Halloween might come a little earlier to State College in the form of a parasitic baby puppet made of latex.
Free movies screen every weekend at the HUB-Robeson Center as part of LateNight Penn State, but little does everyone know that they are selected by one person -- Andrew Haslach, ARHS cinemas chairman.
Although the State Theatre is now as likely to host a folksy rock band as it is to screen a movie, a Hitchcock classic will bring the theater back to its roots this Sunday.
Though Steel Magnolias only requires one set -- a beauty parlor -- No Refund Theatre (NRT) members still had to cart all of their equipment from Atherton Hall to the Forum, setting up and tearing down the set each night in preparation for this weekend.
Film-goers will get a chance to play judge this weekend when State College hosts the Manhattan Short Film Festival at the State Theatre on Sunday.
Tucker Max is a 32-year-old party boy infamous for his fat-girl jokes and ability to consume mass amounts of alcohol.
Two Penn State professors, Rod Bingaman and Maura Shea, will debut their comedy creation about a runaway bride at the State Theatre this Sunday.
Twenty-three years after its birth, the Citizen Kane of graphic novels, Watchmen, will finally be seeing the light of day as a two-hour-and-43-minute feature film.
Francisca Halamajowa hid 16 of her Jewish neighbors from Nazis, including the grandfather of Penn State professor Judy Maltz.
Because of the bureaucracy involved in acquiring a movie, "you have to wait a little bit to see the film that you want to see at the State Theatre," Mike Negra, executive director of the State Theatre, said.