High School Science Series
Genes & Jazz
What do DNA and music have in common? Nobel Prize-winner Harold Varmus teams up with son Jacob Varmus, jazz trumpeter and composer, to explore the ways in which genes and notes affect complex organisms and compelling music. This father-son duo compares cell biology to musical development through a multimedia experience that features a performance by the Jacob Varmus Quintet.
Tickets: On sale for Museum members beginning Monday, August 31. Tickets for the general public begin Thursday, September 3. Purchase tickets in person at the Museum box office, by phone at 617-723-2500, or online at store.mos.org.
Image from DNA chromatin animation by Drew Berry, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research.
This program is made possible by the Richard S. Morse Fund. Additional funding for adult programs provided by the Barbara and Malcolm L. Sherman Fund for Adult Programs and by the David and Marion Ellis Endowment Fund.
| Format | Lecture |
| Grades | n/a – n/a |
| Author | n/a |
| Speaker(s) | Harold Varmus, MD, Nobel Prize winner; president, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Jacob Varmus, The Jacob Varmus Quintet |
| Location | Cahners Theater — Museum of Science, Boston |
| Website | n/a |
| Duration | 120 minutes |
| Reservation | n/a |
| Fee | $15 |
Genes & Jazz
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Genes & Jazz
Schedules
Remaining seats appear in parenthesis after event time.
November 4, 2009: 7:30 pm

