Search Results for: our 50 years
March is a big month for great series and artists who need no introduction.
“Mumburger,” which is making its U.S. premiere at off the WALL in Carnegie this month, deals with how one digests grief.
Your 10 best bets for this month include KISS, Pizza with the Keepers and the Q Ball.
Entertainers ranging from Frank Sinatra to the Grateful Dead performed at the Stanley Theatre, built in 1928. Today, with a new name, it remains one of the city's most well-known venues.
The National Aviary’s first room received a $1.2 million renovation last summer.
The landmark childrens television series was first broadcast 51 years ago this week.
Step-by-step, these establishments helped build our dining scene. Even better, they still have something to offer today.
Rachelle Jeffers and Allen ‘Bud’ Mitchell went to church together but they weren’t close. That changed when she found out he would die unless he found a liver donor. That’s how Jeffers became one of a growing number of living liver donors.
The biggest change in the last 50 years on this busy street is the surface of the street itself.
Producer James Cameron and Director Robert Rodriguez team up for a sci-fi epic depressingly similar to a dozen others.
Stephen Foster was born at 3600 Penn Ave., which later, in a musical connection, was owned by the founder of the American Wind Symphony Orchestra.
The original "Lego Movie" was a welcome surprise. Somehow, the sequel manages to improve on its predecessor.
Yes, that was the late Andy Warhol in a Burger King ad during the fourth quarter of the Super Bowl — and no technological wizardry was involved.
Oakmont Bakery's new, larger location will open next week. Go for the treats, stay for the expanded cafe space.
At the height of its five-decade run, the family-owned business operated three stores Downtown.
The Richland Township singing sensation is moving to New York for the next phase of what she refers to as a “healing process.”
Jamie Lee Curtis is worth your attention in a film that is otherwise a mixed bag.
On tap this month: Xiu Xiu, Poppy and Three Dog Night.
Built five years after the end of the Civil War, the Monongahela Incline is now a tourist attraction. It also continues to fulfill its original intention, to ferry Pittsburghers up and down Mount Washington.
The “Restored by the Fords” designer’s signature lighting line is set to hit shelves in February.
Aside from a Steelers loss, nothing seems to fire up Pittsburghers more than a blown weather forecast.
Six Pittsburghers share their struggles and hopes for the region’s public transit system.