-
Opera in the Ozarks board chair Alice Martinson tours the new Inspiration Point Center for the Arts, a state-of-the-art theater in Carroll County that opened last May.
-
Choreographer Sophia Smith discusses her ballet adaptation of Eric Whitacre's "The Sacred Veil," a choral work about love, grief and loss, coming to Eureka Springs this April.
-
Married duo Destiny and Simon Marie of Honeysuckle Jam talk musical theater, jazz, stepping back into performing and finding home in Eureka Springs.
-
Fayetteville and Eureka Springs will celebrate Mardi Gras with parades, a pub and grub crawl and a masquerade ball. Organizer and musician Chaddy Kumpe Platt shares what to expect as Fat Tuesday approaches.
-
KUAF Community SpotlightA conversation with ESSA's executive director Kelly McDonough about their upcoming fall studio stroll where guests can participate in several artist workshops and tour the camps' art spaces.
-
The 78th Original Ozark Folk Festival takes place in Eureka Springs Sept. 4–6. Ozarks at Large’s Daniel Caruth speaks with organizer and featured artist Nancy Paddock about the history of the festival and what attendees can expect from this year's installment.
-
On today's show, a national organization is working in Arkansas to register eligible voters. Plus, a conversation about the history of the original Ozark Folk Festival and Roby Brock with Talk Business and Politics talks with the new state secretary of human services.
-
In this edition of The Other Way, curator John Rankin talks with Kyle Kellams and Becca Martin Brown about “Everything Old Is New Again,” a spontaneous exhibit at Brews in Eureka Springs, and previews the upcoming show, “Eureka! I Found It.”
-
On today's edition of The Other Way, Becca Martin Brown and Kyle Kellams learn about Eureka Springs' Blue Spring Heritage Center from owner Johnny Cross.
-
On today's show, we hear how the city of Fayetteville plans to revamp its recycling program. Plus, the discussions we can have when we have more information about residents without shelter. Also, our oceans are vast, deep and mysterious, and NPR's "Short Wave" has decided to dive in.