Staged in Arena’s in-the-round Fichandler theater, the show features the world-renowned company dedicated to the African American art form of stepping. The result is a high-energy, family-friendly ...
Shinedown delivered full-throttle rock, tearing through favorites like “Sound of Madness” and “Second Chance.” Backstage, the ...
Sharon Virts and Scott Miller embarked on a two year project to renovate an abandoned historic property in Leesburg, Va. only to find they were not alone on their journey. The expression “if these ...
Washington Life Magazine, 2301 Tracy Place, N.W., Washington, DC 20008 USA Tel. 202.745.9788, Fax. 202.745.9268, [email protected].
Second Lady Karen Pence personalizes One Observatory Circle while paying homage to the house’s past inhabitants. Her predecessor, Jill Biden, also had parting words for Mrs. Pence during the ...
Washington Life Magazine, 2301 Tracy Place, N.W., Washington, DC 20008 USA Tel. 202.745.9788, Fax. 202.745.9268, [email protected].
Former White House press secretary Jen Psaki is sitting, cross-legged on a white replica Barcelona chair in NBC’s Capitol Hill NBC studio lounge. A hairstylist is summoned by the photographer to ...
After meeting at their Alpha Omicron Pi sorority at George Mason University,Anne Hollenbach and Jill Pritchard Ghareeb became fast friends and stayed close for two decades – spanning collegiate bashes ...
If you’ve ever dreamed of strolling through a museum with a slice of pizza and glass of wine in hand, you need to befriend superlobbyist Tony Podesta. Known about town as a legendary political “fix-it ...
In the summer, countless Washingtonians have made their second home on Martha’s Vineyard, the Hamptons or Nantucket. But Georgetown resident and fine art insurer Blair Wunderlich had a different idea.
On any given day, Teresa Carlson might be across the world meeting with high-ranking government officials to discuss how their countries’ infrastructure would be better served on the cloud, or ...
1623 28TH STREET NW is a Federal-style building designed by Nicholas King in 1801 for Samuel Davidson, a businessman who owned 150 acres in Washington, including the land on which the White House was ...
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