Monster Mash: NEA’s new program; a change at Warner Bros.
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Reaching out: The National Endowment for the Arts is launching a new initiative called ArtPlace to spur various projects across the country. (New York Times)
Reorganization: Warner Bros. has restructured its live-theater division, with Alan Horn overseeing the group’s bicoastal presence. (Variety)
Broadway-bound: Producers of ‘The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess’ said the new revival is heading for Broadway, despite rumors that it would close out of town. (Boston Globe)
Public art: A 26-foot-tall sculpture of an elephant balancing on its trunk has taken up residence in New York’s Union Square. (NY1)
‘Awe-inspiring’: Before its Sunday opening at MoMA, ‘De Kooning: A Retrospective’ is getting rave reviews. (New York Times and Associated Press)
Complaining: A group of Utah playwrights has raised objections to the aesthetics of a planned performance space in Salt Lake City. (Salt Lake Tribune)
Skeptical: The grandson of Oscar Wilde has problems with a new play that a British theater company is attributing to the famous writer. (The Guardian)
Chosen: Officials have picked a design for the planned Royal Alberta Museum in Canada. (Vancouver Sun)
Rumored: Lynn Nottage’s ‘By the Way, Meet Vera Stark’ could be headed for a Broadway run. (New York Times)
Security alert: An arts center in Goteborg, Sweden, is believed to have been a recent terrorist target. (NPR)
Branching out: Soprano Renee Fleming, the Chicago Lyric Opera’s creative consultant, has announced the company’s new partnership with the Merit School of Music. (Chicago Classical Review)
Still popular: Broadway’s ‘Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark’ recently celebrated its 500,000 audience member. (Broadway World)
And in the L.A. Times: A review of conductor Bramwell Tovey, the L.A. Philharmonic and Master Chorale at the Hollywood Bowl.
-- David Ng