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Global Edmonton supports: 3rd Annual Fringe Theatre Telethon – GlobalNews Events

Global Edmonton supports: 3rd Annual Fringe Theatre Telethon - GlobalNews Events

Join us July 27 from 12 pm – 8 pm for the 3rd Annual Fringe Theatre Telethon, LIVE on FringeTV!

Enjoy live performances, Festival sneak peeks, artist interviews, and more, all in support of the Edmonton International Fringe Theatre Festival. The generosity of individual donors supports essential Fringe Theatre operations so that they can continue to amplify and illuminate artist stories.

Phone lines will be open to accept your gifts from 12 pm to 8 pm at 780-448-9000 or donate online 24/7 at fringetheatre.ca/donate.

Give Now, Fringe Forever!

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WATCH NOW: Kenosha Opera Festival hosting public events

WATCH NOW: Kenosha Opera Festival hosting public events

The Kenosha Opera Festival, launched in the fall of 2019, is back in a big way this season, with two operas, a recital and even a night of bawdy songs at a local brewery.

All of that activity continues the mission of the opera festival’s founders, Nicholas Huff and Kaila Bingen, to “unstuff” opera.

“It’s been going great,” Huff said of their efforts to bring opera to the general public.

“We’ve got more ways to move that ball down the court this year,” he said, “including a Kenosha Opera Festival app with games on it.”

The app — developed by Bingen’s husband, Rick, a computer science professor at Carthage College — is free to download and features opera “fun facts” and games. (When we talked, the app was only available on Android systems.)

“We’ll be playing games on the app during intermission of ‘The Barber of Seville’ with the audience,” Huff said. “It makes the opera fun and energized, not snobbish, which is what we’re all about.” As a bonus: There will be prizes awarded during those “Barber” intermission games.

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Fellowship program

The Kenosha Opera Festival features four young members in the troupe’s fellowship program — two singers and a pianist.

“We’re proud that our program is completely free for these college-age students to attend,” Huff said.

The fellowship program includes workshops on singing, of course, but also offers practical guidance on such topics as how to file your taxes if you’re a freelance performer and how to use social media.

The “fellows” will be performing an opera, “Orfeo ed Euridice” (“Orpheus and Euridice”), based on the Greek myth.

In the story, Orpheus is promised that he may enter Hades and retrieve his wife, Euridice, from death on one condition: he may not look back to see if she is there for the entire journey from the underworld back to the land of the living.

The opera, composed by Christoph Willibald Gluck, was first performed in Vienna on Oct. 5, 1762.

The opera is the most popular of Gluck’s works.

“It’s a full-length opera but is a short show,” Bingen said, adding that while the story is based on the classic Greek story “this version isn’t quite so tragic. We can’t leave everyone sad walking out of the theater.”

Note: The opera will be presented in Italian with English supertitles. This is a black-box production, accompanied by piano.

‘Barber of Seville’

This season’s main production is “The Barber of Seville,” Gioachino Rossini’s comedy, which premiered in 1816 and has remained popular ever since.

“It’s one of the most fun operas ever written,” Huff said. “Also, people kind of know this one — from the ‘figaro, figaro, figaro’ singing and some of the familiar arias in it.”

Audiences, he said, “should enjoy it because it is somewhat familar — and it’s just a hoot.”

The cast features this season’s six guest artists — who are coming to Kenosha from New York, Cincinnati, the Chicago area, Florida, Portland, Ore., and even from South Korea.

“We reached out in the opera world and received a lot of interest from all over,” Huff said of casting this year’s production.

The cast, he added, “are all great singers — real bangers.”

This opera — a frantic comedy about, yes, a barber in the city of Seville — features the classic opera plot devices of romantic pursuit, false identities and disguises.

“The show is filled with big personalities,” Bingen said. “All the cast members get to go really big on stage. The vocal fireworks will blow your hair back.”

Note: The opera will be presented in Italian with English supertitles, accompanied by an orchestra.

Guest artist recital

Before they perform on stage in the opera, those guest artists — Heeseung Chae, Max Hosmer, Edith Grossman, Stacey Murdock, Alex Boyd and Janese Pentico — will perform in a Friday night recital at First United Methodist Church, 919 60th St.

“This is a great opportunity to get up close and personal with this group of singers,” Bingen said. “The recital features a fantastic set list, and the church is a wonderful setting for the concert.”

The recital will feature “a teaser” for “The Barber of Seville,” along with songs from musical theater, plus a Mozart set and “Easter eggs” — arias that are routinely cut from operas.

“There will be opera and non-opera pieces, and music from all genres and from all periods,” Huff said.

Overall, the two are happy with the audience response to the opera festival’s productions and other events.

“We’re building up momentum, with everything from our YouTube Channel to our live productions,” Bingen said.

Huff added that our little local opera group is also “becoming more well-known in the opera world. That’s very exciting.”

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Today’s events for Saturday, April 30

Today's events for Saturday, April 30

It’s Independent Bookstore Day, and Kenosha’s Blue House Books is hosting a celebration. From 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., six area authors will read excerpts from their books, take questions and sign autographs. Food offerings by Hydn Cheese will start at noon. The free event is in Friendship Park, 5834 Sixth Ave. The bookstore itself is nearby, at 5915 Sixth Ave. A. For more information about the shop, go to blue-house-books.com

“She Kills Monsters” — a play rooted in the Dungeons & Dragons universe and featuring numerous sword-fighting scenes, advanced projection technology and loads of special effects — continues tonight in the Main Stage Theater at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, 900 Wood Road. The show runs April 30-May 1 and May 6-8. Performances are 7 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays. There is also a 10 a.m. matinee on Friday, May 6. Tickets are $20 for adults; $15 for senior citizens (55 and older) and students. Go to uwp.edu/therita.

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“Radio Show” — featuring performances of the classic radio dramas “Sorry, Wrong Number” and “The Hitchhiker” — continues at 7:30 tonight in the Studio Theater at Bradford High School, 3700 Washington Road. Tickets are $6-$13 at kusd.edu/finearts.

“Something Rotten” — a musical comedy that spoofs musicals and Shakespeare — continues tonight at Carthage College. Performances are 7:30 tonight (April 30) and 3 p.m. Sunday (May 1); continuing at 7:30 p.m. May 5-7. Tickets are $14 for adults, $10 for senior citizens (55 and older) and $8 for students. Go to carthage.edu/arts/box-office.

Wake up and smell the all-you-can-eat-pancakes (and enjoy the music) at Pancake Day. The event is 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Roma Lodge, 7130 Spring St. in Mount Pleasant. The music starts at 7 a.m. with Betsy Ade and the Well-Known Strangers. $10 at the door; free for kids 5 and younger.

Looking for live music tonight? Here are some options:

Petty Union (a Tom Petty tribute group) plays at the Brat Stop, 12304 75th St. 9 p.m. $10 cover charge.

Local favorite Ash Can School performs, starting at 8 p.m., at Union Park Tavern, 4520 Eighth Ave. No cover.

And Wisconsin favorite Pat McCurdy brings his brand of music and comedy to the Wyndham Garden Hotel Ballroom, 125 Sixth Ave. 7:30 p.m. $10. Get tickets at brownpapertickets.com/event/5415317.

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Brampton poet performs at Rose Theatre free live Black History Month event |

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Published February 14, 2022 at 11:46 am

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Brampton’s Rose Theater is hosting a free live-streamed performance on Tuesday from a local poet to celebrate Black History Month.

On Feb. 15, born and raised Brampton artist Desiree McKenzie will share new poems and stories of her growth into adulthood, identity, mental health and her reflections on the world as a person of colour.

The performance will be live streamed for free on the Rose Theatre’s Vimeo page and is a partnership with Accida Brampton, the city’s Arts, Culture & Creative Industry Development Agency (ACCIDA).

The show runs on Tuesday between 8:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m., and you can watch the live stream here.

McKenzie’s performance is part of a series of Tuesday night events at the Rose streaming throughout February.

The City of Brampton is honouring Black History Month with even more events, including the Black Artists Live Here Digital Exhibition.

The showcase at Garden Square is presented by ACCIDA and runs until May featuring a PIXEL digital screen exhibition on the 24′ LED screen highlighting the work of eight local artists, creatives and collectives.

For more information on the Black History Month events, visit www.brampton.ca.

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Theatre company planning classes, youth camps, and more events

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The people behind Tweed and Company Theatre have released details of their main productions of this year, but there’s much more in store for audiences and performers alike.

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With two venues now under company control, the opportunities to both see and get involved in live events are increasing. The company now owns the Marble Arts Centre in Actinolite and holds the lease for the Village Playhouse in Bancroft.

“The hope with both is that they will become year-round facilities,” said company artistic director and founder Porter, noting that does not necessarily mean each will be in use every weekend.

Asked about potential for attracting audiences to the buildings, Porter said he did not foresee problems.

“Everybody wants the experience now as much as they want the product.

“The idea of this going to this cute little church in a field is, I think, appealing for people,” he said, referring to the Marble Arts Centre. The hope, he said, is to make it “more of a destination” despite its relative isolation along Highway 37.

In addition to company productions, Porter said, there have been many requests to rent each venue.

“There will probably be entertainment every weekend” between May and October, and possibly even into December, he said.

Starting in March, the company will offer theatre camps for young people between March 14 and March 18. There will be summer camps at each venue; dates and details have yet to be confirmed.

Both locations will eventually have regular weekly classes and workshops throughout the year; they’ll be aimed at pre-professional performers.

Concerts, comedy and other one-night events are also planned. Details remain under wraps.

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The company will screen Toronto International Film Festival films in the fall, with the Village Playhouse already booked. Porter said plans to do the same at the Marble Arts Centre and possibly elsewhere are still being discussed.

In another new addition for the year, seating in each building will be assigned. Fans can book specific seats in advance rather than grabbing what’s available upon arrival.

“I think that’s going to be a fun new thing,” said Porter.

The kitchens and licensed bars of each location will be stocked with local products, the company added in a news release issued Tuesday.

In the meantime, the company is running its first virtual 50-50 draw. Eligible Ontarians may now buy tickets on the company website. The draw is at noon April 1. Funds will help to improve accessibility in both buildings and support the development of youth programs.

Check the company’s website for updates and further information.

For more information about youth programming, visit http://www.tweedandcompany.com , select a venue, and click the “Young Co” tab in the menu bar.