compass june 27, 2013
TRANSCRIPT
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Art , Movies, Theater, Dining, Music, Dance, Recreation
June 27-July 3, 2013
Your Guide to Tri-State Events
Movies: World War ZPlague and other problems, page 11
The Music SceneAn entrance, an exit, page 3
Theater: Life ScienceBerkshire Playwrights Lab, page 7
The Art SceneGiving art a little space, page 5
Dance:
Dance Theatre of HarlemLike the lark, page 8
Calendar,Auditions, crafts,dance, theater,food, page 12
Supplement to THE LAKEVILLE JOURNAL, THE MILLERTON NEWS and THE WINSTED JOURNAL
Noel Desiato plays the fierce, even reckless, nun
in John Patrick Shanleys Doubt at TriArts,
page 10
Photo:
MarsdenEpworth
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on our websiteLISTEN Live &
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A once in a lifetime event.This is your chance to say: "I was there..."
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MUSIC FROM VIENNA
Wih Ransom Wilson, Richard Stoltzman, Peter Frankl,
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STOLTZMAN
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COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013 3
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FORTY YEARS OF PAINTING
MAY 4TH TO JULY 10TH
SHARON HISTORICAL SOCIETY
18 MAIN STREET, SHARON, CT
W & S 10-2 and Th & F 10-4
ROBERT PITTENGER
Arts Entertainment&
Apair of concertswith virtuosoperformers and
a fond farewell highlightthis weekends openingof the Norfolk Chamber
Music Festival in Norfolk,CT.
The farewell is to theTokyo String Quartet,ending its remarkable44-year run with a specialbenefit concert to restoreNorfolks Shed, its perfor-mance space. After its two
longest-serving members violist Kazuhide Isomu-ra, a founding member in1969, and second violinist
Kikuei Ikeda, who joinedin 1974 announcedtheir retirement, thegroup decided to disband.
In an interview withWGBH in Boston, Iso-
mura said that in the earlydays critics sometimescalled the quartets play-ing mechanical, likeningthem, in an obvious bit ofracial profiling, to Toyo-tas or Hondas. Listeningto one of the ensemblesmore than 30 recordings,
one hears anything butmechanical.
A Queens Entrance,
A Quartets Finale at NorfolkTheTokyoStringQuartet;Photo:ChristianDucas
se
Please turn to page 4
The Music Scene: Fred Baumgarten
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17
Arts Entertainment&
Continued from page 3
Rened, clen, with ilken, hiering undi hw I wuld decribethe qurtet und. Fit-tingly r gru thtly n strdivriuintruent clled thepgnini Qurtet be-cue they were riginllywned by the ed 19th-century vilinit Niclpgnini, they re indi-vidully nd gruhighly virtuic.
The rgr eturethree jewel the re-ertire: Hydn stringQurtet in G mjr, o.
77, N. 1; Brtk stringQurtet N. 6; nd De-
buy string Qurtet inG minr, o. 10.Debuy yuthul qur-
tet, hi nly citinin tht genre, ved thewy r hi revlutinryhrnic nd tyliticexlrtin, wht weten cll uicl ire-ini, tht culinted yer lter, in 1894, inhi gret prelude t theaternn Fun rchber rchetr. Thereed with which theuic fw rein e-thing ecil, re thn century lter.
at Nrlk n the
reviu night, cncert muic r Vienneture gggle vir-tu errer: RnWiln, fute; Richrdstltzn, clrinet; Wil-li purvi, French hrn;alln Den, truet;peter Frnkl, in; nd
eber the artiQurtet. The rgreture Hydn, mzrt,Beethven, schubert,mhler, Bruckner ndBerg, in vriu intru-entl cbintin.
The blnce theNrlk en i ntble
r it diverity c-er nd wrk. HndelEntrnce the Queen sheb, n incrblyrthy cnectin thtued t intrduce Rb-ert J. Lurte clicluic hw n WGBH,will be herd n July20 lng with mzrtsinni Cncertnte ndthe Brh pin Quintet
ou 60, Werther.The rt Fridy in au-
gut eture wind cn-cert with wrk Cheru-bini, Gund, arthurFte nd Eile Bernrd.The llwing night, thegret Eern Qurtet hincluded Benjin Brit-
ten string Qurtet N. 3n rgr tht l h Hydn nd Beethven.
muic r Vienntke lce trrwnight, Fridy, July 5, t8 .., nd the Tkystring Qurtet ly itnl cncert n sturdy,
July 6, t 8 ..
Tickets and informationon the Norfolk ChamberMusic Festival of the YaleSchool of Music, can be
found at music.yale.edu/norfolk, or by calling 860-542-3000.
. . . And Many Gems of theChamber Music Repertoire
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COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013 5
Arts Entertainment&
THE BLUE HILL TROUPEperforming Gilbert & Sullivans The Mikado!4.7 2:00 PM
BIG AL ANDERSON AND THEFLOOR MODELS
feat. Jim Chapdelaine, Lorne Entress, Paul Kochanski
!&37 8:00 PM
www.InnityHall.comToll Free: 1-866-666-6306presented by
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Summer HoursWed - Thu 4 pm - 9 pm
Fri - Sat - Sun11:30 am - 9 pm
July 4th11:30 am - 5 pm
Always open before shows!
InfinityBistro.com860-542-5531
See InfinityHall.com for times
Benefit the Norfolk Historical Society
--
What a difference venues make. Two artshows now hanging in Sharon prove thepoint.
Robert Pittengers paintings at the Sharon Histori-cal Society need space and distance between themand the viewer of these difficult works. Up closehis rough undersurfaces, rolled on thickly, look likestucco; and his trees, houses and land can seemamateurish. But move back, look from farther away,
and the best paintings come together in a rigorouswhole.
Pittenger has been painting for many years; hisGreen Trees was made in 1972. From the begin-ning he has been obsessed with time and space, withrepetition and crowding in his landscapes, and withtrees.
Nothing in the paintings is from life or plein air.
The Art Scene: Leon Graham
Giving Works of Art
A Little Distance
Please turn to page 6
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6 COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013
Continued from page 5
Everything springs from the artists imagination.I look at trees. But I dont look at them while I am painting. Its not
what a tree looks like but what painting a tree looks like, he has said. And
certainly his trees look more surreal than real, more like objects crowdedtogether between austere yet elegant Italian villas (really big suburbanhomes) with shapes like Monopoly pieces.
Pittengers work can make you reconsider what trees look like, how alandscape is a mixture of forms and light. There is an ephemeral, almostdreamy quality to many pieces. The landscapes owe homage to NicholasPoussin with their classical allusions, arrangements of forms and their hazycolors. Bright and olive, even gray greens render trees dusty.
The three newest pictures, Our Pond and Sous-bois I and II, French
for undergrowth, are darker, tangled, hidden from the light. They wouldshow better in a larger space, too.
At the Sharon Hotchkiss Library, John Frederick Walker is exhibiting24 pieces throughout the building. The show does not have the impact ofhis smaller, better edited show at Kents Ober Gallery last year. There, allthe works were hung together in the relatively small gallery at eye level soviewers could move from one work to another then back again.
Walker, of course, is a collector and alterer of old books. Most often hetears out pages leaving torn remnants, or discards pages altogether andworks with the bindings or glues pages together and then cuts spaces intheir centers to display an illustration. Flayed Man shows drawings in ananatomy textbook.
On the landing between floors are some small books impaled with mean-looking screws. There are three old Baedeker travel guides, Italian andSwiss, altered and resting together in a single frame. And among works onthe second floor is Truncated, showing lovely endpapers with a repeti-tive, feathery, flame design in faded colors with a hint of gold.
Robert Pittenger 40 Years of Painting continues at the Sharon Historical
Society, 18 Main Street, through July 5. The exhibition is open Wednesday andSaturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call860-364-5688 or go to www.sharonhist.org.
John Frederick Walker Book Art will be at the Sharon Hotchkiss Li-brary through July 31. The library, at 10 Upper Main Street, is open every dayexcept holidays. For hours, call 860-364-5041 or go to www.hotchkisslibrary.org.
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The clex but inully unny dr Lie science, written by annZiegler nd directed by Je Ccci, decribe ur high chl enir wr-rying but getting int cllege nd fguring ut wh they relly re. They rereccuied by byriend, by girlriend, by ln r the uture, by their Jewihheritge nd by uburbn lie, nt t entin wrld terrri nd wr
The ur chrcter, Leh, Dn, T nd mike ech hve their wntruggle. Nt nly did the crit ring true, but the et nd ecil eect ke huge ict well. scene invlving nly texting nd intnt eginginted ctul dilgue lent nte reli t thee 17- nd 18-yer-ldchrcter. The bck dr w l very clever with blck nd white chlkbrdnel hiding r reveling dierent rt the tge which were cvered withgrfti like Dnt grw u, it tr.
Ellie Yohe is a summer intern at The Lakeville Journal.
Life Science runs at the Daniel Art Center at Simons Rock in Great Barrington,MA, through June 30. For tickets, call 413-528-2544.
Young Lives, Big Problems
Theter: Lie science t Berkhire plywright Lb
ph
oto:ChristinaLane
DavidKremenitzerasMikeand
JessJacobsasDanainLife
Science
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In recent in-terview, Dnce
Thetre Hrle rtiticdirectr VirginiJhnn idtht when he
held uditin r thecny, newly retrtedthi yer ter nine-yerhitu, very ew aricn-
aericn dncer hwedu. Even in 2013, terDTH 40-lu yer hi-
try trining yungdncer clr r bllet,
there re very ew dncingin rincil rle in jrcnie. s he turnedt the DTH chl, whichnever ted erting,nd it junir true. shew then ced with h-ing tly yung ndinexerienced gru
dncer int t inter-ntinl cny.Nw, ew hrt week
ince it aril debut inNew Yrk, the 18-eber
cny reented nbitiu nd vried r-gr t Jcb pillw thtdentrted n bun-dnce tlent, rtitry,nd energy nd rie bright uture.
arritely, the rtdnce w agn, the
grundbreking cllbr-tin between Blnchinend strvinky tht elec-tried udience when itreired in 1957. Thecentrl duet w der blck n, arthurmitchell, wh went n tund DTH, nd white
wn, nd w bthhcking nd well withinthe intre wheredern erring rtw ging t tht tie.The cre w strvinkyrt 12-tne wrk, ndwhile bed n Frenchcuntry dnce, i withutrhyth r eldy. Bl-nchine chregrhyi endlely clex, ndtechniclly dendingnd the yung cnyre t the chllenge.Lt Wednedy, Gbri-elle slvtt nd Fredrick
Dvi erred the de deux, nvigting the
tricky dynic hit ndlngru eductin withlb they hd eed,lightne nd gret che-itry. (It truly n extrr-dinry wrk chregr-hy. G t YuTube ndwtch ew verin it.ablutely unrgettble.)
Turen Green nd Chry-tyn Fentry l tdut in l vritin.
michel Deprince ndsuel Wiln erredn excert r swnLke, the brvur actIII de deux. only 18,Deprince h the ju,
the turn, nd the rize-winning extenin, butnt yet the turity tengge nd educe. (shei l lvely ern. mydncer dughter, witingr her t the tge drter n en reherl,w rewrded with eexcellent dvice nd kindencurgeent.)
Lrk acending, dern alvin aileyiece with uic byRlh Vughn Willi,w erred here ninte. It w exquiite.
Even i the dditin inte he dded e
thuing ter ju ndchnged the line e the dern-iniredveent, it brughtut the gentle lyrici the dncer, eecillyslvtt, wh futteredwith uch delicte grcehe lt levitted t the
rter.Fr But Cle, with
chregrhy by Jhn al-leyne nd jzz-infectedcre by Dniel BernrdRuin, tk turnr the cnterry.Tw cule illutrted ken-wrd text by
Dniel Bety, the try yung blck wn whditrut nd er inti-cy nd the n he eetn the ubwy. The e,thugh hertelt, neverre bve clich, nd itditrcted r the trngt-fwing dncing.
The evening cncludedwith the jyu Return,chregrhed by RbertGrlnd nd eturing uite ng by JeBrwn nd areth Frnk-lin. The dncer c-bined urbn R&B dnce
Dnce: Dnce Thetre HrleJenny Hansell
Like the Lark, Ascending
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Compass, Thurdy, June 27, 2013 9
ve with clicl bllet technique.Deprince, linky in her ilver inidre,trted thing ff leding the cny inmther pcrn, nd Turen Greenbrught it he in suerbd. In be-tween, stehnie Re Willi, Dutin
Je nd Chrytyn Fentry td ut,nd the whle cny rdited jy. IfReturn brek n new grund chre-grhiclly, it till give thi yung c-ny the chnce t let le, hw theirch nd et riing th.
and ne nte lng-tie udienceeber: Nw tht the pillw h relcedit ggy uncfrtble et with lendid
new ne, ybe it will ddre the undyte. It dent ee right tht recrdeduic und tinnier nd le lentthn wht ight be herd t ny f urlcl eleentry chl. Let the fundri-ing begin.
Next week at the Pillow: Compagnie Kfgand Leo; Call 413-243-0745 or reservations
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Anthony Savoy and Francis Lawrence in George Balanchines Agon
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10 Compass, Thurdy, June 27, 2013
e Colebrook Book Barn
657 Colebrook Rd. (Rt. 183), Colebrook, CT 06021(1 mile North of Colebrook Center)
(860) 379-3185www.colebrookbookbarn.comemail: [email protected]
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Arts Entertainment
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(((%#$(!&'"
Tues Jul 2 at 8pm
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Sat Jul 20 at 8pm
with the
Sun Jul 21 at 7pm
Sat Jul 27 at 8pm
Thurs Jul 25 at 8pm
Mon July 29 7pm
Sing-a-long
(1978)
Sat Jul 6 at 7pm
Sun Aug 4 at 7pm
Triart h nt unted nn-u-icl ince steel mgnli. Thtw 2001. and, ccrding t Execu-tive Directr alice Bend, wh
w nt executive directr t the tie, steelmgnli w nt hit.
muicl rule in the wdy shrn ply-hue: annie Get Yur Gun, The sund muic, The King nd I, ll hve lded thetge, yer ter yer, with ilir ce ndne r tw r r the tricky rt.
But chnge hen nd Triart h t t-trct re thn ily, riend nd neighbrt thi venerble lyhue. since michel
Berkeley quit lt Nveber, leving Jhnsikin le rtitic directr, chnge hhened. a tight, well-rehered Gerhwinrevue relced the nnul Div undriernd nw tright ly, Jhn ptrick shn-ley Dubt, a prble will be erred fvetie t Triart Bk Gllery, July 7-11, terthe en ener, slt, n the intge.
shnley, knwn widely r mntruck, chring vie but lve nd in ndBrklyn Height, wrte Dubt, gritty,pulitzer-prize winning ly but lve ndin nd the riet-dinted, hierrchiclCthlic Church.
Bed lely n the exerience ilyeber, shnley ly cue n rchil-chl by wh y r y nt hve hd
hyicl encunter with rih riet, ndbut the nun, reltively wrldly wn,wh i t tke thi riet dwn.Nel Deit, bld, vcl, dring ern
herel (he ued t ride 10-eed bicyclerund mnhttn t ve subwy re), lysiter alyiu, the nun wh will rtect child, whether he need rtectin r nt, ndwill rik nything, even her reltinhi withGd, t unih the riet nd the hierrchytht rtect hi.
I cn fght yu, Fther Flynn wrn aly-iu.
Yu will le, he relie. Marsden Epworth
Doubt, A Parable, runs at TriArtsBok Gal-lery in Sharon, CT, July 7-11. For tickets, call860-364-7469.
Theter: Dubt
Drama at TriArts
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COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013 11
Movies: World War ZFRED BAUMGARTEN
At The
Movies
354 Main St., Winsted354 Main St. Winsted Ct 06098
1-860-379-5108 www.gilsoncafecinema.comDoors open at 6 p.m. 21 Years & Older
Now Showing
6/28, 29, 30,7/2, 3
CLOSED MONDAYS
MAIN AUDITORIUM IN DIGITAL
MUD PG-13 7PMSHOWING IN UPSTAIRS THEATER
NOWYOU SEE ME PG-13 7PM
L
ured by ubiquitoustrailers showing
masses of peoplemoved by some unseenforce, scenes of mayhemand destruction, and BradPitts crystal eyes, I de-cided to check out WorldWar Z.
Heres what I got: zom-bies.
Now then, Ive goneand said it. Perhaps Ivespoiled it for you. Orperhaps Im the only idioton the planet who didntknow what the Z stoodfor when I walked into thetheater.
But it hardly matters,because after maybe 10
minutes of good old-fashioned fright moviebuild-up, the movie blowsits cover. Freshly-killedbodies writhe and makeunpleasant noises, getbloodshot eyes and sicklyskin, clack their teeth andgo looking for someone
else to chomp on.Is there such a thing as
an undead origin story?In this case, zombism isa viral condition: Con-tagion meets Dawn ofthe Dead. As if theres aliving soul, or undead one,who cares.
Pitt plays some sortof UN operative calledout of retirement to helpsolve the problem of whatcauses the plague, whichin no time flat has laidwaste to half the citiesof the world, and how tostop it.
Conveniently, becausehe is apparently the onlycitizen of earth who cando it, the entire militaryestablishment expendsits total effort on rescu-ing Pitt and his epicallybland family. Everyoneelse might just as well bechopped liver.
Theres really not muchelse to report, so Ill cut tothe chase. World War Zis a ludicrously bad movie.Try making sense of oneplot point or detail. I did,
and got fried brains.Heres a good one:
When we see Pitt beingflown into Jerusalem tofind out why Israel hasbeen successful in seal-ing off zombies, and againwhile barely escaping thepredictable invasion, the
runways and taxiways arehumming with airliners asif its, oh, just an ordinaryday at the airport.
Huh? Where are allthese people flying to?Are they being airdroppedinto war zones to feed theenemy?
Heres another: Bombsand explosions, includingone that looks like a smallnuke, happen with alarm-ing regularity. Have thesuddenly undead stock-piled a small arsenal?
When Pitt finally doesfigure out a solution,
which involves somepretty bad germs, he findsthem in a biohazard suitethat looks for all the worldlike a china shop.
I could have walkedout there, and ended thisreview, save for one lastthing. How much badjudgment, if not bad taste,does it take to use Israel asthe example of a countrythat walls out the menac-ing other, but cant hold itback forever?
Thats not the only
place World War Zgoes way over the line. Awould-be test zombie ina glass cage somewherein Wales happens to bea dark-skinned African-looking woman withdreadlocks, viciouslygnawing at the wall. Oh,
moviemakers, what areyou trying to tell us?
Only they know theanswer.
World War Z is ratedPG-13 for intense, frighten-ing zombie sequences, vio-lence and disturbing images.
Additional viewer warnings:Heroic limb-cutting a la127 Hours!David Mr.Potato Head Morse in acameo channeling HannibalLecter!
It is playing at the Mov-iehouse in Millerton andelsewhere.
BradPittinWorldWarZ
A Plague and
Other Problems
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TRI-CORNER CALENDAR
Bash Bish BicycleProudly serving cyclists
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THE LAKEVILLE JOURNAL/MILLERTON NEWS/WINSTED JOURNAL
Listing deadline is Thursdayat noon for the next weekspublication. Address your entryto Calendar by fax at 860-435-
4802, by mail to PO Box 1688,Lakeville, CT, 06039, or email [email protected] .
tips on speaking with an Irishaccent, audition sides, and anonline copy of the script, whichis recommended reading, go towww.theatreworks.us/actors
BooksBeardsley and Memorial Library,40 Munro Pl, Winsted, CT, 860-379-6043, www.beardsleyandmemorial.org History Book DiscussionGroup: Last Tues of eachmonth, 6:30 pm. Discussion ledby Virginia Schultz-Charette,a different non-fiction book ischosen each month.
Hotchkiss Library, 10 Upper MainSt, Sharon, CT, 860-364-5041, www.hotchkisslibrary.org Readingsby members of the Memoir
Workshop, Lifes Stages,July23, 4-6 pm. Refreshments willbe served.
Scoville Memorial Library, 38 MainSt, Salisbury, CT, 860-435-2838,www.scovillelibrary.orgBookSchmooze and Signup: Adultsummer reading program, June27, 6-7 pm. For informationcall 860-435-2838; Second Satbook group, Anne Kremerleads, Last Days of PtolemyGray, 4 pm.
Classes[The] Mark Twain House andMuseum, 351 Farmington Ave,Hartford, CT, 860-247-0998, www.marktwainhouse.org Tom Lee,storyteller for adults, offersa five-week storytelling classTuesdays, July 2-30, 6-8 pm.
For information and to registercall 860-280-3130. Class size islimited to 12.
DanceBard College, Sosno Theater,Fisher Center for Performing Arts,Red Hook, NY, 845-758-7900, www.bard.edu Bill T. Jones/ArnieZane Dance Company and SITI
Company: A Rite, July 6, 8 pm,July 7, 3 pm.
Jacobs Pillow, 358 GeorgeCarter Rd, Becket, MA, 413-243-9919, www.jacobspillow.org Compagnie Kfig , TedShawn Theatre, through June30; Leo, Doris Duke Theatre,through June 30; Cedar LakeContemporary Ballet, TedShawn Theatre, July 3-7;Shantala Shivalingappa,Doris Duke Theatre, July 3-7;Companhia Urbana de Danca,Ted Shawn Theatre, July 10-14;Brian Brooks Moving Company,Doris Duke Theatre, July 10-14.
FoodAmenia Farmers Market,
Amenia Town Hall parkinglot, Rte 22, Amenia, NY, www.ameniafarmersmarket.com Openevery Friday, 3-7 pm. Freshlocal produce.
Cornwall Farm Market, West Cornwall,CT, on the Wish House lawn justabove the Covered Bridge, www.cornwallfarmarket.org Every Sat, 9am-1 pm. Plenty of free parkingavailable in Railroad Square.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo CookingSchool, 44 Upland Rd, NewMilford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.hunthillfarmtrust.orgChef SethGoldman, Slightly to the Leftof the Silk Road, June 29, 2pm, with special guest FaithStewart-Gordon, RussianTea Room owner, 1967-1996.Summer dishes using flavorsfrom Russia, Georgia andCentral Asia.
Kent Farmers Market, Kent Green,Kent, CT Every Sat, 9 am-noon.
Millerton Farmers Market, RailroadPlaza, Millerton, NY, www.millertonfarmersmarket.orgEverySat, 9 am-1 pm through Oct 26.Music and special events everyweek.
Norfolk Farmers Market, 19 MapleAve, in front of Town Hall, Norfolk, CT
AuditionsSherman Playhouse, 5 Rte 39 N,Sherman, CT, 860-354-3622, www.shermanplayers.org Seeking 7men and 5 women, ages 25-65,for drama, Book of Days.
Auditions take place July 15,16, 7-9 pm at the playhouse;auditioners will be asked toread from the script. A resumeand headshot encouraged, butnot required. For informationgo to www.shermanplayers.org
TheatreWorks, 5 Brookside Ave,
o Rte 202, next to CVS, NewMilford, CT, 860-350-6863, www.theatreworks.usSeeking 5 men ages 18-60 and 4women, ages 18-80 for the blackIrish comedy, The Cripple ofInishmaan. Auditions will beheld, July 15, 16, 7-9 pm. Allactors must audition with anIrish accent, a dialect coachwill be used during rehearsals.For character breakdowns,
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with science and nature foryounger children and families.Members and visitors enjoyexhibits and demonstrations,education classes and activities,a live animal wildlife sanctuary,
state-of-the art digital sciencedome movies and planetariumshows.Go online forinformation.
[The] Cornwall Library, 30 Pine St,Cornwall, CT, 860-672-6874, www.cornwalllibrary.org Toddler PlayGroup, each Thursday, 10:30-11:30 am.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo CookingSchool, 44 Upland Rd, NewMilford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.hunthillfarmtrust.org LittleSprouts-Young Chefs Week, forages 5-10, July 8-12, 9 am-1 pm;On the Farm-Culinary and ArtWeek, for ages 9-12, July 15-19,9 am-2 pm.
Lake Compounce Amusement Park,822 Lake Ave, Bristol, CT, 860-583-3300, www.lakecompounce.comFamily theme park. Kiddie
rides, roller coaster, waterrides, thrill rides, classic rides,entertainment, dining andsnack areas. Open daily, throughAug. Go online for drivingdirections.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.machaydntheatre.org ChildrensTheatre Season: The LittleMermaid, June 28-29, July5-6 and July 12-13. Call 518-392-9292 for information andreservations.
Norman Rockwell Museum, 9Glendale Rd, Stockbridge, MA, 413-298-4100, www.nrm.org SnowWhite and the Seven Dwarfs,the creation of a classic,through Oct 27. Explore thedevelopment of Walt Disneysfirst feature-length animatedfilm, with original artwork from
the movie.
Old Sturbridge Village, 1 OldSturbridge Village Rd, Sturbridge,MA, 800-733-1830, www.osv.org Are-created village and outdoorhistory museum brings to lifethe world of men and womenin the early 19th- centuryrural New England. Animals,games, events, demonstrations,cafe, gift shop, 4th of Julyfireworks and more. Wheelchair
accessible, free parking, seniordiscount.
TheatreWorks,TWKids, 5 BrooksideAve,New Milford, CT, 860-350-6863, www.theatreworks.us
TheatreWorks Kids SummerCamp Production: Youre aGood Man, Charlie Brown,public performance over theweekend of July 20.
Warner Theatre, 68 Main St, NancyMarine Studio, Torrington, CT, 860-489-7180, www.warnertheatreorgShrek: the Musical, July 27-Aug 4.
West Hartford Art League, 37 BuenaVista Road, West Hartford, CT,www.westhartfordart.org/classesSummer camp starts July 1,offering four one-week sessionsof morning classes for youngartists. Go online to check outthe schedule, call 860-231-8019with questions or to register.
MoviesBank Street Theater, 46 Bank St,NewMilford, CT, 860-354-2122, www.bankstreettheater.com
Bantam Cinema, 115 Lake Rd, Rte209, Bantam, CT, 860-567-0006,www.bantamcinema.comWeek ofJune 28-July 4: The East andMuch Ado About Nothing.
Beacon Cinema, 57 North St,Pittseld, MA, 413-358-4780, www.thebeaconcinema.com
Cinerom, 89 Farley Place, Torrington,CT, 860-489-4111, www.cinerom.comSee Compass movie page.
Gilson Cafe Cinema, 354 Main St,Winsted, CT, 860-379-5108,www.gilsoncafecinema.com SeeCompass movie page.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, GreatBarrington, MA, 413-528-0100, www.
mahaiwe.org Copperhead, July13, 7 pm. Introduction by thedirector, Q & A to follow.
[The] Moviehouse, 48 Main St,Millerton, NY, 518-789-3408, www.themoviehouse.net See Compassmovie page.
[The] Triplex, 70 Railroad St, GreatBarrington, MA, 413-528-8885, www.thetriplex.com
MusicBard College,Richard B. FisherCenter for the Performing Arts,Sosno Theater, Red Hook, NY,
845-758-7900, www.bard.eduAston Magna Concerts: June28, July 5, July 12, 8 pm,Olin Humanities Building;Hudson Valley Chamber MusicCircle Concert:Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio, June29, 8 pm; Bard SummerScape2013, seven-weeks arts festivalexploring the life and times ofIgor Stravinsky, July 6-Aug. 18.
Bard College at Simons Rock,DanielArts Center, 84 Alford Rd, GreatBarrington, MA, 413-644-4400,www.simons-rock.eduAstonMagna Concert: July 6, July 13,6 pm.
Club Helsinki Hudson, 405 ColumbiaSt, Hudson, NY, 518-828-4800Young Paris, June 27; Rev TorBand, June 28; Ben Taylor,July 3; Paul Cebar, July 4;The Holmes Brothers, July 5;
Lake Street Dive, July 6; AnnHampton Callaway, Helsinkion Broadway, July 7; The SoulRebels, July 12; Chris Smither,July 13.
Hotchkiss School,11 InterlakenRd, Katherine M. Elfers Hall,Lakeville, CT, 860-435-4423, www.hotchkiss.org Summer ConcertSeries: Mir Quartet, June 28;Resident Quartet with MirQuartet, June 29, 7:30 pm; TheDessoff Choirs, June 30, 4 pm;Shanghai Quartet, July 5, 7:30pm; Shanghai Quartet withResident Quartet, July 6, 7:30pm; Brentano Quartet, July12, 7:30 pm; Brentano Quartetand Resident Quartet, July13, 7:30 pm; Student Concertwith Instrumental and VocalChamber Music, July 7, 4 pmand July 21, 4 pm; StudentInstrumental Concert, July 14,
4:30 pm.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo CookingSchool, 44 Upland Rd, NewMilford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.hunthillfarmtrust.orgCabaretNight: Blini Blues with EllenKaye, vocalist, June 29, 7:30 pm.
Innity Music Hall & Bistro, 8232Rte 44, Norfolk, CT, 866-666-6306,www.innityhall.comRusted
Root, June 27, June 28; The BlueHill Troupe performing Gilbertand Sullivans, The Mikado,June 30, 2 pm; Aaron Carter,June 30, 7:30 pm; Open micnight, July 3; Forward Motion,
July 5; Blue Coupe, July 6; DeerTick, July 7.
Litcheld Jazz Festival, GoshenFairgrounds, Rte 63, Goshen, CTwww.litcheldjazzfest.com Aug9-11. Children 12 and underfree on lawn. Childrensactivities, picnics allowed,bring blankets, low lawn chairs.Go online for information,schedule, tickets.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.machaydntheatre.org Mac-Haydn Mondays! Bill McGrathsinging Elvis, July 15; MelissaGiattino, Ron DeStefano andRichard Schwartz, July 29;Kathy Halenda, Aug 12, allperformances, 7 pm.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, GreatBarrington, MA, www.mahaiwe.
org, 413-528-0100 Aston MagnaFestival Concert: Masterworksby J.S. Bach and MarinMarais, June 29, 8 pm; PinkMartini, July 2, 8 pm; The FabFaux, July 20, 8 pm; NatalieMerchant with The HudsonValley Philharmonic, July 21, 7pm; Mary Chapin Carpenterand Marc Cohn, July 25, 8 pm;Manhattan Transfer, July 27, 8pm; Menopause the Musical,July 28, 3 pm.
MASS MoCA, 87 Marshall St, NorthAdams, MA, 413-662-2111, www.massmoca.org 12th AnnualSummer Music Festival, July17-Aug. 3. Festival highlightsinclude: Bang on a Can All-Stars, in Julia Wolfes SteelHammer, July 27, 8 pm;Composer Premiere Concert,July 29, 4:30 pm; Bang ona Can Marathon, Aug 3,
4-10 pm; and Daily recitals,July 17-Aug 2, 4:30 pm. Forinformation go to www.bangonacan.org/summerfestival
Meeting House, Village Green,Route 57, New Marlborough,MA, 413-229-2785, www.newmarlborough.org/music-more Music and More Festival
2013, Saturdays, Aug 3-Oct5, 4:30 pm. Xuerong Zhao,pianist, Aug 3; The Art of theFugue, Aug 10; The DaedalusQuartet, Aug 24; A sampling ofConnecticut Yankee composer
Charles Ives vocal andinstrumental works, Aug 31;Letters, lyrics and music fromChaucer to Donne, Sept 7; TheApollo Trio, Sept 21; KarenAkers sings Cole Porter, Sept28; Award Winning Authors,Elizabeth Graver, KatherineHall Page and Robert K.Massie, hosted by MitchelLevitas, Oct. 5.
Music Mountain, 225 MusicMountain Rd, Falls Village, CT, 860-824-7126, www.musicmountain.org The New York Gilbert andSullivan Players; Jive By Five,June 29; St. Petersburg StringQuartet, June 30; Evans Haile,pianist, July 6, 6:30 pm; St.Petersburg String Quartet,encore, July 7, 3 pm; PendereckiString Quartet, July 14, 3 pm;Arianna String Quartet, July 21,
3 pm; Dover String Quartet, July28, 3 pm.
New Haven Symphony, New HavenGreen, Downtown New Haven,www.newhavensymphony.org NHSOMusic on the Green Series:Dueling Divas, July 20, 7 pmwith William Boughton leadingopera divas Jamilyn Manning-White and Toby Newman.
Tanglewood Music Center,Seiji
Ozawa Hall & Koussevitzky MusicShed, 297 West St, Rte 183,Lenox, MA, 413-637-1600 StringQuartet Marathon, July 1, 11am, and 2:30 pm, July 2, 11am; Tanglewood Music CenterOrchestra: Jackson Browne,July 4, 7 pm; Boston SymphonyOrchestra: All-TchaikovskyProgram, July 5, 8:30 pm; BSO:John Oliver-Mahler SymphonyNo. 3, July 6, 8:30 pm; BSO:
Keith Lockhart and Vince Gill,July 7, 2:30 pm.
Tannery Pond Concerts, MountLebanon Shaker Village andDarrow School, Route 20, NewLebanon, NY, 888-820-9441, [email protected] TheMir String Quartet, July 27,8 pm; Vassily Primakov andNatalia Lavrova, pianists, Aug.17, 8 pm.
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Time & Space Limited (TSL)Warehouse, 434 Columbia St, Hudson,NY, www.timeandspace.org Livefrom the Metropolitan Opera:Verdis, Il Trovatore, June 28;Fossinis, Armida, July 12;
Verdis, La Traviata, July 19;Puccinis, Turandot, July 26;Rossinis, Barber of Seville, Aug2. All performances at 7 pm.
TriArts Sharon Playhouse, 49 AmeniaRd, Sharon, CT, 860-364-7469, www.triarts.net Patio Cabarets: June 28,29, July 4, 5, and 6, following theperformance of Monty PythonsSpamalot.Twelve Moons Coee House,
St. Johns Church, 12 Main St,Salisbury, CT, (back door entrance),[email protected], Mark Minkler, Jon Doty,Modern Jazz Trio, July 6, 7-10 pm.
Ulster Performing Arts Center, (UPAC),601 Broadway, Kingston, NY, 845-339-6088, www.upac.org UPAC BenefitConcert: Tony Bennett, June 29,8 pm.
Yale School of Music, The Music Shed,20 Litcheld Rd, Rtes 44 and 272,Norfolk, CT, 860-542-3000, www.norfolkmusic.org Music fromVienna, July 5; The Tokyo StringQuartet, The Last Concert, July6, 8 pm.
PotpourriCanaan Flea Market, Route 44,
North Canaan, Ct ( pavilion acrossfrom McDonalds) 860-824-7346,[email protected] market, June 29, 10 am-3pm. The sale will feature dozensof vendors offering vintage andnew musical instruments andaccessories. Free admission, nofee for vendors to set up a table.Shoppers are welcome to bringunwanted musical items to trade.
Colebrook Congregational ChurchMeeting House, 471 Smith HillRd, Colebrook, CT Annual Townof Colebrook 4th of Julycelebration, 11 am. Guestspeaker, Kenneth Andresenfollowed by traditional buffetluncheon on the Green. Childrenare invited to assemble at theColebrook Consolidated Schoolat 10:15 am to participate in theannual bicycle parade. All arewelcome.
Connecticut Junior Republic, GoshenRd, Litcheld, CT, 860-567-9423 ext252, www.ctjuniorrepublic.org 66thAnnual Litchfield House Tourto benefit Connecticut JuniorRepublic, July 13, 10 am-4 pm,
rain or shine. A private tour andcocktail reception from 4-7:30pm will be held as a separateevent. For information andtickets call or go online at www.litchfieldhousetour.org
North East-Millerton Library, 75 MainSt, Millerton, NY, 518-789-3340, www.nemillertonlibrary.org Book Sale inthe Anex Building, June 29, July6, July 20, Aug 3 and Aug 17, 10am-1 pm. Go online or call the
library if you have any questions.
Talks[The] Falls Village-Canaan HistoricalSociety, South Canaan Meeting House,Jct of Rtes 7 and 63, Falls Village,860-824-8226First Tuesdays at 7series: Lakeville Diving: Its thePits with Donald Mayland, July2, 7 pm. Mayland is a retired
economics teacher and ownerof Marine Study Program,Inc. and will present a lectureon local diving and recoveryof archaeological artifactsfound in Lakevilles abandonediron industry quarry pits. Allprograms are free. Donationswelcome. For information call860-824-8226.
Hotchkiss Library, 10 Upper MainSt, Sharon, CT, 860-364-5041, www.
hotchkisslibrary.org James Buckley,Reflections on the Place ofReligion in Public Life, July 7, 4pm. Free and open to the public.
Litcheld Hills Audubon Society,Litcheld Community Center,Rte 202, Litcheld, CT Monthlymeeting and program, Wildlifeand Connecticuts ChangingLandscape, presented by HeatherShirlock, July 8, 7:30 pm. Public
welcome.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, GreatBarrington, MA, 413-528-0100, www.mahaiwe.org Francine SeganLectures: Food Talk for MovieLovers, July 15, 6:30 pm; VirtualFood Tour of the Berkshires,July 29, 7 pm, ShakespearesKitchen, Aug 12, 6:30 pm.
[The] Mark Twain House andMuseum, 351 Farmington Ave,
Hartford, CT, 860-247-0998, www.marktwainhouse.org CelebratedHints from Heloise, June 27,7 pm, concluding with dessertreception and booksigning.
TheaterBard College, Fisher Center forPerforming Arts, Red Hook, NY,845-758-7900, www.bard.edu BardSummerScape premieres,The Master and Margarita,July 11-21.
Bard College at Simons Rock, 84Alford Rd, Great Barrington, MA,413-644-4400, www.simons-rock.
edu Berkshire Playwrights Labpresents its first full workshopproduction, Anna ZieglersLife Science, through June30; Shakespeare & Co presents:Leap Year, Aug 23- Sept 1.
Barrington Stage Co, Mainstage, 30Union St, Pittseld, MA, 413-236-8888Linda Lavin, Possibilities, withBilly Stritch on piano, July 8,8 pm.
Barrington Stage Co, Sydelle andLee Blatt Performing Arts Center,36 Linden St, Pittseld, MA, 413,499-5446 Muckrakers, throughJuly 6; Mr. Finns Cabaret Series:Up close with the cast of Onthe Town, June 29, 10:30 pm,an informal evening of cabaretsongs; Paul Green and the JewishJazz Project: traditional Klezmerfavorites and Jewish jazz fusion,June 30-July 1, 8 pm; Mr. Finn
and his all-star song writers, Take#I, July 6, 9 pm, July 7, 8 pm;Liz Callaway and Ann HamptonCallaway, July 14 and July 15,8 pm; Gutlss and Grateful: AMusical Feast, Amy Oestreicher,July 16, 8 pm; Joe Iconis andFamily, July 27, 10:30 pm, July28, 8 pm.
[The] Center for Performing Arts,Route 308, Rhinebeck, NY, 845-876-
3080, www.centerforperformingarts.org Jekyll and Hyde, July 5-28.
Chester Theatre Company (ChesterTown Hall) 15 Middleeld Rd,Chester, MA, 413-354-7771, www.chestertheatre.org Arms on Fire,through July 7; Tryst, July11-21; Body of Awareness, July31-Aug 11; An Iliad, Aug 15-25.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.
machaydntheatre.org LaCageAux Folles, through June 30;Singin in the Rain, July 4-21;Les Miserables, July 25-Aug 4;The Best Little Whorehouse InTexax, Aug 8-18; Gypsy, Aug
22-Sept 1.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, GreatBarrington, MA, www.mahaiwe.org,413-528-0100 Londons NationalTheatre in HD: The Audience,encore, July 7, 3 pm; Stagedreadings of new plays, July 10,24, Aug 7, 21; Rita Rudner, Aug4, 7 pm.
[The] Mount Estate & Gardens,Home of Edith Wharton, 2
Plunkett St (Corner of Rte 7),Lenox, MA, 413-551-5111, www.edithwharton.org Theatre at theMount: Shakespeare & Co, AMidsummer Nights Dream,July 20-Aug 17.
Shakespeare & Company,BernsteinTheatre, 70 Kemble St., Lenox, MA,413-637-3353, www.shakespeare.orgMaster Class, through Aug 18;Heros, through Sept 1.
Sherman Playhouse, 5 Rte 39 N,Sherman, CT, 860-354-3622, www.shermanplayers.orgAnne ofGreen Gables, June 28-July 27.
TheatreWorks, 5 Brookside Ave, oRte 202, next to C VS, New Milford, CT,860-350-6863, www.theatreworks.usEarnest or Whats in a Name?,July 12-Aug 3.
TheaterWorks, City Arts on Pearl,233 Pearl St., Hartford, C T, 860-527-7838 Becoming Dr. Ruth,through July 14.
TriArts Sharon Playhouse, 49 AmeniaRd, Sharon, CT, 860-364-7469,www.triarts.net Monty PythonsSpamalot, performancesthrough July 7; Doubt, July 11-14; Theyre Playing Our Song,July 19-28; 13 The Musical, Aug2-4; Next Thing You Know, Aug
8-11; Damn Yankees, Aug 14-25; The Playhouse Stomp, Aug.20, 7 pm.
Vassar College,Powerhouse Theater,124 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie,NY, 845-437-5599, www.vassar.eduDowntown Race Riot, throughJuly 7; When the Lights WentOut, July 17-28.
Vassar College,Susan Stein ShivaTheater, 124 Raymond Ave,Poughkeepsie, NY, 845-437-5599,www.vassar.edu Inside LookWorkshops,semi-staged:Found, July 12-14; Mother of
Invention, July 19-21.
Warner Theatre, 68 Main St, NancyMarine Studio, Torrington, CT, 860-489-7180, www.warnertheatreorgMy Mother Has Four Noses,June 29, 7 pm.
Theater
Workshops
For Kids[The] Center for Performing Arts,Route 308, Rhinebeck, NY, 845-876-3080, www.centerforperformingarts.org Theres still time to sign upfor summer camp! Workshopsand camps for ages 5-7, 7-10 andmiddle and high school students.Tuition assistance for Dutchessand Ulster county children. Call845-876-3088 ext. 13. Go onlineto review all the workshopsavailable. All camps requireadvance registration.
TriArts Sharon Playhouse, Youtheatre2013, 49 Amenia Rd, Sharon, CT,860-364-7469, www.triarts.netMusical Theatre PerformanceWorkshops:GrumblingGryphons, through June 28,ages 6-12; Spamalot, July 3
and July 6, ages 8-18, one-dayintensive behind the scenesworkshop, attend a matineeperformance, meet the cast; ThePhantom Tollbooth, July 8-19,ages 8-16; Creative Dramatics,July 15-26, ages 5-7; TheatreRocks!, July 22-26, ages 8-16;Dance Style for Musical Theatre,July 29-Aug 2, ages 8-16; Disneyon Broadway, Aug 5-9, ages 8-16;Thoroughly Modern MillieJr., Aug 5-24, ages 8-18. Forinformation or to register go towww.triarts.net or call 860-364-7469 x 100. Tuition assistanceis available for all programs.Applications online.
For our complete calendar,go to our website at
www.tricornernews.com
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4
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of JULY SALE
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Sale Starts June 29th - July 7th
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PALEYSFARM MARKET & GARDEN CENTEROpen 7 Days 8 AM - 6 PM230 Amenia Road, Sharon, CT 06069860-364-0674 www.paleysfarmmarket.com
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