Monster Mash: Gustavo Dudamel in L.A.; Green Day breaks records; Brooke Shields photo removed
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--Star power: Conductor Gustavo Dudamel arrives in L.A. amid fanfare and a media commotion.
--Rocking: Green Day’s musical ‘American Idiot’ breaks box-office records at Berkeley Repertory Theatre.
--New job: Allison Vulgamore, who recently said she was stepping down as head of the Atlanta Symphony, is officially taking over the Philadelphia Orchestra.
--Controversial art: The Tate Modern in London has withdrawn a work by Richard Prince that uses a photograph of a naked Brooke Shields at age 10.
--Big donation: Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts receives a $10-million gift from David M. Rubenstein, a co-founder of the private equity firm the Carlyle Group.
--Art theft: A ransom note has reportedly been found by owners of artwork that was stolen this week from a home in Pebble Beach, Calif.
--New phase: British artist Damien Hirst says he will no longer create his signature installation pieces featuring the bodies of animals and will instead concentrate on painting.
--Moving on: Harry Gugger, a partner at the architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron, is stepping down at the end of 2009 to set up his own practice.
--Blockbuster show: The Smithsonian American Art Museum is expected to announce that Steven Spielberg and George Lucas will combine their collections of Norman Rockwell artwork for a new 2010 exhibition.
--In the black: Producers of the Tony-winning Broadway revival of ‘West Side Story’ say they have recouped their $14-million investment.
--Page to stage: Matthew Warchus, who won a Tony this year for directing ‘God of Carnage,’ will direct a stage adaptation of Roald Dahl’s ‘Matilda’ at the Royal Shakespeare Co. in England.
-- David Ng