records in 1924 with solo artists Roba Stanley and cowgirl singer Billie Maxwell leading the way. Others followed, although most supported male partners, including Moonshine Kate, Adelyne Hood, and Zora Layman.
    Week 2: The Carter Family
    Country music’s first family has featured three generations of female performers, beginning with pioneers Maybelle and Sara Carter, then Maybelle’s daughters: June, Helen, & Anita, and finally, Rosanne Cash and Carlene Carter.
    Week 3: The Radio Programs
    Female country performers became popular through their appearances on national radio programs like the Grand Ole Opry and the National Barn Dance in the 1930s and ‘40s. We’ll look at pioneering women artists and groups like Linda Parker, the Three Little Maids, The DeZurik Sisters, Cousin Emmy, Molly O’Day, and Kitty Wells.
    Week 4: The Cowgirls
    Women became more acceptable to audiences as solo performers when they donned leather fringe and ten-gallon hats. This class focuses on girl singers in western swing bands like Laura Lee Owens, Carolina Cotton, and Patsy Montana as well as songwriter Cindy Walker.
    Week 5: Rockabilly Women
    Women began asserting their equality in the 1950s with a series of rambunctious rockabilly singers like Wanda Jackson, Janis Martin, Lorrie Collins, and a young Patsy Cline.
    Week 6: The Nashville Sound & the Outlaw Movement
    Women begin to match men in record sales in the 1960s with artists like Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette, and Connie Smith. In the 1970s, women joined their male counterparts in rebelling against Nashville’s curls-and-gingham image by becoming more assertive in their image, with Jessi Colter, Emmylou Harris, and Linda Ronstadt combining country with other popular music forms.

    Cary Ginell is a Grammy-nominated writer and author of 12 books on American music. After a 30-year career in radio, he has spent the last 20 years as a public speaker, talking about music in classrooms, at conferences, and on cruise ships. Cary brings a lifelong passion for the recording industry to his work and is one of the world’s foremost authorities on his specialty, western swing. Cary previously served as President of the Association for Recorded Sound Collections, an international organization of music scholars and world-renowned institutions. He holds a master’s degree in Folklore from UCLA and a bachelor’s in Radio/TV/Film from Cal State University Northridge.

    Fifty and Better was designed to offer university-level courses and lectures (no tests, no homework) taught by experts in the field, and to host social engagement activities for individuals age 50 and older.
  • All summer, a wide range of hits were in the running for the biggest songs of the season — country singalongs, rap diss tracks, pop kiss-offs and rock epics. But two took the race down to the wire.
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