Category: Arts & Culture

  • Malala Yousafzai has never watched a football game and will gladly start with the Eagles

    Malala Yousafzai has never watched a football game and will gladly start with the Eagles

    When Malala Yousafzai hit world headlines in 2012, she was 15 and lying comatose in a hospital in Birmingham, England. She had been shot in the head by Taliban militants while on her way back from school after an exam, in Pakistan’s Swat Valley.

    “I was getting defined as a brave, courageous activist, a girl who stood up to the Taliban and fighting for girls’ education. But I had still not opened my eyes and figured out what had happened, where I was supposed to now live and restart my life,” said Yousafzai, 28, whose new memoir, Finding My Way, came out this month.

    Malala Yousafzai’s “Finding My Way” is a delightfully candid memoir of her journey through her teen years, finding love, defying expectations, and reconnecting with her mission to empower girls.

    The book begins with the words, “I’ll never know who I was supposed to be.”

    She thinks about that often.

    “Maybe I would have lived a life where I felt less pressure and didn’t have to meet so many expectations. But then, I would be facing so many challenges in my own education, let alone fighting for other girls.”

    Earlier this year, the first class of girls graduated from the high school she started in her native village of Mingora. “The first class in the whole village,” she asserted, breaking into a smile on Zoom.

    Delightfully candid, the memoir speaks of Yousafzai’s high school years in Birmingham. She struggled to make friends. “By the end of it, I had only made one friend,” she said.

    Apparently, a Nobel Peace Prize doesn’t make you cool enough. “Not with friendships anyway,” she said. “Maybe the work you want to do for girls’ education, but not with making friends.”

    Malala Yousafzai during her years at the University of Oxford, where, in the summer of 2018, she met Asser Malik, her now husband

    The memoir details her college years in Oxford, where she nursed heartbreaks, smoked weed, met Asser Malik whom she’d eventually marry, and, yes, made friends.

    As one reads on, the eternal image of the 15-year-old in a veil splashed across TV screens and newspapers, slowly begins to shift. Yousafzai has stepped into womanhood, and she has embraced all the heartbreak and hormones that come with it and is not ashamed to talk about it.

    “In a way, this is a reintroduction of me,” said the author. “I have talked about my love life, friendships, and mental health. It’s been a wild ride from nearly failing my exams to getting ghosted by my crush, to reconnecting with my mission of educating girls.”

    Malala Yousafzai at her matriculation at University of Oxford, where she studied philosophy, politics, and economics at Lady Margaret Hall.

    For someone who won a Nobel at 17, topped school in Pakistan, and became a beacon of hope for girls who dream of getting an education, talking about almost failing in college wasn’t easy.

    “I realized that I cannot miss this opportunity to prioritize making friends,” she said, recalling sitting in the library and looking outside to see friends sitting in the sun and laughing.

    “I realized I wanted to be with them more than anything … It’s not just about having fun and socializing. I think learning from people can be life-changing, and it can stay with you forever.”

    Malala Yousafzai during her years at University of Oxford, where she joined all the societies she could find and took up rowing

    At Oxford, she attended Lady Margaret Hall, studied philosophy, politics, and economics, took up rowing, joined every society that she could find, organized social events, and attended parties.

    It’s also where, in the summer of 2018, she met Malik through mutual friends and bonded over a shared love for cricket.

    After a string of secret dates, a desire to never get married, and an eventual change of heart, she decided to tell her parents.

    Malala Yousafzai (right) with her family in England on Oct. 10, 2018. From left: Father Ziauddin, brothers Atal and Khushal, and mother Toor Pekai.

    She first told her forever cheerleader and father, Ziauddin, who was a schoolteacher back home in Pakistan, and asked him not to tell her mother, Toor Pekai, just yet.

    “Because I knew she would freak out.”

    Her father, she said, “took no pause and called my mom. I was like, ‘Dad, how could you do this?’ And then my mom told me off.” It felt like a betrayal. But eventually, “after all of that hide and seek, they finally approved us.”

    “I love my mom,” said Yousafzai. “Her upbringing, childhood, and experiences were so different from mine. I understand her fears, and that she wants to protect me. We constantly have these conversations. I keep telling her that we have to resist these pressures, so we can make it comfortable for more girls to be able to express themselves.”

    Malala Yousafzai visiting a Pakistani classroom as part of the Higher Education Readiness (HER) program.

    Toor Pekai, her daughter says, is “a work in progress.”

    “She just started reading the book. So we’ll find out how much more work needs to be done on her,” Yousafzai said with a laugh.

    She and Malik were married in 2021, but it wasn’t an obvious decision just because they had dated for a while. Yousafzai, running schools for girls in Pakistan and Lebanon, wondered if “embracing love and taking a big decision like marriage” would take away from everything she had achieved.

    Asser Malik and Malala Yousafzai on their wedding day in November 2021 at her parents’ home in Birmingham, England.

    “I had so many questions and doubts about marriage. We all know the issue of forced marriages and child marriage. We also know how, historically, marriage has meant more compromises for women. So I took my time, I did my research, I learned, and more than anything, I asked Asser questions.”

    One of them was, “What if I earn more than you?”

    “He would say something like, ‘If my wife earns more than me, I’ll be the luckiest husband, and I would love to just sit at home and enjoy my life.’ So I was like, ‘Wow, this guy is funny as well.’”

    “We need better men, better boys,” said Yousafzai.

    Which she said, makes her Team Conrad, referring to the Prime Video show The Summer I Turned Pretty that she binge-watched with Malik.

    For someone who was forced out of her home country, she has now learned to find a sense of belonging. “It is the home that we have in Birmingham now, where my family lives. It is when I’m with my friends, or when I’m with my husband, and we have a moment of joy together. It’s when we’re watching our favorite TV show, or holding hands. All of that is now home to me.”

    Her book tour brings her to Philadelphia on Tuesday, where she’ll be in conversation with Kylie Kelce.

    “I’m really excited to be in Philadelphia,” said the cricket fan, “and open to going to an Eagles game. I don’t think I’ve been to any of the games.

    “What is it called? American football?”


    “Malala Yousafzai: Finding My Way Book Tour,” Oct. 28, 8 p.m., the Fillmore, 29 E. Allen St., Phila., livenation.com

  • ‘Kimberly Akimbo’ reminds us it’s never too late to go on an adventure

    ‘Kimberly Akimbo’ reminds us it’s never too late to go on an adventure

    The 2023 Tony Award-winning musical Kimberly Akimbo has made its way to the Academy of Music, courtesy of Ensemble Arts Philly.

    The intimate show tells the story of a girl named Kimberly Levaco (Ann Morrison) who has a genetic disorder that causes her to age at a rate of four to five times that of a normal person. So at 16, she looks like a 60-plus-year-old woman.

    The show isn’t very plot driven, but more a character study of Kimberly, her family, and friends.

    Ann Morrison in the National Tour of “Kimbelry Akimbo”

    Kimberly lives with her parents, Pattie and Buddy (Laura Woyasz and Jim Hogan), and her Aunt Debra (a funny Emily Koch), who don’t always have Kimberly’s best interests in mind. The score is enjoyable in the moment but doesn’t provide the audience with tunes they leave the theater humming. It falls more in line with composer Jeanine Tesori’s other work, Fun Home, than something like Mamma Mia.

    However, the score and script work well together to get the audience to empathize and care about Kimberly.

    Leading the talented ensemble is Morrison who is able to embody the youthful hopes and dreams of Kimberly, while bringing an effective aged physicality to the role. Her voice, while mature, holds a youthful quality to it, making it feel like she is truly a young woman trapped in an older body.

    Miguel Gil as Seth, Kimberly’s schoolmate-turned-friend-turned-partner-in-crime, is another standout. He brings an endearing nerdiness to the character that makes him a true scene-stealer.

    Ann Morrison and Miguel Gil in the National Tour of “Kimberly Akimbo.”

    While extremely affecting, the show remains a small-scale story; its intimacy often gets lost in the massive space of the Academy of Music. There are moments when the vastness of the stage almost swallows what should be a much more personable experience.

    In a similar vein, the performances often feel like they are struggling to fill the space. There are several moments where diction could be cleaner, as there is an occasional mumbled or muffled quality to line (and lyric) delivery.

    Kimberly Akimbo reminds the audience that life is short: You should live it to the fullest while you can. For such a conventional message, the show never feels saccharine. Instead, when the final song implores the audience to go on a great adventure “cause no one gets a second time around,” you are inspired to do just that.

    ‘Kimberly Akimbo’

    (Community/Arts)

    The Tony-winning story of a girl named Kimberly Levaco (Ann Morrison) who has a genetic disorder that causes her to age at a rate four to five times that of a normal person. With some great performances, the musical delivers a sweet message but never feels saccharine.

    ⌚️ Through Nov. 2, 📍 240 S Broad St, Phila. 🌐 ensembleartsphilly.org

    Theater reviews are produced independently by The Inquirer without editorial input by their sponsor, Visit Philadelphia.

  • Colman Domingo to receive the 2025 Lumière Award at the 34th Philadelphia Film Festival

    Colman Domingo to receive the 2025 Lumière Award at the 34th Philadelphia Film Festival

    As the 34th Philadelphia Film Festival wraps up on Sunday, organizers have a parting gift.

    On Friday, the Philadelphia Film Society, which is the parent organization for the festival, announced that Emmy-winning actor and West Philly’s very own Colman Domingo is the recipient of the society’s 2025 Lumière Award.

    The award honors Domingo’s “extraordinary contributions” as an actor, writer, and director, as well as his deep ties to Philadelphia, according to a statement.

    Colman Domingo poses for photographers upon arrival at the amfAR, foundation for aids research, gala at the Arsenale di Venezia during the 82nd edition of the Venice Film Festival in Venice, Italy, on Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP)

    “[Domingo’s] impressive ability to channel raw emotion, compassion, conviction, intensity, humor, and charisma into each of his roles is truly remarkable,” Andrew Greenblatt, CEO of the Philadelphia Film Society, said in the statement. “I couldn’t be more excited to honor Colman Domingo with our 2025 Lumière Award.”

    Domingo grew up in the city with his stepfather, Clarence Bowles, who sanded hardwood floors, and his mother, Edith Bowles, who worked in a bank. He attended Temple University, where he studied journalism before dropping out at 21 to make headlines of his own as a stage actor.

    In the years since, he has emerged as a transformative talent on the Broadway stage and in Hollywood. He starred as Billy Flynn in the Broadway revival of Chicago in 2010 and was nominated the following year for a Tony for his work on the musical The Scottsboro Boys.

    His starring roles in films such as the 2023 biopic Rustin and the 2024 drama Sing Sing earned him consecutive Academy Award best actor nominations.

    Colman Domingo attends the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute benefit gala celebrating the opening of the “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” exhibition on Monday, May 5, 2025, in New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

    Domingo joins former Lumière Award honorees M. Night Shyamalan, Bruce Willis, Adam McKay, and Lee Daniels, who were all recognized for their cinematic achievements and meaningful contribution to the City of Brotherly Love.

    Along with Domingo’s honor, PFS presented its Audrey Evans Impact Award for Social Change to boxer Christy Salters and the film Christy.

    The award is named after Evans, a pioneering pediatric oncologist and Ronald McDonald House cofounder, who worked for decades at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

  • Philly rapper Armani White criticizes TMZ coverage of his arrest

    Philly rapper Armani White criticizes TMZ coverage of his arrest

    Philly-raised rapper Armani White is pushing back on the media coverage of his arrest earlier this month.

    White, 29, born Enoch Armani Tolbert, was arrested for disorderly conduct on Oct. 12 after police found the artist and members of his tour bus filming a music video on I-75 in Newport, Ky.

    TMZ covered the arrest, releasing Tolbert’s mug shot and police bodycam footage of the arrest, as well as remarking on the nature of his hair in the mug shot.

    “My father didn’t raise me to be a criminal. My grandfather didn’t raise me to be a criminal. The only reason why I smiled in that mug shot is because I refuse to let anybody paint a picture of me as a criminal on TV, on the internet, anywhere,” White said to a packed crowd in Birmingham, Ala., last weekend.

    Armani White performs during the NFC Championship show as the Eagles face the Commanders Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025, in Philadelphia.

    Tolbert was in Kentucky as part of a nationwide tour alongside Grammy-award-winning singer T-Pain when his tour bus stopped on the interstate to film a music video. White did not respond to a request for comment.

    According to a police citation, the police were called to the highway after reports of people running on the road. When they arrived, police reportedly found White dancing on the concrete median of the interstate.

    White grew to international fame in 2022 after his bass-bumping, Neptunes-sampled track “BILLIE EILISH” birthed a viral TikTok challenge reaching millions. White later joined the track’s namesake, Billie Eilish, the 23-year-old Grammy and Oscar award-winning singer, to perform the song together in 2023.

    Rapping since the 2010s, White grew an underground following before joining the lineup of Jay-Z’s Made In America festival in 2018, which he had been attending as a fan before hitting the stage. Earlier this year, White performed his first NFL halftime show during the NFC championship, with the Philadelphia Eagles against the Washington Commanders.

    White released his debut album, Keep In Touch, in 2019, followed by the EP, Things We Lost in the Fire, referring to a house fire in which White lost family members at a young age.

    This week, he released a music video for the single, “MOUNT PLEASANT.,” a teaser for what’s to come on the release of his next album on Oct. 31.

  • Philly’s Maya Nazareth lands $300,000 deal on ‘Shark Tank’

    Philly’s Maya Nazareth lands $300,000 deal on ‘Shark Tank’

    Philadelphia entrepreneur Maya Nazareth, the founder of Alchemize Fightwear, delivered her pitch to celebrity investors on ABC’s Shark Tank on Wednesday.

    In hopes of striking a deal for her women’s combat sports apparel company, the Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree appeared on episode four of the hit show’s 17th season.

    When she was 17, Nazareth said, she transformed her passion for jiujitsu into a woman-centered, high-performance fightwear brand from the ground up. Today, Alchemize makes a range of apparel for women training in martial arts, boxing, wrestling, and jiujitsu.

    “I think it’s so much bigger than combat sports,” Nazareth said of her company’s appeal. “We’re for the fighter in every woman.”

    Investor and “Shark Tank” star Kevin O’Leary testifies before the Senate Banking Committee about cryptocurrency and the collapse of FTX, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2022. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    After noticing a lack of womenswear options in combat training, which often “makes a lot of women quit,” Nazareth said she started the business as a University of Delaware college student in 2020.

    The apparel brand founder presented in front of regular “sharks” Daymond John, Lori Greiner, Kevin O’Leary, and Kendra Scott, and guest investor Alexis Ohanian.

    Ohanian, the cofounder of Reddit and husband of tennis legend Serena Williams, expressed early interest in Nazareth’s company. He cited data explaining why a lack of properly-fitting sports bras turns school-age girls away from competing in athletics.

    Nazareth initially sought a $250,000 investment in exchange for a 5% stake in Alchemize. The sharks were hesitant about the price tag and competition from apparel giants like Nike and other major retailers.

    “You’re competing against folks that have built brands that people will tattoo on their bodies,” Ohanian said. “The brand you’re going to have to build is going to have to be something very formidable and compelling.”

    In response, Nazareth pointed to her brand’s strong social media engagement and $1.8 million in lifetime sales at the time of recording. In 2024 alone, Nazareth said the company had nearly $500,000 in sales.

    Alexis Ohanian, cofounder and former chairman of Reddit, speaks during a Bloomberg Technology interview in San Francisco, California, on Feb. 1, 2017. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris

    After a series of counter offers, Ohanian, Greiner, and Scott teamed up for a $300,000 offer in exchange for a 15% stake in the business, split equally among the three investors.

    Nazareth attempted to negotiate the equity stake down to 12%, but ultimately accepted the three sharks’ offer. “We’re about to build a world-class community in movement for the fighter in every woman,” Nazareth said on-screen.

    In an interview with CNBC Make It, Nazareth declined to confirm whether the deal was finalized off-screen. But she said her plans are to use the capital to scale up marketing and “continue to amplify the brand.”

    During the episode, Nazareth was joined by the founders of an at-home sprout grower and a pet-first aviation service. Other competitors included Orka Bar founder Stephen Longo, of Belmar, N.J., who pitched his high-protein dessert. The Jersey Shore business owner secured a $100,000 investment for a 25% stake in the brand.

    To watch the episode, visit abc.com or stream “Shark Tank” on Hulu.

  • Philadelphia’s ‘great masterpieces’ find a new home in Woodmere Museum’s Frances M. Maguire Hall

    Philadelphia’s ‘great masterpieces’ find a new home in Woodmere Museum’s Frances M. Maguire Hall

    Woodmere Art Museum director and CEO William R. Valerio never thought he’d be standing in a former second-floor bedroom turned into a cozy, copper-hued art gallery, admiring Violet Oakley’s famous series of paintings: Building the House of Wisdom.

    Yet, there he was.

    Two weeks before the new Frances M. Maguire Hall for Art and Education opens on Nov. 1, Valerio was brimming with excitement.

    The Victorian mansion and former convent is the new home to the 112-year-old Chestnut Hill museum’s permanent collection, the most definitive group of paintings, sculptures, and prints by Philadelphia artists in the region — if not the world.

    William R. Valerio surrounded by Violet Oakley’s seminal work “Building the House of Wisdom” in the Frances M. Maguire’s second floor Violet Oakley Gallery. Valerio recreated this gallery as a replica of Charlton Yarnall’s early 20th century Rittenhouse Square home where the 12-piece series was commissioned for the mansion’s music room.

    “I’ve been at the museum for 15 years and I’ve always wanted to build a space to show House of Wisdom the way Oakley intended it to be shown,” Valerio said. “But I never could have imagined this.”

    This is a four-story, 17,000-square-foot, gleaming house museum.

    The Violet Oakley Gallery is particularly noteworthy. The 375-square-foot space is a recreation of early 20th-century banker Charlton Yarnall’s music room, where Oakley’s vibrant murals were nestled in the Rittenhouse Square mansion’s vaulted ceilings.

    At Maguire Hall, Oakley’s allegorical interpretations of wisdom in the arts and sciences are fixed in lunettes positioned at eye level, allowing museumgoers to sit in a meditative gaze under a glowing replica of Italian designer Nicola d’Ascenzo’s stained glass dome.

    Oakley’s House of Wisdom has been on and off view at Woodmere since 1962, when the museum’s then director — and Oakley’s life partner — Edith Emerson brought the 12-piece series to the museum. Yarnall’s mansion was being converted to an office building, and Emerson feared her late partner’s seminal work would be carelessly discarded.

    The House of Wisdom is among the roughly 11,000 pieces of art we’ve acquired over the decades that now have a place to shine like never before,“ Valerio said.

    View of hallway between six second-floor galleries at Woodmere’s soon-to-be-opened Frances M. Maguire Hall.

    ‘Philadelphia’s great masterpieces’

    Charles Knox Smith opened the Woodmere Museum — what is now the museum’s Charles Knox Smith Hall — in 1913. It holds Woodmere’s vast 18th- and 19th-century collections, including Smith’s beloved Philadelphia landscapes, and is open Wednesday to Sunday.

    A few houses down and across the street, Maguire Hall’s 14 galleries hold paintings, sculptures, illustrations, photographs, and mixed media murals centering 20th-century Philadelphia artists.

    William R. Valerio, director and CEO of Woodmere Museum, chatting in front of George Biddle’s 1966 oil on canvas “Evocation of the Past.”

    “The idea is to show off Philadelphia’s great masterpieces,” Valerio said.

    He and his four-person curatorial team spent months mounting golden frames on the monochromatic walls, so closely together they nearly touched. It gives Maguire Hall the intimate vibe of a 19th-century home.

    Every major 20th-century art movement is represented, but the curation is a nod to 21st-century diversity.

    African American realist Ellen Powell Tiberino’s striking nude Repose shares gallery space with Martha Mayer Erlebacher’s stunning life-size portrait The Path. Both are only a few feet away from a work by George Biddle — of the illustrious Philadelphia family that traces its roots to the 17th century — the thoughtful Evocation of the Past.

    Black Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts scholar Charles Jay’s meticulous floral still life paintings from the early 1980s line Maguire Hall’s grand staircase. It leads to the second-floor galleries, where lauded 1920s impressionist Walter Elmer Schofield’s bucolic renderings of snowy Wissahickon trails coolly hang.

    William R. Valerio, director and CEO of Woodmere Art Museum in conversation with Syd Carpenter’s arresting “Frank as the Sun King,” paying homage to Carpenter’s brother who served in the Army during the 90s during Desert Storm and returned to Philadelphia as a quadriplegic.

    An entire gallery is dedicated to female artists, featuring portraits by Oakley and Emerson. They are in conversation with an arresting sculpture by Syd Carpenter, Frank as the Sun King, an homage to Carpenter’s brother, who served in Desert Storm and came home to Philadelphia as a quadriplegic. Carpenter curated the Colored Girls Museum’s Livingroom Garden in 2024.

    “These diverse backgrounds and social experiences reshape and expand the canon of 20th-century art through a Philadelphia lens,” Valerio said.

    A major gift

    Maguire Hall was built in 1854 as a country estate for the family of William Henry Trotter, an importer of steel, copper, and tin. In the 1890s, the house was renovated by sugar merchant Alfred C. Harrison.

    The Sisters of St. Joseph bought the stately home from developers in the 1920s to serve as the Norwood-Fontbonne Academy dorm. The nuns lived there until 2021, when Woodmere purchased it for $2.5 million.

    “It gave us the opportunity to take items out of storage and show the beauty of Woodmere to the world,” Valerio said.

    Overview of the former Sisters of St. Joseph Convent that’s been transformed to Woodmere’s Frances M. Maguire Hall for Art and Education in Chestnut Hill.

    James J. Maguire Sr. built a string of small insurance companies into a national conglomerate in the mid- to late 20th century. In 2008, he completed a $5 billion merger with a Japanese firm and, with his wife, Frances, became one of the region’s largest philanthropic donors.

    An artist and patron of the arts, Frances Maguire died in 2020. Three years later, the Frances M. Maguire Art Museum was opened at the former home of the Barnes by St. Joseph’s University, which had received a $50 million donation from the Maguire Foundation in 2017.

    Frances Maguire also spent a lot of time at Woodmere, taking classes and serving on the board of trustees. In her honor, the Maguire Foundation gave the museum $10 million. Valerio raised an additional $18 million from donors, state, and federal funding. The $28 million was used to renovate the mansion and start an endowment.

    Entrance way of the Frances M. Maguire hall. To the left is a portrait of Maguire by Kassem Amoudi. The chandelier Chestnut Street’s Boyd Theater open from 1928 to 2002.

    A portrait of Frances Maguire by Kassem Amoudi hangs in the foyer.

    “In creating the Frances M. Maguire Hall and supporting Woodmere, we are assuring that her legacy is shared with current and future generations,” said Megan Maguire Nicoletti, one of the Maguires’ nine children and CEO of the Maguire Foundation.

    All the details

    Krieger Architects worked with New York-based Baird Architects to turn the ramshackle convent into a modern museum, complete with wheelchair-accessible ramps and a shiny glass elevator overlooking the art trail connecting Maguire Hall to Charles Knox Smith Hall.

    Mammoth sculptures by 1959 Penn graduate Robinson Fredenthal are visible from the elevator as well as chokeberry, bayberry, and pawpaw trees, planted in Woodmere’s perennial Outdoor Wonder garden in honor of the Lenape Indians. Maguire Hall boasts a brand-new porch dotted with bright Adirondack chairs that once belonged to the University of the Arts.

    Detail of Belgium carver Edward Maene’s work in The Frances M. Maguire Hall breakfast nook. During the renovation, the carvings original red, green, and golden hues were discovered.

    In the mansion’s dining room, breakfast room, and central staircase are exquisite woodcarvings from 20th-century master and Belgium immigrant Edward Maene.

    “He went all out and carved fantastical medallions with images of fish that turned into birds and humans that turned into lions,” Valerio said of Maene’s work.

    There is the MacDonald Family Children’s Art Studio, where little ones can try their hands at finger painting, watercolors, and perhaps a bit of jewelry making. Right across from it is a jewelry vault, where an ankle-length Henri David coat sparkles with jewels from local Victorian-era jewelry houses: Bailey, Banks & Biddle and Caldwell.

    Tyler School of Art and Architecture graduate Theophilus Annor fashioned hand mannequins for the baubles. (Annor also carved Adinkra symbols into John Rais’ decorative wrought iron)

    Jewels shown on a hand mannequin fashioned by Ghanian artist Theophilus Annor in the Frances M. Maguire jewelry vault. (L) Theophilus Annor, Holding On, 2024, Gold & faceted gemstone. (R) Richard Reinhardt, Ring, date unknown.

    Housing history

    The second-floor illustrative arts rooms feature wartime drawings from 1940s issues of the Saturday Evening Post and framed TV Guide images of Kojak’s Telly Savalas and Columbo’s Peter Falk. (TV Guide was owned by former Inquirer and Daily News publisher Walter Annenberg.)

    “This part of our history is often forgotten,” Valerio said. “But it was important to artists who lived here and made a living in what was then a big media city.”

    The first floor gallery of the Frances M. Maguire Hall featuring (left) Ashley Flynn’s stark mural of drug culture in Kensington and “Madre del Nene” a1990, oil on linen from Bo Bartlett

    But the bottom floor is the star. Housed here are Maguire’s most evocative pieces, like an abstract collage by Danny Simmons — brother of hip-hop luminaries Russell and Joseph “Run” Simmons — titled Hocus Pocus, which interrogates magic in the Black community. Ashley Flynn’s gripping mural depicting drug abuse in Kensington and gay artist and collage maker Stuart Netsky’s Have Your Cake and Eat it Too, which puts a naughty twist on Victorian-era prudishness, radiate under the Boyd Theatre’s chandelier.

    With this work, Valerio hopes Maguire Hall plays a role in shaping a more inclusive future in Philadelphia — and around the world — through the arts.

    “We do what no other museum does in exploring the art and culture of this city in depth,” Valerio said. “And we welcome everyone to take part in the conversation.”

    Woodmere’s Frances M. Maguire Hall for Art and Education, 9001 Germantown Ave., opens to the public on Nov. 1 and 2. Charles Knox Smith Hall is located at 9201 Germantown Ave. Both are open Wednesday to Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets are $10. Free on Sundays. woodmere.museum.org

    The article was updated to reflect the new name of the children’s art studio at Woodmere Museum, and the last name of Maguire Foundation’s CEO.

  • Foo Fighters’ stadium tour is coming to Lincoln Financial Field

    Foo Fighters’ stadium tour is coming to Lincoln Financial Field

    After selling out football stadiums and baseball fields worldwide during the band’s last tour, Foo Fighters is coming back for another North American run.

    The iconic Seattle-bred band announced it is embarking on a 12-city stadium tour with fellow rockers Queens of the Stone Age and will stop at Lincoln Financial Field on Aug. 13, 2026.

    General tickets to the show will be available at 10 a.m. Oct. 31.

    The band performed in the now-shuttered Trocadero Theatre in 1995, soon after its inception in 1994. Over the years, it has performed at the Electric Factory, First Union Center, the Wachovia Center, and the Wells Fargo Center in 2011.

    Thursday’s announcement came with the release of a new single, “Asking for a Friend,” an intense and decidedly darker track than the band’s recent hit, “Today’s Song,” which debuted in July.

    From left, Taylor Hawkins, Dave Grohl and Nate Mendel of Foo Fighters performs onstage at the after-party for the Los Angeles premiere of “Studio 666” at the Fonda Theatre on Feb. 16, 2022, in Hollywood, California. (Rich Fury/Getty Images/TNS)

    Foo Fighters founder and lead singer Dave Grohl said the song and the upcoming tour are inspired by the band’s recent surprise club shows, beginning with a performance at the Fremont Theater in San Luis Obispo, Calif., last month.

    After turning back the clock and performing more than 30 years worth of songs, Grohl said the band was reminded “why we love and are forever devoted to doing this Foo Fighters thing.”

    The band, led by Grohl, lost drummer Taylor Hawkins in 2022, while on tour in Colombia. John Freese, who had stepped in as drummer after Hawkins died, was dismissed from the band in 2025. The band will be touring with a new drummer, Ilan Rubin, who has played drums for Nine Inch Nails and Paramore.

    A July 2022 scheduled stop at Lincoln Financial Field was canceled following Hawkins’ death.

    The new tour includes stops in Toronto, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Nashville, Las Vegas, Fargo, N.D., and Vancouver, B.C., among others. The band said that it will be announcing more shows.

    Presale tickets will be available 10 a.m. Oct. 29. ticketmaster.com.

  • Hilary Hahn and Lang Lang cancel their Kimmel Center concert

    Hilary Hahn and Lang Lang cancel their Kimmel Center concert

    Two of classical music’s biggest stars slated to perform together in Philadelphia have canceled their appearance.

    Hilary Hahn is still recovering from a double pinched nerve, and the violinist’s Dec. 4 Kimmel Center recital with pianist Lang Lang won’t be rescheduled, Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts announced Thursday.

    The recital was to have been repeated a few days later in New York City’s Carnegie Hall, and that performance, too, has been canceled.

    Both Hahn and Lang Lang were trained at Philadelphia’s Curtis Institute of Music, where their conservatory days overlapped in the late 1990s.

    Hahn announced this past summer that she was canceling performances through November for the same reason. At the time she wrote on social media that “while I thought I was fully recovered from my injury last season, I’m not. I have a lot more left to say on the violin and I’m not giving up! I will miss you and I hope to see you all soon.”

    The next artist scheduled in POEA’s recital series is Víkingur Ólafsson, the Icelandic pianist whose Bach Goldberg Variations in 2024 with the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society had the audience “universally over the moon,” said PCMS artistic director Miles Cohen. Ólafsson has recorded works of Bach, Mozart and his contemporaries, Philip Glass, and Debussy.

    Ólafsson’s March recital in Marian Anderson Hall includes Bach, Beethoven, and Schubert.

    Ticket holders for the Hahn-Lang Lang recital will receive a gift certificate for the value of their tickets, a POEA spokesperson said.

    ensembleartsphilly.org, 215-893-1999

  • Pew Charitable Trusts chief to step down

    Pew Charitable Trusts chief to step down

    The head of the Pew Charitable Trusts is stepping down.

    Susan K. Urahn, president and CEO, is expected to retire in early 2027 after a search for a successor is completed and the new leader has begun working at the organization, a Pew spokesperson said.

    Urahn, 72, began at Pew in 1994 and took the top job in 2020 following the retirement of longtime chief Rebecca W. Rimel.

    Neither Urahn nor board chair Christopher Jones were made available for interviews. But, in a statement posted on Pew’s website, Urahn said she was fortunate to work with colleagues and a board “all dedicated to finding common ground and using facts as the foundation for discussion and action.”

    “Under Sue’s leadership, Pew has become even better and stronger,” read a statement attributed to Jones.

    Pew — which has offices in Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and other cities — is a combination foundation/think tank, conducting research and disbursing grants to nonprofit organizations.

    In Philadelphia, it awards money to arts groups through the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage. Its D. C-based Pew Research Center provides research on demographic trends and social issues, as well as polling on matters like politics, religion, climate change, and the role of technology in daily life.

    Pew’s work is funded through seven charitable trusts established between 1948 and 1979 by the children of Sun Oil Co. founder Joseph Newton Pew and his wife, Mary Anderson Pew. As of June 2024, the collective value of the trusts was $6.1 billion, a spokesperson said.

    In addition to funding Philadelphia arts groups and individual artists, Pew has sometimes taken a more activist role by partnering with other philanthropists on large civic projects costing tens of millions of dollars, such as the 2012 move by the Barnes Foundation from Merion to the Ben Franklin Parkway. In 2008, Pew contributed millions toward a bailout of the Kimmel Center that relieved it of debt left over from the arts center’s construction phase.

    In 2023, it announced the award of $4 million for Esperanza Health Center in North Philadelphia to expand services.

    Urahn, most recently based in D.C., worked her way through several posts — including director of Pew’s planning and evaluation division; director of the Pew Center on the States; and executive vice president for Pew’s work on state policy, economics and healthcare.

    A search for a new president is expected to begin in January.

  • Philly will celebrate ‘52 Weeks of Firsts’ in 2026. Here is the complete schedule of festivities.

    Philly will celebrate ‘52 Weeks of Firsts’ in 2026. Here is the complete schedule of festivities.

    Sure, Philly’s the birthplace of the nation. But we’re also the site of the first hot-air balloon ride (1793), the first selfie (1839), and the first pencil with an attached eraser (1858). So why not celebrate these Philly firsts and many more?

    That’s the idea behind the Philadelphia Historic District 250th Committee’s “52 Weeks of Firsts” in 2026. Every week, all year, there will be a party somewhere in the city honoring a different “Philly-born” first, replete with a “first-ival,” storytelling, giveaways, scavenger hunts, and an oversized #1 sculpture made of foam to mark the exact spot, or closest thing to it, of the milestone.

    On Thursday, during a festive gathering at the Constitution Center featuring circus performers, Mummers, Once Upon A Nation storytellers, and ice cream sodas from Franklin Fountain, officials announced the complete schedule for “52 Weeks of Firsts.”

    “Philadelphia has always been a city of firsts — from the founding of our nation to innovations that shaped everyday life,” said Amy Needle, president and CEO of Historic Philadelphia Inc. “It’s an opportunity for residents and visitors alike to go and explore and find these firsts and learn about all the amazing history and innovation that has happened in Philadelphia in the last 250 years.”

    Fitting with planners’ promise to bring the 250th celebration to the neighborhoods, the 52 Weeks festivities will take place across at least 16 different sections of the city, Needle said. In compiling the list, a partnership of representatives from 22 Philly museums and cultural institutions adhered to a strict definition of first from Merriam Webster: “preceding all others in time, order, or importance.”

    Some Philly firsts are known to every schoolchild. Like the first American flag (thanks, Betsy: 1777). And first naming of the United States (1776.) Others may stump even the most ardent Philly booster. Like the country’s first public showing of a motion picture (1870), first U.S. weather bureau office (also 1870), and first electronic computer (1945).

    The 52 Weeks of First aims to capture all that has made Philly first in the nation throughout the years, Needle said.

    “There are so many things that Philadelphia has to be excited about,” she said.

    Here is the full list, with the schedule for the whole year.

    52 Weeks of Firsts: Week by week

    First Hot Air Balloon Flight in America: 1793

    • The Athenaeum, Jan. 3, 2026

    First Folk Parade: 1901

    • Mummers Museum, Jan. 10, 2026

    First Volunteer Fire Company: 1736

    • Fireman’s Hall Museum, Jan. 17, 2026

    First Professional Basketball League: 1898

    • Location TBD, Jan. 24, 2026

    First Public Girl Scout Cookie Sale: 1932

    • Location TBD, Jan. 31, 2026

    First African Methodist Episcopal Congregation: 1794

    • Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church, Feb. 7, 2026

    First Abolitionist Society in America: 1775

    • The African American Museum in Philadelphia, Feb. 14, 2026

    First Authentic Chinese Gate Built in America: 1984

    • Chinatown Friendship Gate, Chinatown, Feb. 21, 2026

    First Public Protest Against Slavery in America: 1688

    • Germantown Mennonite Historic Trust, Feb. 28, 2026

    First Flower Show: 1829

    • Convention Center, March 7, 2026

    First Women’s Medical College: 1850

    • Drexel University, March 14, 2026

    First Match Folder: 1892

    • Science History Institute, March 21, 2026

    First Medical School in America: 1765

    • Perelman School of Medicine, March 28, 2026

    First Botanical Garden: 1728

    • Bartram’s Garden, April 4, 2026

    First Circus Performance in America: 1793

    • Philadelphia School of Circus Arts, April 11, 2026

    First Stadium in America: 1895

    • Franklin Field, April 18, 2026

    First Postmaster: 1737

    • Franklin Court, April 25, 2026

    First American-Made Piano and Sousaphone: 1775/1893

    • Ensemble Arts Philly, May 2, 2026

    First Mother’s Day: 1908

    • Rittenhouse Square, May 9, 2026

    First Hospital in America: 1751

    • Pennsylvania Hospital, May 16, 2026

    First World’s Fair on American Soil: 1876

    • Please Touch Museum, May 23, 2026

    First Steamboat for Passengers and Freight: 1787

    • Independence Seaport Museum, May 30, 2026

    First American Flag: 1777

    • Betsy Ross House, June 6, 2026

    First U.S. Army: 1775

    • Museum of the American Revolution, June 13, 2026

    First Annual Reminder Demonstration: 1965

    • Philly Pride Visitor Center, June 20, 2026

    First Paper Maker in America: 1690

    • Rittenhouse Town, June 27, 2026

    First Bank of the United States: 1791

    • First Bank of the United States, July 4, 2026

    First Organized Baseball Team: 1831

    • Citizens Bank Park, July 11, 2026

    First Ice Cream Soda: October 1874

    • The Franklin Institute, July 18, 2026

    First American Art School: 1805

    • Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, July 25, 2026

    First Pencil with Attached Eraser: 1858

    • Location TBD, Aug. 1, 2026

    First Zoo in America: 1874

    • Philadelphia Zoo Aug. 8, 2026

    First U.S. Mint: 1793

    • Location TBD, Philadelphia, Aug. 15, 2026

    First Selfie: 1839

    • LOVE Park, Aug. 22, 2026

    First Slinky: 1943

    • Philadelphia Art Museum, Aug. 29, 2026

    First Signing of the Constitution: 1787

    • National Constitution Center, Sept. 5, 2026

    First Continental Congress: 1774

    • Carpenters’ Hall, Sept. 12, 2026

    First Naming of the United States: 1776

    • Independence Hall, Sept. 19, 2026

    First Ronald McDonald House: 1974

    • Ronald McDonald House, Sept. 26, 2026

    First Penitentiary in America: 1829

    • Eastern State Penitentiary, Oct. 3, 2026

    First Peoples

    • Penn Museum, Oct. 10, 2026

    First U.S. Navy & Marine Corps: 1775

    • Arch Street Meeting House, Oct. 17, 2026

    First Public Showing of a Motion Picture: 1870

    • Philadelphia Film Society, Oct. 24, 2026

    First Modern Detective Story Written: 1841

    • Edgar Allan Poe House, Oct. 31, 2026

    First Thanksgiving Day Parade in America: 1920

    • Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Nov. 7, 2026

    First University in America: 1740

    • University of Pennsylvania, Nov. 14, 2026

    First Children’s Hospital in America: 1855

    • Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Nov. 21, 2026

    First Electronic Computer: 1945

    • University of Pennsylvania, Nov. 28, 2026

    First Weather Bureau: 1870

    • Franklin Institute, Dec. 5, 2026

    First Scientific Society of Natural History: 1812

    • Location TBD, Dec. 12, 2026

    First Public Lending Library in America: 1731

    • Library Company of Philadelphia, Dec. 19, 2026

    Philly Food Firsts: First Cheesesteak, 1930s/Water Ice, 1932/Bubble Gum, 1928

    • Reading Terminal Market, Dec. 26, 2026

    A map of the events is available at https://www.visitphilly.com/52-weeks-of-firsts/.