APRIL 16, 2012
Changing faces at the Guthrie
A firestorm erupted when the Guthrie, a Minnesota asset whose founding sparked America's regional theater movement, announced its milestone 50th-anniversary season. All the shows were written and directed by white men. Three years later, the theater's board would tap Joseph Haj, a visionary director of Palestinian heritage, as leader. Haj broadened the welcome at the Guthrie, hiring women and people of color even as the theater thrived artistically and financially. By 2019, six of the nine directors of its main-stage shows were female. "Plural voices make the work better," Haj said, while showing that diversity, equity and inclusion are not just buzzwords but cardinal values for a field grappling with how to stay current in a rapidly changing America.
SEPT. 20, 2013
Lizzo's star is born
Minnesota's biggest breakout star of the 2010s was just an opening act and backup singer for Har Mar Superstar when we learned with fair certainty that she was bound for glory. On the night of her rapturous solo debut at First Avenue, her first album, "Lizzobangers," was still a month from being released. Thanks to Current airplay for "Batches & Cookies" and performances with her local groups Grrrl Prty and the Chalice, though, the packed crowd already knew the words to several of the LP cuts. She was still all-hip-hop at that point, but the pop hooks were clear as day. She was still modestly dressed, too, but her "big-grrrl" flair shined through. Lizzo packed the club four more times as a headliner before becoming too big for it — and for Minnesota — in 2017. What took the rest of the world so long to catch on, though?
APRIL 14, 2014
Graywolf wins its second Pulitzer
"I'm trembling from head to toe," Graywolf Press publisher Fiona McCrae said the day the Pulitzer committee announced that Vijay Seshadri had won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry for "3 Sections." The award came just four months after another Graywolf book, Mary Szybist's "Incarnadine," won the National Book Award, and two years after future U.S. poet laureate Tracy K. Smith won the press' first Pulitzer for "Life on Mars." This flurry of significant awards helped cement Graywolf's position as one of the nation's leading publishers of poetry and brought a spotlight to the vitality of the Twin Cities book scene. Minnesota publishers went on to rack up numerous awards during the decade while the Loft Literary Center launched an ambitious book festival, Wordplay, in 2019.
Jan. 1, 2015
Happy birthday to Mia
Kicking off its 100th birthday with a display of artistic cakes, the Minneapolis Institute of Art celebrated a century of museum life with an ambitious yearlong slate of events. Record-setting crowds poured into Mia to see such exhibitions as "The Habsburgs" and "Eros," a newly purchased giant bronze head by Polish-born sculptor Igor Mitoraj. The museum continued evolving toward more community-oriented exhibits, including one devoted to Philando Castile, the first-ever major museum show of Native women's art, and photos from the 1970s radical lesbian world — demonstrating that museums are for the people, not just the art elite.