Nov. 20-22. RC students perform Sarah Treem’s 2014 drama, set in 1972, about a woman who manages a bed-and-breakfast on an island off the coast of Washington State while running an underground shelter for victims of domestic violence.
7 p.m.( 2 p.m., Sunday), Keene Theatre, East Quad, 701 East University. Free; donations welcome.
Nov. 20-22. RC students perform Sarah Treem’s 2014 drama, set in 1972, about a woman who manages a bed-and-breakfast on an island off the coast of Washington State while running an underground shelter for victims of domestic violence.
7 p.m.( 2 p.m., Sunday), Keene Theatre, East Quad, 701 East University. Free; donations welcome.
Nov. 20-22. RC students perform Sarah Treem’s 2014 drama, set in 1972, about a woman who manages a bed-and-breakfast on an island off the coast of Washington State while running an underground shelter for victims of domestic violence.
7 p.m.( 2 p.m., Sunday), Keene Theatre, East Quad, 701 East University. Free; donations welcome.
Nov. 20-22. RC students perform Sarah Treem’s 2014 drama, set in 1972, about a woman who manages a bed-and-breakfast on an island off the coast of Washington State while running an underground shelter for victims of domestic violence.
7 p.m.( 2 p.m., Sunday), Keene Theatre, East Quad, 701 East University. Free; donations welcome.
Silent (6:30 p.m.) and live (8 p.m.) auction of works by current and former prison inmates and local artists. Wine & dessert available. Proceeds benefit the 21st Annual Exhibition of Art by Michigan Prisoners at the U-M in March.
6:30-9:30 p.m., U-M Duderstadt Center Gallery, 2281 Bonisteel, North Campus.
Join us for the RC Creative Writing Program Senior Reading celebrating December Graduates Elena Potek and Nadia Todoroff. Light refreshments, great writing!
RC students present a varied program of choral music from Mozart and Mendelssohn to Shakespearean madrigals, folk songs, and gospel.
Professor Heather Thompson, of the RC Social Theory and Practice Program, delivers the second in the RC Faculty Talks series: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and its Legacy: The Perils of Writing the Painful Past“
U-M drama lecturer Kate Mendeloff directs RC students in scenes from Uncle Vanya (7 p.m.), Chekhov’s richly varied ensemble piece about the search for happiness–from love, achievement, or nature–at various stages of life, and Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes ( (8 p.m.), Tony Kushner’s celebrated 2-play series exploring the apocalyptic fears at the heart of contemporary culture. Also, “Race in America” (9 p.m.), a collage of scenes and monologues by major contemporary playwrights about racial profiling, interracial and interreligious relationships, illegal immigration, and identity.
Ana Fernandez teaches art courses at the University of Michigan’s Residential College in drawing and printmaking. Her artwork includes elements of drawing, printmaking, fibers and collage. It reflects a tactile sensibility and an affinity for layering, patterning and ornamentation. Thematically, it focuses on the interaction between fashion, representations of the female body and notions of femininity.