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Rosalind Bentley

Rosalind Bentley is a reporter for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Latest from Rosalind Bentley

Pulitzer Prize winning poet to read at Emory

The last time you read a poem, did you read it to yourself silently? If so, poet W.S. Merwin believes there’s no way you could have fully detected its true meaning. To do that, a poem must be read aloud. Maybe read aloud only to yourself, but read aloud nonetheless. ...

Ramsey Lewis to shine under the stars

When Ramsey Lewis’ father, Ramsey Sr., pulled up stakes and left Augusta for Chicago, he became part of the Great Migration of southern African-Americans seeking better fortunes in the North. One thing he didn’t leave behind was his love of music, which he and his wife cultivated in their son. ...

“Harmony — A New Musical,” with the book and lyrics by Grammy Award winner Bruce Sussman (left) and music by Barry Manilow, will open the Alliance Theatre’s season in September. ALLIANCE THEATRE

Alliance Theatre announces 2013/2014 season lineup

The Alliance Theatre on Thursday will announce its 2013/2014 season, a 12-play lineup bookended by musicals — one by a pop music legend, the other by one of the country’s most accomplished tap dancers.It’s also a season with several world premieres on both the main stage and the smaller Hertz ...

Members of the Club Estates Garden Club chose Spray Roses to be part of their entry for the Southeast Flower Show at Cut Flower Wholesale in Atlanta in Weds., March 5th, 2013. The 25th Silver Anniversary show running March 15-17 at the Cobb Galleria brings in 25,000 people. You could call it the flower show version of “Top Chef.” PHIL SKINNER / PSKINNER@AJC.COM

Forget about food and fashion; this competition is about stems and petals

Which flower would a storybook character bring to a tea party: sunflowers, roses, violets, peonies? Careful with your answer. In the arena of competitive flower arranging, theses decisions carry real weight. Choosing the wrong bloom could mean the difference between going home from next week’s 25th Southeastern Flower and Antiques ...

Actors Keith Randolph Smith (left) and John Stewart rehearse a scene for “The Whipping Man.” PHIL SKINNER / PSKINNER@AJC.COM

‘Whipping Man’ casts light on Southern Jewish slave owners

The thing about American’s history with chattel slavery, aside from the fact that a lot of people just don’t want to talk about it anymore, is that it continues to surprise us. We’re surprised by things that were always there in plain sight but that we looked right past. For ...

White and black audience members take in the closing street corner scene before holding a group discussion on what they just experienced during a new interactive play “Four Days of Fury Atlanta 1906” based on the events leading up to and following the Atlanta race riots of that year at the Atlanta History Center on Sunday, Feb. 17, 2013, in Atlanta. CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM

History Center explores legacy of Atlanta 1906 Race Riot

In this transient city, where people come to make big money and be seen and where most interactions are transactional, historical memory is often undervalued.Many people — at least we hope many people — know how the city was shaped by the Civil War. But far fewer know of a ...

Spelman Museum Director awarded prestigious Driskell Prize by High Museum

February just got much brighter for Andrea Barnwell Brownlee, director of the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art. Earlier this month she oversaw the opening of the museum’s latest exhibit from its permanent collection, “Multiple Choice: Perspectives on the Spelman Collection.” Then on Monday, Barnwell Brownlee was officially awarded the ...

Director LaTanya Richardson Jackson and actress Pauletta Washington are working together on the August Wilson play “Two Trains Running,” which will be at Kenny Leon’s True Colors Theatre in the Southwest Arts Center through March 10. The two women have husbands whose careers have a higher profile: Samuel L. Jackson and Denzel Washington. BITA HONARVAR / BHONARVAR@AJC.COM

‘Two Trains’ takes talented duo out of famous husbands’ shadow

Years ago, actress LaTanya Richardson Jackson asked playwright August Wilson a bold, to-your-face question, one that was being asked of the playwright in print by several female social critics of the time.Richardson Jackson wanted to know why Wilson didn’t write plays with more female characters in them, particularly women with ...

'Frida and Diego' exhibit could be tool to build broader audience for High Museum

When the High Museum of Art’s “Frida and Diego: Passion, Politics and Painting” exhibition officially opens on Thursday, it will signify a couple of important firsts for the museum. It will be the only time the work of iconic Mexican painters Frida Kahlo and her husband Diego Rivera has been ...

Portrait of Diego Rivera (1937, oil on masonite) by Frida Kahlo. The Jacques and Natasha Gelman Collection of Mexican Art. 2012 Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D. F. / Artists Rights Society, New York

Kahlo and Rivera: The intersection of art, pain and politics

Conventional wisdom says it’s futile to try to figure out why a couple of seemingly ill-fit people stay together. You can speculate, but unless you are one of the players, how can you possibly know for sure? And sometimes, even the people involved in the relationship can’t pinpoint their reasons ...