As You Like It a Musical Adaptation of William Shakespeare's As You Like It

As You Like It

A Musical Adaptation of William Shakespeare's As You Like It |
October 17–19 | Greenberg Theatre |
Tickets: $10–$15, free for AU students

This delightful adaptation of As You Like It is a hope-filled, musical celebration of love in its many forms. A 32-member cast of actors, musicians, and dancers bring this classic story to life in a way that celebrates the transformative power of nature and love.
As You Like It Tickets  


Economic Issues in the 2024 Presidential Election
Department of Economics & Women in Economics
October 15, 3:00–4:00 p.m. | Kerwin T02

Faculty in the Department of Economics will discuss various issues at the forefront of the 2024 presidential election, including taxes, tariffs, China policy, monetary policy/inflation, abortion, and affordable housing. No RSVP is necessary.

Robert Blecker: Tariffs; industrial policy
Evan Kraft: Fed independence/monetary policy
Nathan Larson: strategic "horse race" issues: where to deploy campaign spending, rational voter models, etc; price gouging
John Willoughby: China relations
Kelly Jones: abortion access
Juan Montecino: Institute for Macroeconomic & Policy Analysis (IMPA) tax work and what the election means for the upcoming 2025 tax fight over the expiration of the Tax Cut and Jobs Acts (TCJA).

 

: Memorial at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life Synagogue where, on 10/27/2018, an antisemite murdered 11 people.

Center for Israel StudiesFall Events 
Cosponsored by Jewish Studies Program

AI-generated illustration of a diverse group of people

WLC Fall Meet & Greet
October 17, 4:00–5:00 p.m. | Bentley Room (Gray Hall 130)

Join the Department of World Languages & Cultures for the fall Meet & Greet. Bring a friend and meet language professors. Ask any questions and enjoy some treats.

Image created with generative AI

 

Joan Birnbaum, "Untitled"

Jamming: Art & Music
Group 93 2024
Exhibition on view in the Katzen Arts Center Rotunda
September 16 to October 17
 

Art and music have always been fast friends. In the early twentieth century, artists interested in color as form found connections in music theory. The artworks chosen for this exhibit call to mind sounds, rhythms, and tunes through color, movement, compositional elements, imagery, participation, and even silence. Group 93 was formed in 1990 to explore a critique method developed by artist and AU Professor Emeritus Luciano Penay. The artists include professor emeriti and artists with deep connections to AU and DC’s art culture.
Learn more: Group 93 
 

Black Lives Matter protestors. Credit:  Vlad Tchompalov via Unsplash

Lunch ‘n’ Learn: Race and The Elections
October 23, 1:00 p.m. | MGC 305

Join ARPC for a panel discussing the intersections of race and the elections. Faculty panelists will discuss key issues for racial justice, how they are reflected in the current election, how they play out in local elections and communities, and how to mobilize beyond the elections.
RSVP - Lunch ‘n’ Learn

Photo credit: Vlad Tchompalov via Unsplash

Howie Lee Weiss "#13-Group"

Visiting Artists Series

The AU Studio Art MFA Program presents visiting artists throughout the year in Katzen 201.

In Pieces A New Musical, Music and Lyrics by Joey Contreras

In Pieces: A New Musical
October 24–26 | Katzen Studio Theatre | Tickets: $10–$15, free for AU students

You never know who might be around the corner if you take a chance on love. In Pieces: A New Musical reflects on the romantic journeys of eight characters as they look back at their pasts, learn to embrace all the pieces of who they are, and discover what it means to find love. Set in New York City and featuring a pop score by Joey Contreras, In Pieces is a candid take on self-identity, growth, and acceptance.
In Pieces Tickets  
 

AU Faculty Music Concert Oh He Dead

Faculty Music Concert:
Oh He Dead
October 26, 7:30 p.m. | Katzen Recital Hall | Tickets: $10–$15, free for AU students

Kick back with DC-based indie soul band Oh He Dead, featuring AU music faculty Alex Salser on guitar. Oh He Dead is a study in contradictions. The band sounds as smooth and lux as leather, but there’s also a levity there, like a feather in flight. Those contrasts and contradictions are ever more evident on their new studio album, Ugly, a suite of songs that encompasses everything from death to new love.
Oh He Dead tickets  
 

Lyd: Film Screening and Q&Awith directors Rami Younis and Sarah Ema Friedland
Monday, October 28th, 2 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. | Kerwin T01 Auditorium

The film Lyd (the Arabic name of Lod, a city now in Israel) is about a 5,000-year-old bustling Palestinian town that was taken over when Israel was established in 1948. An exploration of what it once was, and what it is now, in the context of the continuing conflicts and the war in Gaza, Lyd’s excavation of one community’s complex history offers us not only lessons, but possible futures. Made by a Palestinian from Lyd and a Jewish American, Lyd provides much-needed context for this moment, as it goes deep into the history of the city and its residents. Film screening will be followed by a moderated conversation with the film’s directors, Rami Younis and Sarah Ema Friedland.
More Anthropology events

American University Chamber Singers International Tour Preview Concert Colombia Daniel Abraham, director

AU Chamber Singers
International Tour Preview Concert: Colombia
November 2, 7:30 p.m., November 3, 3 p.m. | Katzen Arts Center, Abramson Family Recital Hall | Tickets: $10–$15, free for AU students

The AU Chamber Singers present an international pre-tour concert program at AU before they visit Colombia in May 2025, returning to South America for the first time since the 1990s. This mixed program will feature traditional choral music from across the Americas including Colombian and Latin American composers. 
Chamber Singers tickets  
 

Futuristic coastal city illustration.

Israel at 100: Scenarios for the Future of Israel in 2048

November 10–11
SIS Building & Constitution Hall

As Israel approaches its 100th anniversary in 2048, we invite you to explore the future as modern futurists, utilizing contemporary foresight approaches. As we delve into various scenarios concerning Israel's future, we will address such topics as its religiosity, sustainability within its desert geography, Palestinian and other Arab relations, ongoing conflicts, the remarkable "startup nation" economy, and the intricate connections between Israel and diaspora Jewry.
Israel at 100