Clark Art Airs an HD MET Production: 'La Traviata'

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Metropolitan Opera's broadcast production of "La Traviata" airs at the Clark Art Institute on Saturday, Nov. 5, at 12:55 pm in the second installment of The Met: Live in HD. 
 
The award-winning series of live, high-definition cinema simulcasts features the full live performance along with backstage interviews and commentary. The Clark will broadcast the opera in its auditorium, located in the Manton Research Center.
 
According to a press release, Soprano Nadine Sierra stars as the self-sacrificing courtesan Violetta—one of opera's ultimate heroines—in Michael Mayer's vibrant production of Verdi's beloved tragedy. Tenor Stephen Costello is her self-centered lover, Alfredo, alongside baritone Luca Salsi as his disapproving father. Daniele Callegari conducts the performance.
 
In conjunction with the broadcast, the Clark's Manton Study Center for Works on Paper hosts a special pop-up exhibition. The exhibition includes a sampling of prints, drawings, and photographs of nineteenth-century Paris, the setting of the play by Alexandre Dumas. 
 
The pop-up exhibition is free with gallery admission or The Met: Live in HD ticket purchase; it will be on view from 11 am to 1 pm on Nov. 5.
 
Tickets are $25 ($22 for members, $18 for students with valid ID, and $7 for children 10 and under). To purchase tickets, visit clarkart.edu/events or call the box office at 413 458 0524. Advance reservations are strongly suggested. No refunds.
 
The next Met: Live in HD performance is The Hours, airing Saturday, Dec. 10, at 12:55 pm.

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Mount Greylock School Committee 'Struggles' with High-Stakes MCAS Question

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Mount Greylock Regional School Committee last week had a microcosm of the debate with which voters around the commonwealth will grapple when they go to the polls over the next few weeks: whether to continue using the MCAS test as a requirement for a high school diploma.
 
Question 2 on the Nov. 5 ballot, if passed, would eliminate the current practice requiring high school students to pass the 10th grade Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System test in order to graduate from school.
 
The issue arose at the October meeting of the regional school committee in the context of advising the body's delegate to this fall's Massachusetts Association of School Committee's convention on a proposal before that statewide body. One of the resolutions on the MASC agenda would go even further, calling on the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education to institute a "moratorium" on all MCAS testing while a replacement to the current standardized test is developed.
 
The committee agreed to authorize its delegate, Julia Bowen, to submit an amendment to the MCAS resolution that would strike the moratorium language but continue to push for alternatives.
 
But the regional panel also waded into the more pressing issue: Question 2, which will be decided the day before the MASC conference in Hyannis on Nov. 6.
 
Carolyn Greene noted that the MASC's executive committee already voted a position on Question 2, encouraging its passage and the replacement of the "high-stakes MCAS" with a, "more reasonable and equitable requirement for a high school diploma."
 
But the local elected officials were more conflicted — both as a group and as individuals — on the issue.
 
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