After success in Portugal and Brazil, Claudia Raia and Jarbas Homem de Mello bring “Menopause Scenes” to Teatro João Caetano from April 2–12.
Categoria: Culture
Travelers embark on a literary journey across Gabriel García Márquez’s Colombia, reliving the places that inspired “One Hundred Years of Solitude”.
An asteroid wipes out dinosaurs 66 million years ago, paving way for humans: relive it at NYC’s Natural History Museum in 2026, plus Frida Kahlo and Raphael masterpieces.
St. Patrick’s Day Passeio Pedra Branca returns March 7–8 in Palhoça, SC: 3 stages, 26 craft breweries, and free admission for the whole family.
Brazil’s leading animation festival announces 52 selected films across 4 competitive sections, with prizes totaling over €2,300 in Goiânia this March.
Performance artist Cássia Nunes launches the e-book Complexo das Artes Goianas on March 4 at 9am during FAV-UFG’s opening class in Goiânia, free entry.
Five new concerts on SescTV explore Brazilian roots, afro-jazz and chamber music as spaces of invention and belonging.
After a successful 2025, Renato Turnes’ “Homens Pink” returns with accessible performances in Florianópolis and São José on February 27 and 28.
Carnival lives on in Niterói: Orquestra da Grota performs a free concert this Sunday (28) at Centro EcoCultural Sueli Pontes.
Dragon Dance, tea ceremony and Tai Chi highlight the free Chinese New Year celebration at São Paulo’s Immigration Museum with Ibrachina.
An unprecedented symphonic tribute to Cazuza brings Criolo, Bebel Gilberto, and others with the Heliópolis Orchestra at Teatro Bradesco.
The new Samba Practice School opens at Centro Cultural Olido with live performances and a public samba jam session.
PLOC celebrates 21 years with a unique festival at Qualistage: 21 artists, six hours of live nostalgia from the 1980s.
CAIXA Cultural Rio screens the complete works of Italian filmmaker Alice Rohrwacher in a free retrospective from March 3 to 15.
In Washington, DC, masterpieces by Da Vinci, Van Gogh, Matisse, and Chagall make the U.S. capital a must-see art destination.
Work uniforms and fishing nets become sustainable fashion in SENAI CETIQT’s “Upcycling Challenge” exhibition at MAC Niterói until March 4.
Due to high demand, Gabriel Villela’s “Medea” stays at Sesc Consolação until March 15 and hosts a debate on women in theater.
A homophobic attack at a memorial Mass became a stage monologue: “Hétero Sigilo” opens March 6 at Teatro Laura Alvim, starring and written by Bernardo Dugin.
Brazil’s Minas Gerais state hosts its first-ever Hip-Hop Summit on March 14–15 in Contagem. 300 free spots for MCs, DJs, b-boys, b-girls, and graffiti artists.
On March 8, BioParque do Rio reserves 90 minutes of exclusive access for people with autism — free entry and a quieter, sensory-friendly environment.
Gabriel Santana dies, comes back as a ghost and schemes to stop his wife’s new love — the hit comedy “O Marido da Minha Mulher” returns with a stellar cast.
Pullman Vila Olímpia hosts Art & Wine on Feb 26 — a sensory evening blending live painting, wine tasting, and throwback EletroHits from the 2000s.
50 photo panels and an audiovisual installation bring Mandela’s legacy to Curitiba’s Portão Cultural, free admission, March 3 to April 30, 2026.
From March 4–8, CarniSal brings immersive LGBTQIA+ theater to free venues across Rio de Janeiro and the Baixada Fluminense region.
“Visceral Geometry” closes March 1 at Paço Imperial — a rare Rio encounter with a São Paulo master absent from the city for 17 years.
After 350,000 spectators in 2025, Brazil’s top stand-up comedian Fabio Porchat hits Vassouras on March 5 with his globe-trotting comedy show.
Brazilian photographer Malu Mesquita unveiled ‘Miami’ at the Former Versace Mansion: an analog series revisiting 1990s memories, coming to São Paulo in 2026.
On February 28, São Paulo’s Museum of the Portuguese Language hosts a free poetry tribute and an award-winning urban dance premiere in the same day.
25 years later, the cult Brazilian play is back — now performed and adapted by the daughters of its original creators.
Brazilian mime company Etc e Tal opens Don Quixote in March in Rio — no words, no limits, just pure physical storytelling.