The Footlight Players put on a performance of Cabaret at Dock Street Theatre | Courtesy Footlight Players

Charleston artists demonstrated time and again their industry and invention in 2025 in finding a place for arts and culture in the face a dearth of available space and resources for artists.

There was a lot of big thinking:

Among the standouts were Recommissioned, the November pop-up curated by Lindsay Collins at Storehouse 8 at the Navy Yard in North Charleston. It featured five artists whose large-scale work required ample room. On the heels of that at the Navy Yard was Kulture Klash, and for its 10th iteration, it featured an outsize installation by locally-born national sensation Shepard Fairey and performance by musical artist Darryl McDaniels of Run-DMC.

Elsewhere in North Charleston, the inaugural MELT Charleston Mural Fest, the brainchild of Christine Crawford, Allison Dunavant and Connor Lock, enlisted seven artists in September to paint the exterior walls of partnering businesses on Reynolds Avenue.

Cautionary classics

As the world churns, Charleston theatermakers continue to parse the human condition for better and for worse. This year, that included addressing the re-advent of Nazism by way of a pair of standard-bearer 20th-century works.

At Dock Street Theatre, Charleston Stage launched the season with a superb production of The Sound of Music that converged the charm of Maria and brood in an occupied Austria. The Footlight Players put on a tremendous, splendidly louche go at Cabaret, set in Weimar-era Berlin as the Nazi Party is in ascendance.

New works registered theater’s relevance as well, with PURE Theatre’s Southeast premiere of Eureka Day, the spot-on satire of parenting in the age of vaxxers.

Getting lit

The proliferation of high-profile book gatherings and bookstores in the Charleston area belies any assertion that literature is losing steam. In fact, there is such a concentration of all things bookish in November to lobby for officially dubbing it Charleston Literary Month.

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson discussed her book, Lovely One, at the Charleston Gaillard Center in September | Kennedi Carter

The Charleston Literary Festival continues to grab national press and court acclaimed authors from around the country and across the pond. And YALLFest is going strong, drawing young adult readers in vast, fairy-haired droves to its hub at Blue Bicycle Books.

Large-scale venues like Charleston Gaillard Center also are able to accommodate authors with blockbuster titles, this year hosting everyone from U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson to Harlan Coben and Reese Witherspoon.

Operatic heights

Charleston also continues to distinguish itself as an opera town, even with this year’s regrettable closure of Holy City Arts and Lyric Opera, aka HALO.

Fear not. Opera lovers can continue to rely on Spoleto Festival USA. For 17 days in late May through early June, the festival holds fast in its commitment to ambitious works of opera from around the globe. This year was no exception, with a sleek stunner at in director Rodula Gaitanou’s new production of composer Benjamin Britten’s The Turn of the Screw, which upped the creep factor in this operatic adaptation of Henry James’s haunting tale, all with standout performances and a phenomenal set making optimal use of the Dock Street Theatre.

And on the local scene, Charleston Opera Theater floored Sottile Theatre audiences with its November production of Bizet’s Carmen. The full-scale, gripping production directed by Harold Meers and conducted by Wojciech Milewski starred the sublime, commanding Ginger Costa-Jackson, all on an evocative set.


Help keep the City Paper free.
No paywalls.
No subscription cost.
Free delivery at 800 locations.

Help support independent journalism by donating today.

[empowerlocal_ad sponsoredarticles]