The local host of the World Figure Skating Championships at the TD Garden March 28–April 3, The Skating Club of Boston has a long and distinguished history as an influential and pioneering mover and
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Whether it’s a colonial-era site like the Old North Church or the iconic Back Bay row houses, Boston is best known as a city of brick landmarks. Yet for Chris Grimley, Boston’s concret
Fans of the beloved musical The Sound of Music—and you know who you are—may have to resist singing along when the classic Rodgers and Hammerstein tuner takes up residence at the Boston Opera
For the ninth year, AD20/21: Art & Design of the 20th & 21st Centuries & Boston Print Fair returns to the Cyclorama at the South End’s Boston Center for the Arts April 7–10
For the first time ever, Boston plays host to one of the biggest figure skating competitions outside of the Olympics—the World Figure Skating Championships (refer to listing, page 18). T
“Fashion” and “Canada” aren’t often included in the same sentence. Now that one of the country’s premier women’s clothing retailers has debuted in Boston, perhaps that will b
When Chef Stefan Jarausch first arrived in the United States in 1994 after beginning his career in France, he came to Boston to work at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel (now the Taj). Relatives livi
Our picks for night owls on the hunt for clubs, late night dining, midnight movies and more in the Hub Lansdowne StreetNot just for baseball fans, the area behind Fenway Park’s Green Mon
There’s a new cultural organization in Boston, and Laura Conrad Mandel wants you to get excited and involved! Mandel is executive director of the Jewish Arts Collaborative (JAC), the res
Ken Oringer has long been considered one of the best chefs in the city, and his beloved Japanese eatery Uni (The Eliot Hotel, 370 Commonwealth Ave., 617-536-7200, uni-boston.com) is one of