THE MAGAZINE

Cambridge at Christmas: Quiet Streets, Hidden Traditions, and the Songs You Hear After Dark
City Letters Hector Wolff City Letters Hector Wolff

Cambridge at Christmas: Quiet Streets, Hidden Traditions, and the Songs You Hear After Dark

Christmas in Cambridge isn’t only found in lights and market stalls—it lingers in quiet streets, late-night footsteps, and the echoes of song after dark. TWoA follows a winter wander through the city, tracing modern student rituals back to Josiah Chater’s 1840s diary and discovering how Christmas survives in the gentlest, most surprising sounds.

Read More
Nutcracker Stories
Dance Christina Ezrahi Dance Christina Ezrahi

Nutcracker Stories

The Nutcracker may feel like an eternal Christmas fixture, but its history is full of doubt, crisis, and unexpected brilliance. TWoA traces the ballet’s journey from Tchaikovsky’s reluctance and Ivanov’s quiet ingenuity to Balanchine’s dazzling New York revival, revealing the hidden stories behind the world’s most beloved holiday ballet.

Read More
‘West Meets East’… ? Shankar, Menuhin, and Indian Classical Music in the West
Classical Music Natalie Tero Classical Music Natalie Tero

‘West Meets East’… ? Shankar, Menuhin, and Indian Classical Music in the West

In 1967, Ravi Shankar and Yehudi Menuhin created West Meets East, a groundbreaking collaboration that brought Indian classical music into Western mainstream consciousness. But beneath its Grammy-winning success lie deeper questions of influence, appropriation, and cultural power. TWoA explores the friendship between the two virtuosos, the shifting Western fascination with Indian music, and what true cross-cultural learning demands.

Read More
‘Tis the Season
Lifestyle TWoA GmbH Lifestyle TWoA GmbH

‘Tis the Season

Looking for gifts with a little artistic magic? TWoA’s writers curate their favourite festive picks—from art-history reads and museum memberships to dancer must-haves, musician treasures, and beautifully crafted objects. Consider it your guide to artsy presents with real holiday spark.

Read More
Uncanny Valley: The Art Behind TikTok’s Creepiest Trend
Art Tertia Hastings Art Tertia Hastings

Uncanny Valley: The Art Behind TikTok’s Creepiest Trend

If TikTok’s fascination with the “uncanny valley” has caught your eye, you’ll find its roots deeply embedded in Eastern European Surrealism. Explore how this haunting art movement channels real trauma through unsettling, dreamlike imagery.

Read More
From London with Love: The King of Vogue
City Letters Maya Stoilova City Letters Maya Stoilova

From London with Love: The King of Vogue

A new exhibition is up at London’s National Portrait Gallery: Cecil Beaton’s Fashionable World. Step inside the gallery to see how Beaton went from a war photographer to set and stage designer to the King of Vogue. Crisp, direct, and slightly cynical, this is your guide to the latest happenings in London.

Read More
Danae Venson, Composer and Graduate, The Juilliard School: “Words were failing to describe what I felt, so I began to teach myself how to write music.”
Classical Music, Interviews Christina Ezrahi Classical Music, Interviews Christina Ezrahi

Danae Venson, Composer and Graduate, The Juilliard School: “Words were failing to describe what I felt, so I began to teach myself how to write music.”

Danae Venson’s music begins where language fails—shaped by jazz, gospel, classical tradition, and the vivid colours of her synesthesia. In this conversation with TWoA, the Juilliard-trained composer reflects on her artistic beginnings, composing through trauma, and discovering a musical vocabulary entirely her own. Read on to discover how she’s shaping the music she always longed to hear.

Read More
A Tale of Autumn
Art, Lifestyle Fran Osborne Art, Lifestyle Fran Osborne

A Tale of Autumn

Ever felt inspired by autumn? Good. So were Osslund, Tchaikovsky, and Rohmer, among many others. Read this article to find out how the season appears in art, music, and film, and why its briefness makes artists notice things they ignore the rest of the year.

Read More
From New York with Love: Halloween
City Letters Olivia Merola City Letters Olivia Merola

From New York with Love: Halloween

Halloween in New York carries its own kind of theatre—costumes, orchestras, and a city that refuses to do anything halfway. This letter moves from childhood memories to a live screening of Psycho, where Herrmann’s strings cut through the hall as sharply as Hitchcock’s edits. Read it now and enjoy some Halloween vibes from NYC.

Read More
From New York with Love: Connecting With People
City Letters Olivia Merola City Letters Olivia Merola

From New York with Love: Connecting With People

Autumn shows up in New York not on the sidewalks, but in the seats of City Center, where Fall for Dance turns a single evening into a study in how people meet. TWoA follows the night from a pre-show class to the final curtain, watching dancers and audiences negotiate rhythm, effort, and each other. Read this article for a City Letter about connection in its simplest, most unguarded forms.

Read More
The Killer History Can’t Escape: How a 300-year-old Outlaw Became an Internet Meme
Classical Music Hector Wolff Classical Music Hector Wolff

The Killer History Can’t Escape: How a 300-year-old Outlaw Became an Internet Meme

History doesn’t always retire its characters. Sometimes it just changes their stage. This piece follows a 300-year-old outlaw as he slips from London’s theatres to Berlin’s cabarets, Broadway’s brass, late-night advertising, and finally the strange churn of internet culture. Read this article to see how Macheath survived each era—and why his grin keeps returning.

Read More
Étoile: What Does it Mean to Put Dance on Screen?
Dance Hannah Lipman Dance Hannah Lipman

Étoile: What Does it Mean to Put Dance on Screen?

Television keeps trying to bottle the world of ballet, and most attempts slip through the frame. In this article, TWoA looks at Étoile and why a series filled with extraordinary dancers still couldn’t capture movement, risk, or the pulse that keeps artists glued to old rehearsal clips. Read on for a clear look at what televised dance needs—and why so few shows manage it.


Read More
From Berlin with Love: Gods and Dogs
City Letters Christina Ezrahi City Letters Christina Ezrahi

From Berlin with Love: Gods and Dogs

Berlin’s Festival of Lights floods the city with colour, but inside the Staatsoper the evening turns darker, sharper, and more human. In this article, TWoA follows a night with Staatsballett Berlin as Kylián’s Gods and Dogs and Crystal Pite’s Angels’ Atlas trace loneliness, community, and the uneasy politics humming beneath the surface. Read on for more.

Read More
Anastasia Cheplyansky, Dutch National Ballet: “Studying While Dancing Brought a Lot of Balance Into My Life.”
Dance, Interviews Christina Ezrahi Dance, Interviews Christina Ezrahi

Anastasia Cheplyansky, Dutch National Ballet: “Studying While Dancing Brought a Lot of Balance Into My Life.”

Balancing a dance career with an academic degree sounds impossible until you hear Anastasia Cheplyansky explain how she did both. In this article, TWoA looks at her path from Atlanta Ballet to Dutch National Ballet, and how studying psychology reshaped her approach to training, pressure, and performance.

Read More