Category Archives: Entertainment

Can one person make a difference? Civic Theatre explores that in upcoming production

What is bravery? How can one person make a difference? These are a few of the questions this Newbery Medal award-winning novel, “Number the Stars,” asks its readers and now its audience.  For the first time on Grand Rapids Civic Theatre’s stage, this powerful story of a young Christian girl’s willingness to risk her life to save her Jewish friend is told. Set in Copenhagen, Denmark, during World War II, the story reflects our world’s dark history in an effort to remind us all, good and light continues to be found.

 

Taking its name, “Number the Stars,” from Psalm 147.4, the story is rich with symbolism as it weaves together themes of bravery and family to demonstrate the power of small acts of heroism.  “A popular novel in many middle and high schools, seeing the page transform to the stage will be a moving experience” said Civic Director of Community Relations Nancy Brozek.  “Our purpose is to produce plays that create conversations in our community, this production is certain to open dialog between children and their parents”.

 

Grand Rapids Civic Theatre presents “Number the Stars” Oct. 12 – 21 at its theater, 30 N. Division Ave. Tickets are $12 for students and $18 for adults. A special Community Night performance is scheduled for October 18, at 7:30 PM, with all seats only $6.  For more information or to purchase tickets, visit grct.org.

On the shelf: ‘Mennonite in a Little Black Dress’ by Rhoda Janzen

By Bill Hill, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

Because we do stupid things, and feel that no one in the world has ever been that dumb, we are deeply grateful to anyone who shows us that we are not alone. When that person can also make us smile and laugh out loud, and wince at the truth, we feel a bond develop, and are ready to listen to her stories as long as she cares to talk.

 

Rhoda Janzen’s miserable story is of a life that fell apart. A successful teacher of English at Hope College, she lived in a lakeside home with a brilliant husband. In the space of a week she is smashed up in a car wreck and further crushed when her loyal husband of 15 years announces that he is leaving her for a guy he met on the internet.

 

What’s a sensible woman to do? She retreats.

 

She goes home to her Mennonite roots and family in California, and rediscovers nothing miraculous, no seventh secret, or third eye, but much that is reassuring, affectionate and hilarious. If you ever wanted a fond, clear-eyed view of Mennonite life beyond potlucks, public prayer and a reluctance to discuss sex, this is the book for you. She spends her time in neither self-pity nor self-laceration but is determined to figure out what went wrong. Luckily she comes from a family well endowed with the genes for forgiveness, humor and hard work for whatever it takes
.

Ah, but the secret is in the telling, and her stories are a delight. As a friend put it, “Big laughs & a lot of deep breaths. Loved it.”

DeVos Performance Hall hosts Chinese Warriors of Peking on Oct. 30

Photo supplied

By Hilarie Szarowicz

 

Columbia Artists Management and the Ministry of Culture of The People’s Republic of China continue their ongoing collaboration to present the Chinese Warriors of Peking. This new production is filled with high-intensity martial arts and breathtaking acrobatics, set during the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644), to tell the tale of two rival martial arts disciplines competing in the ancient Chinese capital of Peking. Under the direction of Qui Jian, the Chinese Warrior of Peking provides a culturally enriching experience filled with juggling, acrobatics, weapons handling, and live stage combat. The cultural show comes to Grand Rapids for a live performance on Oct. 30, 2018 at 7:30pm in DeVos Performance Hall.

 

Tickets are available at the DeVos Place® and Van Andel Arena® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. See Ticketmaster for all current pricing and availability.

 

The company of the Chinese Warriors of Peking was founded in 1958 as a group of Chinese acrobats and martial artists. The Chinese Warriors of Peking have been on many tours in the past two decades. Most recently, the company performed in Denmark for six months in 2011 and in Britain for ten months in 2013. In 2016, the company’s performance of Pagoda of Bowls was selected by the American UniverSoul Circus to tour around the United States with the circus for more than ten months. The company’s Slack Wire act was picked by Cirque du Soleil and has toured with Cirque du Soleil around the world.

 

The company acts have won many awards throughout the years as well. In July 2005, its Bicycle and Slack Wire performance won first place, Ring Diving and Spinning Plates routine won 2nd place and Diabolo and Feet Juggling won 3rd place at the 3rd Shandong Provincial Acrobatics and Magic Competition. In 2010, at the 4th Shandong Provincial Acrobatics and Magic Competition, the company’s Bicycle routine won first place and the Diabolo and Swinging Poles routine won 2nd place. In 2012, at the 5th Shandong Provincial Acrobatics and Magic Competition, the troupe’s Stacking Chairs and Swinging Poles routine won first place. Most recently, the troupe’s Spinning Plates routine won 2nd place at the 6th Shandong Provincial acrobatics and Magic Competition in July 2016.

Tickets for Bob Seger’s Jan. 5th show go on sale TODAY, Oct. 5th

Bob Seger (file photo)

By Hilarie Szarowicz

 

Thanks to the tremendous response from fans, Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band’s show at SMG-managed Van Andel Arena on Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2018, has SOLD OUT. As a result, a second show has been added for Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019, at 8pm.

 

Tickets for the Jan. 5 date will go on sale Friday, Oct. 5 at 10am. Tickets will be available at the Van Andel Arena and DeVos Place® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. A purchase limit of eight (8) tickets will apply to every order. See Ticketmaster.com for all pricing and availability.

 

Bob Seger fan club members will have special access to purchase tickets in advance of the scheduled on-sale dates. To become a Bullet Club member, visit BobSeger.com/bulletclub. For additional information on Bob Seger, please visit BobSeger.com. Stream your Bob Seger favorites, here.

 

 

On the shelf: ‘Grand Rapids in Vintage Postcards: 1890-1940’ by Thomas R. Dilley

By M. Christine Byron, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

This volume by local author Tom Dilley is a wonderful contribution to the growing number of books about the history of Grand Rapids. Postcard collectors, historians and researchers will find this a useful and interesting book with its black and white reproductions of 228 postcards from Dilley’s personal collection, many of which are quite rare.

 

Dilley begins the volume with a concise overviews of Grand Rapids history and the history of postcards. Short explanations are given for the various types of postcards: postal mailing cards, real photos, white border cards, linen and chrome cards. He points out the importance of postcards as historical documents capturing the social history of a certain time and place.

 

The book is divided into three sections: “The City,” “Life in the City” and “The City at Work.” This structure works well in categorizing the wide array of postcards. Dilley starts by showing aerial views of the city. He proceeds with street scenes, individual buildings and bridges. Dilley does an excellent job of identifying buildings, giving the location, interesting details, the architect when known, and the lifespan of the structure. Dilley often refers to the contemporary counterpart of a historical building, giving readers a real sense of “then and now.”

 

The section “Life in the City” includes the commercial, religious, educational and social activities of the growing city. There are wonderful views of museums, theaters, retail stores, cafes, hotels, hospitals, churches schools and parks. The author spotlights social organizations such as the YMCA, the Ladies Literary Club and the St. Cecilia Music Society. Dilley’s book includes rare interior scenes of the YWCA gymnasium and the clothing department of May and Sons.

 

Section Three, “The City at Work,” shows Grand Rapids as a leader in “wholesale, retail and manufacturing enterprise.” The furniture industry is given prominence, but other industries are also included. The Grand Rapids Brewing Company, Grand Rapids Brass Company, the Cargill Company, and Bissell Carpet Sweeper Company stand out as a few fine examples.

 

Grand Rapids in Vintage Postcards includes many cards that most people have never seen. Included is a rare double card of the Majestic Theatre, a real photo card of the Fanatorium Bowling Alley and a scene of visiting airplanes lined up for the 1919 dedication of the Grand Rapids Airport. Besides the wonderful visual images, a strong point of the book is the accompanying text, which is very helpful in giving a historical perspective on the postcard views. Dilley’s book will serve as a valuable reference work as well as an enjoyable walk down memory lane.

A Drag Queen Christmas ‘The Naughty Tour’ to play GR on Nov. 24

By Murray Hodgson, SMG

 

The holidays were never this naughty! Hosted by Miz Cracker, tickets are now on sale for this must-see annual holiday spectacular with your favorite contestants from RuPaul’s Drag Race (VH1), set for Saturday, Nov. 24 at 8pm at SMG-managed DeVos Performance Hall. Drag Queen Christmas: The Naughty Tour will feature Drag Race contestants Latrice Royale, Naomi Smalls, Thorgy Thor, Raja Gemini, Miss Vanjie & Farrah Moan and hosted by the one and only Miz Cracker.

 

Tickets are available at the DeVos Place® and Van Andel Arena® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. See Ticketmaster.com for pricing and availability. Super Fan packages are also available in the first few rows with a first-in-line meet and greet pass, official tour poster and laminate with lanyard. This is an all-ages show.

 

‘The Series: Creative Expressions of African-American Culture’ at DeVos Place Nov. 12

Photo supplied

By Hilarie Carpenter

 

SMG-managed DeVos Performance Hall, DeVos Place®, and the Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority (CAA) Community Inclusion Group (CIG) has announced “The Series: Creative Expressions of African-American Culture,” and its first event the Dance Theatre of Harlem, which brings their 50th Anniversary Tour to DeVos Performance Hall on Monday, Nov. 12, 2018 at 8pm. Additional events in The Series will be announced in the near future.

 

“We are pleased to announce the launch of The Series: Creative Expressions of African-American Culture,” said CIG Chairman Darius Quinn. “The Series is a program of the CAA and CIG that is designed to provide consistent, high-quality programming for members of the West Michigan region who have an interest in the various forms of arts and entertainment inspired by African-American culture. We are committed to ensuring that the series is entertaining, empowering, educational and inspiring.”

 

“We strive to guide the venues in bringing diverse and inclusive entertainment to West Michigan,” added Joe Jones, CIG Member and President/CEO of the Urban League of West Michigan. “The Series follows in line with this vision, and we are excited to bring a set of excellent events to Grand Rapids that both celebrate and reflect the rich and vibrant African-American culture.”

 

Photo supplied

Dance Theatre of Harlem is a leading dance institute of unparalleled global acclaim whose mission is to maintain a world-class school that trains young people in classical ballet and the allied arts. They provide arts education, community outreach programs and serve as positive role models for all. The Dance Theatre of Harlem presents a ballet company of African-American and other racially diverse artists who perform the most demanding repertory at the highest level of quality. Now a singular presence in the ballet world, the Dance Theatre of Harlem Company tours nationally and internationally, presenting a powerful vision for ballet in the 21st century.

 

The 16-member, multi-ethnic company performs a forward-thinking repertoire that includes treasured classics, neoclassical works by George Balanchine and resident choreographer Robert Garland, as well as innovative contemporary works that use the language of ballet to celebrate African-American culture. Through performances, community engagement and arts education, the Company carries forward Dance Theatre of Harlem’s message of empowerment through the arts for all.

 

Tickets for Dance Theatre of Harlem are on sale now. Tickets are available at the DeVos Place and Van Andel Arena® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. See Ticketmaster.com for all current pricing and availability.

TreeRunner Grand Rapids releases October event schedule

Courtesy TreeRunner Grand Rapids

By Jeremy Witt, West Michigan Tourist Association

 

TreeRunner Grand Rapids released their fall events schedule filled with special themed glow nights, promotions for students, and pumpkin hunting. If you are looking for something unique and different to experience this fall, look no further.

 

“We host many fun and themed events throughout the season, including our ever-popular Glow Nights every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday night where we play upbeat music and climb under the LED lights in the park,” says Amanda McClellan, Business Manager. “This year, we have added various themed glow nights where climbers can dress up, participate in contests and earn prizes, and enjoy themed decorations throughout the park.”

 

The fall events extravaganza begins on Oct. 5th with Superhero Glow Night, followed by Alien Invasion Glow Night on Oct. 12th, Pirate Glow Night on Oct. 19th, and Zombie Apocalypse Glow Night on Oct. 26th. TreeRunner also has The Great Pumpkin Hunt going on every Sunday in October where climbers can search for a pumpkin in the park for a $5 add-on.

 

Alongside these exciting Fall events, TreeRunner also rolled out a couple new promotions; Thrifty Thursdays and Student Sundays. Thrift Thursdays will occur every Thursday and climbers can purchase all three-hour climb tickets for $30 and all last-call tickets for $20. Student Sundays will occur every Sunday throughout the rest of the season where students can purchase a climbing ticket all day for $25.

 

Courtesy TreeRunner Grand Rapids

TreeRunner Grand Rapids is built on two acres of rolling terrain and features seven zip lines, a Junior Park, seven main-level aerial trails, three levels of climbing difficulty, and 55 challenge elements to navigate through. TreeRunner Adventure Parks do not feature just one single aerial treetop trail but a variety of color-coded aerial trails. Each trail has a unique challenge level, beginner through expert, that climbers choose from depending on their age or climbing experience. These trails consist of platforms installed in the trees which are connected by various configurations of cable, wood, and rope to form crossings of different kinds including the ever-popular zip lines. Climbers wear harnesses which are secured to safety cables using the park’s “always locked on” system of interlocking safety clips. Before venturing onto the trails climbers receive an interactive orientation and practice session.

 

TreeRunner Grand Rapids Adventure Park is located on the Knapp’s Corner Mall Campus at 2121 Celebration Drive Northeast. The park’s season will end late November.  Reservations are now available for climbing and group appointments.

GR Symphony opens Great Eras series with music of Baroque on Oct. 12

Principal Oboist Ellen Sherman (Photo supplied)

By Jeffrey Kaczmarczyk, Grand Rapids Symphony

J.S. Bach’s “Air on the G String is an all-time audience favorite melody. It’s a sure bet you’ve heard it before.
 
It’s part of a larger work, Bach’s Orchestra Suite No. 3, which the Grand Rapids Symphony performs on Friday, Oct. 12, in St. Cecilia Music Center’s Royce Auditorium.
 
Principal Oboist Ellen Sherman is soloist on The Baroque Concert: Bach and Beyond, which includes music from the Baroque plus a contemporary piece by Brazilian’s most famous composer, Heitor Villa-Lobos, that’s inspired by the music of Bach. It’s the first of four concerts in the Grand Rapids Symphony’s Great Eras series.
 
Marcelo Lehninger leads the Grand Rapids Symphony at 8pm Oct. 12 in Grand Rapids plus a repeat of the entire concert at 8pm Saturday, Oct. 13 in Holland at the Jack Miller Center for Musical Arts at Hope College.
 
The Grand Rapids Symphony also plays a shorter version of the concert at 10am Oct. 12 at St. Cecilia for the Coffee Classics series. The one-hour concerts are held without intermission, and doors open at 9am for complementary coffee and donuts.

GVSU Shakespeare Festival to celebrate 25th anniversary with multiple events

Shakespeare’s “King Lear” featured at this year’s GVSU Shakespeare Festival.

By Matthew Makowski

GVSU

 

The Grand Valley Shakespeare Festival is the oldest and largest festival celebrating the Bard’s life and works in Michigan. For the past 25 years, festival events have attracted thousands of people of all ages to Grand Valley State University to enjoy the legacy of Shakespeare.

 

The Grand Valley community will celebrate the 25th anniversary of the festival with “A Silver Coronation: The Grand Valley Shakespeare Effect” — a series of events taking place through Nov. 3.

 

Shakespeare Festival Managing Director Jim Bell said the goal of the festival is to involve both the Grand Valley and West Michigan communities, as well as communities around the world. Over the years, this has been accomplished through various events, including a mainstage production, performances abroad, a biannual Shakespeare conference, involvement by guest artists and alumni, and outreach performances at local schools by Bard to Go, Grand Valley’s all-student touring Shakespeare company.

 

“Participating in the festival means the opportunity to enter the laboratory of live theater performance to experience the world’s greatest storyteller and humanity’s greatest spokesman in the arena where he is best understood,” said Bell. “Times change, but thoughts about life still often involve those areas of life that Shakespeare’s plays and characters contemplate, confront and challenge.”

 

More than 30,000 middle and high school students have visited Grand Valley to experience the mainstage production since the festival’s inception. This year, audiences of all ages will experience “King Lear” — a tale of a retiring king who determines through a series of tests of love how to divide his kingdom among his three daughters.

 

Special to the 25th anniversary of the festival will be the staged reading by festival alumni of a commissioned play by Grand Valley alumnus Scott Watson called “Defy the Stars.”

 

Based on true events, the play follows two actors who are held at the Westerbork Transit Camp in 1942. The actors perform “Romeo and Juliet” to save themselves and others from deportation to Auschwitz.

 

Below is the full schedule of Shakespeare Festival events. All events are free and open to the public, except performances of “King Lear.” Contact the Louis Armstrong Box Office at (616) 331-2300 for additional ticket information. For all event information, visit the Shakespeare Festival website.

“King Lear”
Thru Oct. 7
Louis Armstrong Theatre, Thomas J. and Marcia J. Haas Center for Performing Arts, Allendale Campus

 

“Defy the Stars”
Oct. 3, 6, and 7
Linn Maxwell Keller Black Box Theatre, Haas Center, Allendale Campus

 

Bard to Go: Twelfth Night
Oct. 7 during ArtPrize as an official time-based entry outside Eberhard Center, at noon and 1 p.m.
Nov. 3, at 1 p.m., Loosemore Auditorium, DeVos Center, Pew Grand Rapids Campus

‘Sean Blackman presents Fiesta Caribena’ at DeVos Peformance Hall Oct. 18

By Hilarie Szarowicz

 

Sean Blackman presents Fiesta Caribeña has been announced as the third event in the Latin Entertainment Series, celebrating Latin culture in Michigan. The series is presented by SMG-managed DeVos Performance Hall and the Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority’s Community Inclusion Group (CIG). “Fiesta Caribeña” will feature live music and dancers performing salsa, bachata, reggaeton and kizomba. The music comes from the Caribbean regions including sounds from Cuba, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and Haiti fused together with Detroit Soul. The third series event will take place at DeVos Performance Hall on Thursday, Oct. 18, 2018, at 7:30pm.

 

Tickets are available at the DeVos Place® and Van Andel Arena® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. VIP tickets include a reserved seat in the first few rows and two (2) complimentary drinks.

 

About Sean Blackman
Sean Blackman has been honored with many Detroit Music Awards, launched and directed World Music Festivals and worked as creative director of entertainment for corporate events for Red Bull, Chrysler and the grand opening of the McNamara Terminal at the Detroit Metropolitan Airport — one of the nation’s most state-of-the-art terminals.

 

As an established world-music musician, Blackman continues to compose and produce new material that links different genres of music with dance and theatrical performance. Whether on the streets, in front of thousands at a theater concert, or inside a smoldering hidden nightclub, Blackman’s music is disciplined from a lifetime of training, yet his raw passion makes every note seemingly intimate.

 

About CIG
The Grand Rapids-Kent County Convention/Arena Authority’s Community Inclusion Group (CIG) is a task force comprised of local community leaders that strive to make DeVos Place, Van Andel Arena and DeVos Performance Hall West Michigan’s premier multicultural entertainment venues. Established in 2005, the Community Inclusion Group actively guides the venues in increasing community access and awareness, attracting top level events and talent, and fostering inclusive staff and supplier development and engagement.

 

As a result of these ongoing efforts, the West Michigan community has enjoyed visits from a number of diverse artists, including Gerardo Ortiz, Pepe Aguilar, Kevin Hart, Shen Yun, Snoop Dogg and more, and several community events such as the annual Spectrum Health Jump Jam and Grand Rapids Community College Giants Awards. The support of the Community Inclusion Group continues to ensure that DeVos Place, Van Andel Arena and DeVos Performance Hall remain “Three Premier Venues: Welcoming All.”

On the shelf: ‘Serpent’ by Clive Cussler with Paul Kemprecos

By Megan Andres, Grand Rapids Public Library, Seymour Branch

 

Serpent, Clive Cussler’s first National Water & Marine Agency Files book, gives readers a new hero for a new age. Kurt Austin has a master’s degree in Systems Management from the University of Washington and much experience in marine recovery. In Serpent, Austin and his Special Assignments Team of Joe Zavala and Drs. Paul and Gamay Trout find themselves conquering a mystery of legendary caliber.

 

“In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue”; Austin and his team soon find that there were a lot of things left out of the popular children’s rhyme. With the help of Nina Kirov, the team investigates industrialist Don Halcon. Halcon is dedicated to carving a new country out of the southwestern United States. To do so, Halcon needs a priceless pre-Columbian antiquity buried in the battered remains of the sunken Italian luxury liner Andrea Doria, and he’s prepared to do anything to get it.

 

Admiral James Sandecker, from Dirk Pitt fame, sends Austin and his team all over the world to stop Halcon before he can get his hands on the artifact. Austin and Zavala soon find themselves diving the Andrea Doria itself in order to gain access to a secured vault left behind when the liner sank fifty years before.

 

With a hefty dose of actual historical fact and fictional license, Cussler dishes out a wonderful first episode in the lives of the new heroes of NUMA. The subsequent novels in the series, Blue Gold, Fire Ice, White Death, Lost City and Polar Shift, all follow Austin as he pursues a life of intrigue and danger. Fans of Cussler’s Dirk Pitt will find much to love in Kurt Austin.

On the shelf: ‘Bodies in Motion and at Rest: On Metaphor and Mortality’ by Thomas Lynch

By Stephanie M. White, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

Funeral home director Thomas Lynch’s essays are as much about poetry as they are about undertaking, as much about life as they are about death.

 

Acclaimed essayist and poet Lynch runs the family funeral home in Milford, Michigan. Bodies in Motion and at Rest is a collection of essays that addresses both of Lynch’s professions but, more importantly, links them wholly to one another. Lynch writes about the struggles of each profession and the struggles of mixing them. “Reno,” an essay that touches on marketing strategies for a poet/undertaker, contains moving passages comparing words of a poem to words spoken at a funeral.

 

In essays such as “Bodies in Motion and at Rest” and “Johnny, We Hardly Knew You” Lynch writes with the knowledge of an undertaker and the wisdom of one who has experienced the death of loved friends and family. He speaks against those who pretend that death may never affect them, and against those who allow the drama of celebrity deaths to overshadow their own losses.

 

Lynch doesn’t shy away from other serious topics. In “The Way We Are” he describes the alcoholism that runs in his family, writing with honesty about his own collisions with the disease and, more tragically, his son’s. As a victim of and a witness to alcoholism, Lynch writes with sensitivity and honesty about the grief of alcoholism.

 

These essays contrast with the funny, lighthearted tone found in the other essays of this collection. “Notes on ‘A Note on the Rapture to His True Love’” is a step-by-step approach to writing a good poem. With humor and satire, Lynch makes it clear that he is a humble, sincere poet. “Y2Kat” is a hilarious account of Lynch’s despised pet and adored son.

 

Like good poetry and good funerals, Lynch’s essays contain some death and some life, some humor and some sobriety, and plenty of honest wisdom.

Chicago’s Ballet 5:8 returns to Grand Rapids with re-imaging of C.S. Lewis’ work

“The Four Seasons of the Soul” by Ballet 5:8. (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Those who attended the Chicago-based Ballet 5:8 in performance last year at Grand Rapids Christian High School’s DeVos Center for the Arts and Worship probably wished the group visited more often.

 

Those who didn’t attend will get a chance to see what they missed and what they can now look forward to in the future as on Saturday, Oct. 6, the group returns to the venue with the world premier of “The Space in Between”.

 

“The Space in Between” by Ballet 5:8. (Supplied)

Ballet 5:8 artistic director Julianna Rubio Slager’s newest work draws inspiration from “The Great Divorce” by C.S. Lewis, using Ballet 5:8’s subtle blend of religious storytelling and cutting-edge dance to “explore the nature of eternity and the joy found on its shores,” according to supplied material.

 

Among the Ballet 5:8 dancers set to perform in Grand Rapids is company artist Emily Ratkos, an alumna of the Grand Rapids Ballet School. Ratkos moved to Grand Rapids at the age of 16 to train under Attila Mosolygo before joining Ballet 5:8 as a trainee in 2016. She joined Ballet 5:8 as an apprentice in 2017 and was promoted to company artist this year.

 

Now in its 7th season of performance, the dance group also premiered a new work last season: “Compass: Navigating Cultural Tension with Compassion”. Ballet 5:8 tours nationally each season to provide audiences with “a unique opportunity to engage in conversation on relevant life and faith topics addressed in the company’s repertoire.”

 

In their home of Chicago, Kristi Licera of Dancermusic.com called Ballet 5:8’s “Compass” work as “an evening of inspired choreography and thought-provoking performance,” and Kristian Jamie of San Antonio’s March Magazine called Ballet 5:8’s Scarlet an “effortless” adaptation of classic literature through a combination of film, spoken word and ballet.

 

In New York City, Pilar Garcia, mime coach at Gelsey Kirkland Ballet and Academy, said that, in “Compass”, Slager “deftly weaves the emotional questions that live on after such hard choices are made no matter the reasons.”

 

WKTV reviewed the local performance of ‘Compass’ as well

 

Ballet 5:8’s two-act program at Grand Rapids pairs the world premiere of “The Space in Between” and a re-creation of a Ballet 5:8’s signature work, “Four Seasons of the Soul”.

 

“The Space in Between” by Ballet 5:8. (Supplied)

Slager, talking in supplied information about “The Great Divorce” by C.S. Lewis, calls it “a timeless and timely work of literature that deserves a fresh, 21st century revisiting.” The work “invites audiences into a riveting story that begins in a grey town where the rain falls continuously, where a man stands at a bus stop on the brink of heaven and hell.” In Lewis’ work, hell is not a place where a vengeful God tortures his victims, but a place where, according to Lewis, “the gates are locked from the inside.”

 

Also featured in the program, “Four Seasons of the Soul”, explores how the turning of the seasons in nature parallels the recurring themes of human life — the innocence of youth, the zeal of adolescence, the celebrations and tragedies of adulthood, and the coming winter of life — all using Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons”.

 

A single Grand Rapids performance will be held on Saturday, Oct. 6, at 7 p.m., at the Devos Center for Arts and Worship, 2300 Plymouth Avenue Southeast. There will be a post-performance discussion with Slager and troupe members on the performance. Tickets are $25 for adults, $20 for students and seniors, and $12 for children. Tickets can be purchased at ballet58.org or by calling 312-725-4752.

 

Additional performance information is available at ballet58.org/space-in-between and a video of the company at work is available here.

 

 

Tickets to Jan. 27th Harlem Globetrotters show go on sale Oct. 3rd at 10am

By Hilarie Szarowicz

 

The world-famous Harlem Globetrotters, featuring some of the most electrifying athletes on the planet, will bring their spectacular show to Grand Rapids during their 2019 World Tour. The famed team will feature a star-studded roster that includes Big Easy Lofton, Ant Atkinson, Hi-Lite Bruton, Thunder Law, Bull Bullard and Cheese Chisholm.* The Globetrotters’ one-of-a-kind show is unrivaled in the world of family entertainment. The Globetrotters will play at Van Andel Arena on Sunday, Jan. 27, 2019 at 2pm.

 

Every game will showcase incredible ball-handling wizardry, rim-rattling dunks, trick shots, hilarious comedy and unequaled fan interaction. Prepare to be amazed as the Globetrotters showcase basketball’s first 4-point line, located 30 feet from the basket — 6 feet, 3 inches beyond the top of the NBA’s current 3-point line. You won’t want your family to miss it — buy your tickets today.

 

Tickets go on sale to the general public beginning Wednesday, Oct. 3 at 10am. Tickets will be available at the Van Andel Arena and DeVos Place box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. See Ticketmaster for all current pricing and availability.

 

The Harlem Globetrotters® are legendary worldwide, synonymous with one-of-a-kind family entertainment and great basketball skills for the past 92 years. Throughout their history, the Original Harlem Globetrotters have showcased their iconic talents in 123 countries and territories on six continents, often breaking down cultural and societal barriers while providing fans with their first-ever basketball experience.

 

Proud inductees of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, the Globetrotters have entertained hundreds of millions of fans — among them popes, kings, queens, and presidents — over nine thrilling decades. The American Red Cross is the official charity of the Harlem Globetrotters. For the latest news and information about the Harlem Globetrotters, visit the Globetrotters’ official website, and follow them on Twitter @Globies.

 

*Rosters will vary in each city and are subject to change.

On the shelf: ‘Eleven on Top’ by Janet Evanovich

By Laura Nawrot, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

Although her novels are classified as mysteries, Janet Evanovich really deserves a category of her own. Her stories fall somewhere between soap opera and a cheesy whodunit by combining over-the-top drama with a healthy dose of humor and a Nancy Drew twist or two.

 

The beauty of this series is that readers don’t need to read each book in succession to get a sense of the characters. Stephanie Plum is a moderately successful bounty hunter with a little too much spunk and not quite enough common sense who can’t seem to commit to a permanent relationship. The difficulties between Stephanie and the men in her life, Joe Morrelli and Ranger, pale in comparison to the difficulties she encounters in her job, all of which brings her to a life changing decision: time for a career move.

 

In Eleven on Top, Stephanie convinces herself that life in the law enforcement field is over for her, so she attempts to start a new career. While this is great in concept, she just can’t seem to adapt to the mundane and finds herself doing office work for Ranger instead. The tension escalates as Stephanie walks the line between Ranger and Joe and tries to maintain her balance while seeking the identity of the stalker who is trying to kill her.

 

Swing Night kicks off Van Singel’s 2018-2019 season

Glenn Bulthuis with the Hark Up horns

By Kathy Richards

Van Singel Fine Arts Center

 

The 2018-2019 CHEMICAL BANK Series celebrates 20 years at the Van Singel Fine Arts Center kicking off with Swing Night at the Van Singel featuring one of this area’s favorite entertainers, Glenn Bulthuis. Butlhuis returns to the Van Singel stage for a 7:30 pm performance on Saturday, Oct. 6, along with the 17-piece Hark Up Big Band for an evening of twenty-four swingin’ hits.

 

Over the past 10 years, Bulthuis and his band have performed the Music of the Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, and James Taylor at the Van Singel.  Now he returns with an all-new concert featuring a 17-piece big band line-up performing the songs of Frank Sinatra, Ray Charles, Michael Buble, Nat King Cole, Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor and many more.

 

Reserved seating is $18 for adults and $12 for students (high school and younger). Reserve seats by calling the Van Singel box office at (616)878-6800 or purchase on-line at www.vsfac.com. The box office is open Monday through Friday, 12 noon to 5 pm. For more information or bios, photos and more go to www.glennbulthuis.com.

 

The Van Singel Fine Arts Center is located on 84th Street and Burlingame Avenue in Byron Center, just 1.5 miles west of US-131 in Byron Center. The Fine Arts Center features free parking (see below for construction parking details.)

 

Please note: The Van Singel Fine Arts Center sits at the east end of the Byron Center High School which is part of a $68 million dollar bond construction project. Because of the construction, parking will be limited at the east of the facility where the Van Singel is located. Patrons attending evening events may have to park in the lots off Burlingame and enter the building on the west end (near the gym/swimming pool) and walk through the school to the Van Singel. Signage will be placed to help direct patrons.

On the shelf: ‘Abundance: A Novel of Marie Antoinette’ by Sena Jeter Naslund

By Kristen Krueger-Corrado, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

I am new to the world of historical fiction, having assumed that it would be similar to a very dry history course full of esoteric facts and dates. I selected Abundance to read because I was interested in seeing the recent film about Marie Antoinette and thought this might be a good primer. Imagine my surprise when I read the entire book (over 500 pages) in one day, dragging myself away from the engrossing story only to eat dinner or to tell my husband to stop talking to me while I was reading. For days afterwards, I delighted him with interesting facts I had picked up until he begged me to stop.

 

Marie Antoinette gets a bad rap in history textbooks — the frivolous young queen who cares little about her subjects, an attitude that ultimately leads to her demise. But in Abundance, the queen is portrayed in a much more flattering light. The story begins with her marriage to the Dauphin, Louis August, at the age of 14 and chronicles their 22-year marriage, the births of their four children, the fall of their monarchy and their beheadings.

 

Marie Antoinette was a devout Catholic, dedicated to her family and friends, determined to keep her marriage together and lived to serve the people of France. The book is told in the first person, and it is very evident that while Marie Antoinette had good intentions, she could not even begin to understand the plight of her people. And although I knew how the story would end, I was rooting for her to succeed. Abundance is a good read, but not one to lose your head over.

Box Factory celebrates next art exhibition on Friday, Sept. 28th

 

By Nikki Gauthier, Box Factory for the Arts

 

On Friday, Sept. 28th, the Box Factory for the Arts (1101 Broad Street, Saint Joseph, MI 49085) will celebrate the opening of its Series 6 Art Exhibition. The public is invited to a free opening reception which will be held from 5-7:30pm and include an Artist Talk led by Eli Zilke at 5:45. All the details of the evening can be found on Box Factory’s Facebook Page. The exhibition will run from Sept. 28 through Nov. 10th.

 

The exhibition presents the works of a number of artists: Eli Zilke Collaborative with “Collaborative Nature,” Box Palette Group with “Bloomin’ at the Box” and Jennifer Tomshack with “Spirit of Place.”

 

ELI ZILKE COLLABORATIVE – COLLABORATIVE NATURE

 

Williams Gallery

The Eli Zilke Collaborative presents “Collaborative Nature” in the Robert Williams Gallery. Eli runs the studios at Water Street Glassworks, 140 Water Street in Benton Harbor, Michigan. He has designed this show with a number of very talented glass artists from the immediate area and beyond. The show speaks to the collaborative nature of how glass is made. Lynne Clayton, Executive Director of Water Street Glassworks, is among the artists who will exhibit work in the show.

 

In addition to the pieces which will be shown, there will also be an interactive piece in which visitors can have a hand in creating. The show will conclude with a demonstration event on Friday, Nov. 2nd hosted at Water Street Glassworks where this piece will be completed and then brought back to the Box Factory to be displayed for the final week of the exhibition.

 

For more information about Eli Zilke and Water Street Glassworks or the artists who are showing works in “Collaborative Nature,” please contact Eli at eli@waterstreetglassworks.org.

Bob Seger brings final tour to Grand Rapids’ Van Andel Arena

Bob Seger comes to the Van Andel Arena Nov. 21.

After a career that has spanned more than 50 years, Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band will hit the road for one last time on their final tour. More dates are being added to Seger’s previously announced dates, giving fans one more opportunity to see Seger and the band live. The Travelin’ Man tour kicks off on Wednesday, November 21 in Grand Rapids at SMG-managed Van Andel Arena

 

Tickets for the Grand Rapids date will go on sale Friday, Sept. 28 at 10 a.m. Tickets will be available at the Van Andel Arena and DeVos Place® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. A purchase limit of four (4) tickets will apply to every order. SeeTicketmaster.com for all pricing and availability.

 

Bob Seger fan club members will have special access to purchase tickets in advance of the scheduled on-sale dates. To become a Bullet Club member, visit BobSeger.com/bulletclub. For additional information on Bob Seger, please visit BobSeger.com. Stream your Bob Seger favorites, here.

On the shelf: ‘The Terror’ by Dan Simmons

By Amy L. Cochran, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

In this historical novel The Terror, Dan Simmons weaves known facts, extrapolation, and Inuit beliefs into his own vividly harsh version of the fate of the lost Franklin Expedition. The book is part thrilling arctic survival fiction, part horror, part nautical adventure, and completely impossible to put down.

 

Back in 1845, Sir John Franklin led an expedition in search of the Northwest Passage and disappeared completely along with two ships and 128 men. Simmons uses the last known whereabouts of the ships Erebus and Terror to alternate between the present in 1847, as the men try to make it through their second icebound winter, and flashbacks that show how badly informed route decisions and cheap supplies have left the expedition stranded and low on food.

 

You’d think that being stuck in two wooden ships in pack ice 1200 miles from any chance of rescue would be enough to handle, but Simmons just keeps increasing the tension. After expedition leader Sir John Franklin dies, Captain Francis Crozier of the Terror must somehow get his men home in spite of encroaching scurvy, -82 degree daily temperatures, rotten canned food, and the constant fatal attacks of a terrible beast that seems to be a 14-foot polar bear impervious to bullets. Just about the time the beast appears, Lady Silence, a mysterious Inuit girl with no tongue, comes aboard. She alone can find fresh meat; unfortunately, none of the surviving men have any luck hunting during even the slightly warmer summers. A last-ditch attempt to build morale by staging a winter carnival goes horribly awry, and on top of the deadly natural conditions and animal attacks, human nature shows its ugly side and turns sailor against sailor.

 

Simmons does an amazing job of providing in gritty detail the nasty, smelly uncomfortable conditions on board ship and the symptoms of advanced scurvy, as well as the harsh realities of surviving for any length of time in the Arctic. In conditions almost beyond comprehension, the men fiercely struggle to stay hopeful and escape their doomed situation. And after reading this excellent historical novel, I have to say that, despite our nasty Michigan winters, we’ve got it pretty good. Compared, at least, to the plight of the men of the ships Erebus and Terror.

GVSU’s Fall Arts Celebration spotlights the arts during multiple free events

William Deresiewicz (photo supplied)

By Matthew Makowski, Grand Valley State University

 

For the past 15 years, West Michigan audiences have enjoyed a series of six free events every fall at Grand Valley that celebrate the positive impact of the arts. President Thomas J. Haas said these events are offered as gifts to the local community that has supported the evolution of the university.

 

“Each year, these six diverse and free events provide us with the opportunity to thank the West Michigan community for its continued support of the performing arts at Grand Valley, and the university as a whole,” said Haas. “The arts lift us up, make us think and provide an endless variety of entertainment and enrichment, and we hope others will join us in celebrating the richness of the worlds of poetry, dance, art, music and more this fall.”

 

Here are the upcoming Fall Arts Celebration events for October. For more event details, go here.

 

What is Art in the 21st Century?

  • Lecture presented by William Deresiewicz
  • Oct. 1, at 7:30 pm
  • Location: L.V. Eberhard Center, 2nd floor, Pew Grand Rapids Campus

In today’s world, creativity is a necessity for successful collaborations in business and to develop and expand vibrant cultures. As business and the arts draw closer together, how are they changing each other? Expanding on his viral essay for The Atlantic, “The Death of the Artist—and the Birth of the Creative Entrepreneur,” award-winning essayist, critic and best-selling author William Deresiewicz will answer that question by addressing the understanding and practice of creative work and the creative life. Deresiewicz is the author of Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, Harper’s, The Nation, The New Republic, The American Scholar and The London Review of Books.

 

Ada Limon (photo supplied)

An Evening of Poetry and Conversation with Ada Limón and Carl Phillips

  • Oct. 18, at 7:30 pm
  • Location: L.V. Eberhard Center, 2nd floor, Pew Grand Rapids Campus

Two unique poetic voices will share their work with the West Michigan community during an evening of poetry and conversation. Ada Limón is the author of five books of poetry, including her new book, The Carrying (2018). Her volume Bright Dead Things was named one of the top 10 poetry books of the year by The New York Times. Limón currently serves on the faculty of Queens University of Charlotte’s low-residency Master of Fine Arts program.

 

Carl Phillips (photo supplied)

Carl Phillips is the author of 14 books of poetry, including his most recent works, Wild Is the Wind (2018) and Reconnaissance (2015). The latter won the PEN USA Award and the Lambda Literary Award. A four-time finalist for the National Book Award, Phillips’ honors include the Los Angeles Times’ Book Prize for Poetry, the Kingsley Tufts Award and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, Library of Congress and Academy of American Poets. He is currently a professor of English at Washington University in St. Louis.

ArtPrize artist and Army veteran to discuss her journey from soldier to artist during GVSU event

“Locked and Loaded” by Kimberly Walker will be at the Eberhard Center on the GVSU Pew Grand Rapids Campus.

By Matthew Makowski

GVSU

 

After retiring from the United States Army in 2015 following 17 years of service, Kimberly Walker began searching for her purpose as an artist, which she eventually found in the form of sharing stories of sexual assault in the military through art.

 

During this year’s 10th anniversary of ArtPrize, Walker’s piece, “Locked and Loaded,” will be the sole entry located at the Eberhard Center on Grand Valley State University’s Pew Grand Rapids Campus.

 

The piece will consist of 46 military-issue duffle bags representing 46 cases of sexual assault in the military. Walker, an Ohio-based artist, said through her research, she discovered that none of the cases were disclosed to the general public.

 

Walker will discuss her ArtPrize entry, as well as her journey from soldier to artist, during a special presentation on Thursday, Sept. 20. “Finding Your Purpose With Art” will take place at 6 p.m. in room 716 in the Eberhard Center. A reception will precede remarks at 5:30 p.m. outside the Veterans Upward Bound office.

 

Following Walker’s remarks, Tim Marroquin, director of Veterans Upward Bound, and Krystal Diel, Victim Advocate in Grand Valley’s Gayle R. Davis Center for Women and Gender Equity, will discuss resources on campus available to veterans, current students, victims and survivors of sexual assault, and advocate community members.

 

“Locked and Loaded” was chosen by members of Grand Valley’s Art Gallery staff during an ArtPrize Pitch Night in May. These events provide artists in five different cities an opportunity to present to judges an idea for a piece of artwork that would be on display at a high-profile venue in Grand Rapids during the competition. The selected artists each received a $5,000 grant to bring their ideas to life.

 

ArtPrize takes place September 19-October 7.

 

For more information about this event, visit gvsu.edu/artgallery.

On the shelf: ‘Capital Crimes’ and ‘Short Straw’

By Laura Nawrot, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

 

I was feeling rather sluggish and thought a good mystery would get my blood moving, so I decided to try something by an author I hadn’t previously read. I turned to bestselling authors to help with my selection.

 

Short Straw by Stuart Woods seemed to fit my criteria; Woods is a bestselling author and the synopsis promised an intriguing, fast-paced mystery, and I looked forward to diving into my first Stuart Woods novel. Unfortunately, this will also be my last Stuart Woods novel. While there were a couple of interesting twists in the plot, overall I found it to be very dull and predictable. The characters were flat and lifeless, and I found myself not caring what happened to any of them. In fact, I felt like they got what they deserved for the most part.

 

Apparently, a familiar character from an earlier book, Ed Eagle, resurfaces in Short Straw only to be taken to the cleaners by his soon-to-be-ex-wife. A pair of incompetent men, hired by Eagle, follow Barbara all over Mexico to prevent her from getting her hands on all of Ed’s money. If this is typical of his work, I certainly don’t plan to read any further.

 

On the other hand, I found Capital Crimes by Jonathan and Faye Kellerman to be just what the book jacket promised: “…a gripping pair of original crime thrillers…” This was my first experience with Jonathan and Faye Kellerman, also bestselling authors, and I wasn’t sure what to expect, but this time I wasn’t disappointed.

 

Although I didn’t initially realize that Capital Crimes was actually two novellas combined under one cover, both stories stood well on their own, and I will definitely read more of their work. The characters were far more colorful than those in Short Straw, and the pace moved much quicker. I felt more involved with the stories and interested in the outcomes.

 

The only criticism I have is that the language in Capital Crimes was a little rough. While the usage of rough language was well within the boundaries of keeping in the voice of the character, I sometimes find it distracts from the story when the dialogue is spotted with conversational swearing. I didn’t find it distracting enough, however, to put this book down and recommend it for a taste of both Jonathan and Faye Kellerman.

John Mellencamp to bring iconic tour to DeVos Performance Hall

John Mellencamp (Photo by Myrna Suarez)

By Mike Klompstra

SMG Management

 

SMSet to coincide with a highly anticipated new album release, JOHN MELLENCAMP will embark on a 2019 tour of “The John Mellencamp Show” which will feature the rock icon’s classics plus some new material. Hailed by critics and fans alike as one of music’s most authentic and crowd pleasing concert performers, Mellencamp will begin the tour Feb. 7 in his home state of Indiana at South Bend’s Morris Performing Arts Center before stopping in Grand Rapids to play SMG-managed DeVos Performance Hall on Sunday, Feb. 17. Produced by AEG Presents, “The John Mellencamp Show” will start promptly at 8pm and will not have an opening act. Every ticket purchased online will receive a physical copy of Mellencamp’s forthcoming album “Other People’s Stuff” set for release on November 16th by Universal Republic.

 

Tickets go on sale to the general public beginning Friday, September 21 at 10 AM. Tickets will be available at the DeVos Place® and Van Andel Arena® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. A purchase limit of eight (8) tickets will apply to every order. See Ticketmaster.com for all pricing and availability. DeVos Performance Hall email subscribers will have access to an exclusive presale on Thursday, September 20. Sign up to the email list by September 18 to receive the presale code!

 

Mellencamp’s live shows have garnered huge critical acclaim with the Hollywood Reporter calling it a “triumphant, career-spanning show” and a “superb performance…still full of fiery defiance” by the Boston Globe.  His extensive touring and live shows have solidified the Rock and Roll Hall-of-Famer’s place at the forefront of American music for the past 40 years.

 

Mellencamp’s career in music, spanning more than 35 years, has seen him transition from pop star to one of the most highly respected singer/songwriters of a generation.  Mellencamp is incredibly acclaimed; he is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, a Grammy winner, a recipient of the John Steinbeck Award, ASCAP Foundation’s Champion Award, The Woody Guthrie Award and Americana Music Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award and more recently, the Founders Award, the top honor assigned by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers.  Additionally, he was recently inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame this past June. He is also one of the most successful live concert performers in the world.   In 1985, Mellencamp, together with Willie Nelson and Neil Young, created Farm Aid. The social activism reflected in his songs helped catalyze Farm Aid, the concert series and organization that has addressed the struggle of American family farmers for more than 25 years.

 

As well, Mellencamp journeyed  into the darkness of coal mining life in his reverent cover of Merle Travis’ 1946 song “Dark as a Dungeon,” recorded in support of National Geographic’s acclaimed documentary about the mining industry, “From The Ashes,” produced by Michael Bloomberg, former NYC Mayor.

 

John continues to focus on another facet of his artistic expression: painting. His style has progressed over the years as evidenced by several gallery shows and published portfolios, and in recent years he has increased his output by completing over 100 new works. He had his second solo exhibition this past Spring in New York and has a current exhibit at the famed Butler Museum in Youngstown, Ohio from September 20ththrough January 19, 2019.   His highly successful Rock and Roll Hall of Fame exhibit ran for nearly two years and is now at the Woodie Guthrie Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma from September 1st through January 5, 2019.

 

Mellencamp continues his journey as the walking embodiment of rock icon; passionate, plain-spoken, and a self-proclaimed rebel.  John Mellencamp continues to live and work in Bloomington, Indiana.

Public Museum starts Saturday Curiosity Labs on Sept. 22

Finny, the finback whale skeleton, greats visitors as the enter the Grand Rapids Public Museum.

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) just announced new Saturday Curiosity Labs will be starting Saturday, Sept. 22. Curiosity Labs give visitors the opportunity to get hands-on with science during their visit.

 

Curiosity Labs will feature fun, hands-on activities themed around science for all ages. Highlights visitors can expect include: learning how a watershed works through the Museum’s water table and utilizing an Augmented Reality (AR) sandbox in which by moving and building the sand, visitors can create erupting volcanoes, rivers, oceans, mountains. Additional hands on activities will change week to week.

 

Saturday Curiosity Labs will be free with general admission take place every Saturday at the GRPM from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in an open house style format.

 

Labs begin Saturday, September 22 and will run through Saturday, May 18, 2019. For more information on Curiosity Labs and to see upcoming exhibits and programs at the Museum, visit grpm.org.

 

The GRPM’s Watershed Lab was funded by Great Lakes Fishery Trust and Wege Foundation. Saturday Curiosity Labs are funded by the Brookby Foundation.

GVSU free concert to take audience on musical tour of Italy

Tesla Quartet performs a free concert Sept. 17.

By Matthew Makowski

GVSU

 

Inspired by numerous enjoyable escapes from harsh Russian winters, composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s love of Italy is reflected in his “String Sextet in D Minor, Op. 70 ‘Souvenir de Florence.’”

 

This musical tour of Italy will be performed by the internationally acclaimed Tesla Quartet and Grand Valley State University music faculty members during this year’s Fall Arts Celebration.

 

“An Italian Journey: Tesla Quartet performs Tchaikovsky’s ‘Souvenir de Florence’” will take place Sept. 17, at 7:30 p.m., in the Cook-DeWitt Center on the Allendale Campus.

 

The Tesla Quartet will open the program with “Quartet in B minor, Op. 33, No. 1” by Franz Joseph Haydn, and then be joined by Paul Swantek, affiliate professor of viola, and Pablo Mahave-Veglia, associate professor of cello and Early Music Ensemble director, to perform “Souvenir de Florence.”

 

Best known as a master composer of symphonies and ballets, Tchaikovsky crafted this work through a rich blend of well-known Italian street songs and melodies.

 

“The music of Haydn is timeless and the music of Tchaikovsky opens us up to the romantic century which defined his compositions,” said Danny Phipps, chair of Grand Valley’s Music, Theatre, and Dance Department. “Having both of these masterpieces performed with a new and fresh perspective and vision will be an extraordinary treat.”

 

Formed at The Julliard School in 2008, members of the Tesla String Quartet include Ross Snyder (violin), Michelle Lie (violin), Edwin Kaplan (viola) and Serafim Smigelskiy (cello). The quartet regularly performs across North America and internationally, with recent appearances in Austria, Canada, China, Germany, Hungary, South Korea and the United Kingdom.

 

“What I think will stand out to our audiences is how much they love what they do,” said Phipps. “Their playing is virtuosic and brilliant, and they are very personable. All of this is apparent when they perform, adding to the audience’s enjoyment.”

 

The quartet has won numerous awards and prizes at international competitions, including the 2017 John Lad Prize; the Gold Medal at the 2012 Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition; and Second Prize, Haydn Prize, and Canadian Commission Prize at the 12th Banff International String Quartet Competition.

 

The quartet’s first album, “Haydn, Ravel, Stravinsky,” debuted on September 7.

 

Community involvement and outreach are integral aspects of the quartet’s mission as they perform inspiring music at children’s hospitals, soup kitchens, libraries, retirement communities, schools and more.

 

For more information about Fall Arts Celebration, visit gvsu.edu/fallarts. All events are free and open to the public.

On the shelf: ‘Rescue My Child’ by Neil C. Livingstone

By Megan Andres, Grand Rapids Public Library, Seymour Branch

 

When Betty Mahmoody’s story first came to light, the United States was confronted with a problem of epic proportions: international parental abduction. Countless parents around the county were finally heard. Author Livingstone wrote Rescue My Child to help inform an entire generation of the cruelty these parents face every day.

 

Livingston focused on Corporate Training Unlimited (CTU), an organization composed of ex-Delta Force commandos, who would intervene in international cases. This book tells of four such cases. The stories detail the rescues of five children and one mother from various countries and situations. Laurie Swint Ghidaoui and her daughter Leila were rescued from Tunisia. Lauren Mahone was recovered in Jordan. Brittney Chowdhury was located in Bangladesh while Jeremy Hefner and his sister Amy were rescued in Ecuador.

 

Rescue My Child endeavored to alert the world about international parental abduction at a time when such a crime was hardly imaginable. CTU risked much to be able to help these families: prison, injury and even death. Had these men and women been discovered while on foreign soil and in possession of a child of a citizen, the United States could not have helped them. It is a reminder that some children do come home and also a reminder that some are still missing.

Cher scheduled to come to the Van Andel Arena

The one and only Cher is set to hit the road with the HERE WE GO AGAIN Tour beginning Jan. 17, in Ft. Myers, FL. The tour will visit Grand Rapids at Van Andel Arena on Wednesday, May 8, at 8 p.m.

 

Tickets will go on sale to the general public on Friday, Sept. 14 at noon. Tickets will be available at the Van Andel Arena and DeVos Place® box offices, online at Ticketmaster.com, and charge by phone at 1-800-745-3000. A purchase limit of eight (8) tickets will apply to every order. See Ticketmaster.com for all pricing and availability. U.S. and Canadian residents who purchase tickets online will be able to redeem (1) physical or digital copy of Cher’s new album “Dancing Queen.” All albums must be redeemed by May 19, 2019.

 

Citi® is the official presale credit card for the HERE WE GO AGAIN Tour. As such, Citi® card members will have access to purchase U.S. presale tickets beginning Wednesday, Sept. 12 at 10 a.m. local time until Thursday, Sept. 13 at 10 p.m. local time through Citi’s Private Pass®program. For complete presale details visit www.citiprivatepass.com.

 

Following the recent global success and rave reviews for Cher’s role in the Mamma Mia 2 – Here We Go Again film, the multi-award winning singer, actress and show-stopping performer will be crossing the U.S. for the first time in five years. Cher is expected to perform many of her hits along with some new songs from the Dancing Queen album – Cher’s tribute to the music of ABBA – out September 28th. Dancing Queen is currently available for pre-order. The Oscar, Emmy, Cannes Film Festival and Grammy Award winning icon is scheduled to be honored at the Kennedy Center later this year.  She is also co-producer of The Cher Show, the upcoming Broadway musical opening December 3rd and is currently touring Australia and New Zealand. Cher is currently doing a series of residencies in Las Vegas.

 

The mysteries of Mars to be explored during GVSU art exhibit

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By Matthew Makowski
Throughout the years, Mars has been depicted in multiple forms as societies around the world have gazed at the Red Planet.
During this year’s Fall Arts Celebration at Grand Valley State University, the “Mars: Astronomy and Culture” exhibit will bring together 140 photographs, drawings, movie posters, book covers and more spotlighting Mars. The exhibit will also include a showcase of Martian-themed toys and collectibles from a private collection based in Chicago.
A special exhibition reception will take place September 13 from 5-7 p.m. in the Art Gallery (room 1121), located in the Thomas J. and Marcia J. Haas Center for Performing Arts on the Allendale Campus. The exhibit’s time at Grand Valley will conclude on October 31 with a Martian-themed Halloween event where guests are encouraged to dress as their favorite Martian.
During the reception, guests will be able to use a virtual reality simulator for an immersive experience on the surface of Mars. The “Mars 2030” experience was produced by Fusion Media Group in partnership with NASA and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s AeroAstro Lab. “Mars 2030” allows users to wander around 15 square miles of the Red Planet’s landscape while planting a flag on the surface, picking up rocks, driving a rover and visiting a habitat.
Joel Zwart, Art Gallery curator of exhibitions, said the exhibit is the perfect blend of astronomy and popular culture.
“A visitor can learn about the geographic features of Mars and history of its exploration while at the same time discover how Martians have become such a huge part of science fiction, literature, film and culture,” he explained. “Where else can you engage with beautiful panoramas of the Martian landscape, ‘War of the Worlds’ memorabilia, a historic photo of the first landing on Mars, an alien drinking cup, an image of the largest known volcano in the solar system and a Mars VR experience?”
Portions of the exhibition will be hosted at both the Center Art Gallery at Calvin College and the Holland Museum. The exhibit will be on display at Calvin College through October 20, and the Holland Museum September 20-December 29.

This exhibition was curated by the Pasadena Arts Council for the Williamson Gallery, Art Center College of Design, Pasadena, California. It is a project of the Pasadena Arts Council’s EMERGE Fiscal Sponsorship Program.

For more information about Fall Arts Celebration, visit gvsu.edu/fallarts. All Fall Arts Celebration events are free and open to the public.
Multiple free events will occur in the Art Gallery in conjunction with this Fall Arts Celebration exhibit.
Curator Talk and Reception
September 13, at 2 p.m.
Visiting art and astronomy curator Jay Belloli will talk about how the “Mars: Astronomy and Culture” exhibit was created to foster an understanding of Mars’ impact in societies around the world.
“The War that Never Was: The 1938 Radio Broadcast of ‘The War of the Worlds'”
October 17, at 1 p.m.
This presentation will explore the impact of H.G. Wells’ science fiction classic within the historical context of the infamous radio adaptation and how it continues to be popularized in film, television and music.
“Confronting the Martian: Humanity’s Changing Concepts about Life on the Red Planet”
October 18, at 1 p.m.
Deana Weibel, professor of anthropology and religious studies at Grand Valley, will take an anthropological look at humanity’s fascination with life on Mars, from ancient civilizations to popular culture, and explore what this reveals about societies around the world.
For more information about exhibition-related events, visit the Art Gallery website.

On the shelf: ‘Artemis Fowl: The Lost Colony’ by Eoin Colfer

By Megan Andres, Grand Rapids Public Library, Seymour Branch

 

Artemis Fowl has done many things in his short life. He has mastered criminal enterprise. He has taken on Russian mobsters to save his father’s life. He has even saved the entire faerie world from a master criminal pixie. What a teenager! In this adventure, Artemis has met his match in a girl named Minerva, who kidnaps a demon, one of ten families of faerie, from an opera house in Italy.

 

Author Eoin Colfer is a former educator who had amazing success with the first Artemis Fowl novel and has continued to toss the boy genius into exciting adventures. Colfer’s stories have been compared with C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia as well as J.K. Rowlings’ Harry Potter series. Children around the world love the way Artemis uses technology, education and logic to expose the faerie world, endanger it, and then ultimately save it.

 

Artemis has always been a lonely, unique boy. Minerva is his ultimate competitor.
The Artemis Fowl series contain enough world travel, fantasy and mystery to intrigue any child. Who knows, it may even give the grandchildren some ideas! Start with the original Artemis Fowl and end the series with The Lost Colony. Your grandchildren will love them!

‘Mars: Astronomy and Culture’ kicks off GVSU 2018 Fall Arts Celebration Sept. 13

Tesla Quartet (photo supplied)

By Grand Valley State University

 

Fall Arts Celebration opens this year when Grand Valley State University’s Art Gallery showcases the historical fascination surrounding the planet Mars during the Mars: Astronomy and Culture exhibit. This exciting exhibit brings together photographs, drawings, movie posters, book covers, and video projections to show the impact of the “Red Planet” on popular culture, even before the 20th century.

 

Also, the internationally acclaimed Tesla Quartet partners with Grand Valley music faculty to perform a reflection of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s love of Italy through the composer’s famous String Sextet in D Minor, Op. 70 Souvenir de Florence.

 

Art–The Mars: Astronomy and Culture Exhibit reception is Thursday, Sept. 13, 5-7pm at the Art Gallery, Thomas J. and Marcia J. Haas Center for Performing Arts on the Allendale Campus. Exhibit dates: Aug. 24-Oct. 31.

 

Music–An Italian Journey: Tesla Quartet performs Tchaikovsky’s Souvenir de Florence on Monday, Sept. 17 at 7:30p at the Cook-DeWitt Center on the Allendale Campus.

 

New Queen Light Show at the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Chaffee Planetarium

By Christie Bender

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) has announced that a brand new show will begin this fall in the Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium line up! Beginning, Saturday, Sept. 15, The Queen Light Show: From Mercury with Love, “will rock you!”

 

New life is brought to the wildly popular classic rock light show format with an original production set to the music of Queen. Experience 10 of Queen’s greatest hits in this brand new show, including favorites like “Bohemian Rhapsody,” “Another One Bites the Dust” and “You’re My Best Friend.”

 

The Queen Light Show: From Mercury with Love is brought to the Chaffee Planetarium from Longway Planetarium in Flint, MI.

 

The Queen Light Show will play at 4 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. Planetarium tickets are $4 each with purchased general admission to the Museum, $5 each for planetarium-only tickets and free to Museum members. For more planetarium show times and to purchase tickets, visit grpm.org/Planetarium.

 

Moving beyond Black Crowes, Rich Robinson takes flight with Magpie at 20 Monroe Live

Rich Robinson (once of The Black Crowes) will bring his new band, Magpie Salute, to Grand Rapids this week. (Photo credit David McLister)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

While Rich Robinson is in no way forgetting his past roads travelled, or the musical legacy he and brother, Chris, formed with the Black Crowes, he is moving on musically with a new journey and a new band, The Magpie Salute.

 

Among other proofs is the name of his new band, which will make a stop at 20 Monroe Live in Grand Rapids on Wednesday, Sept. 5.

 

“I’ve always loved the element of crows, but they have a dark connotation,” Robinson said in information supplied to WKTV. “Magpies are revered by ancient and indigenous cultures around the world, because they walk that bridge between dark and light. A magpie is also a cousin to a crow. This band (is) a cousin to the Crowes.”

 

Robinson, in an interview with WKTV, dug a little deeper into the relationship between his past with the Crowes and his present with Magpie.

 

“The music I wrote for the Black Crowes, with my brother, was what it was, you know,” Robinson said. “The way I write music is the way I have always written music. I do not believe in changing the way you write music, or to try to sound like something or to try to not sound like something. I think it should just be natural. That being said … I think there is a little bit of both, but hopefully it comes down the listener, what the listener choses to hear and get out of what you do.”

 

Pulled together in 2016 by guitarist/songwriter Robinson, Magpie Salute includes Black Crowes guitarist Marc Ford and bassist Sven Pipien, vocalist John Hogg, and keyboardist Matt Slocum and drummer Joe Magistro, both of whom have played with Robinson before.

 

Together they have recorded their full-length debut of original material, High Water I, released this year, with High Water II to come in 2019. The band’s debut recording, in a twist on the usual sequence of recording events, was actually recorded live, The Magpie Salute (Live), last year.

 

Forming Magpie Salute “was really like a bunch of friends getting together to go on tour and have fun, to celebrate some of the songs and the music we have made in the past, covered, and even ones that we have made individually,” he said. “That is really what it was. It was a very natural process. We just put this band together … there wasn’t a master plan. We did not necessarily know what it would be in the future. What I like about it is that it is pretty unconventional. You don’t overthink anything like that.”

 

As far as the songs on the new album. Those, too, came naturally.

 

“Towards the end of the tour, last year, we started writing songs knowing that we wanted to make a record, to become a band, and that is ultimately what happened,” he said. “Toward the end of last year, we just started messing around with some ideas that Marc, John and I had. It was really cool at that time. As the tour came to an end, we knew what we wanted. … and we took some time in January to make that happen.”

 

For now, Robinson said, doing something new — performing with Magpie Salute and with the guys in the band — is where is he at right now.

 

“Everything is new and everything is going to go in the way it chooses to go,” he said. “Ultimately, this is what I have done since I was 19 … 30 years later I am still doing this. It is always cool to find different avenues, different contexts to play in, with different people. Those elements are what I am interested in and why I continue to choose to make music.”

 

Tickets are still available for Magpie Salute at 20 Monroe Live. (Visit here for more information.)

 

On the shelf: More books for the grand kids by various authors

Empress Orchid
by Anchee Min

At one time in China, a woman’s value was judged by her marriage and children. For Imperial wives and concubines, this could mean life or a secret death. Author Anchee Min introduces Tzu His who became China’s last empress. Orchid, as she was known in the Forbidden City, began life as an innocent country girl who became the Emperor’s fourth wife.

 

While others have told Empress Orchid’s story, author Min uses her own childhood in China to tell this story of a girl turned goddess. Orchid rises above all other women in the Forbidden City to become her Emperor’s favorite wife. She gives him an heir and, when enemies threaten China, leads her people as regent for 46 years.

 

Min’s native tongue helps give the story its scope. Her descriptions tell a tale of a time when the Boxers were gaining power and the Imperials were losing it. It was a time when the wives and concubines of an emperor fought for the chance to have an heir and the power and security that a son could bring. Orchid is the Cinderella of 19th century China: a woman who had to become more than a simple country girl to rule her people in peace and justice.

 

By Megan Andres, Grand Rapids Public Library, Seymour Branch

The Commissario Guido Brunetti Series
by Donna Leon

Your plans for a trip to Italy fell apart? Until you can visit Rome or glide through Venice’s canals, do this: Take up with a policeman.

 

Donna Leon, an American living in Italy, has just brought out the 15th book, Through a Glass Darkly, in her mystery series set in Venice. Commissario Guido Brunetti is patient, principled and long suffering in the pursuit of justice in a bureaucracy that is often corrupt. He is married to Paola, who cooks wonderful meals and provides shrewd commentary. You finish a book feeling you’ve had a privileged homestay and seen sites far from the tourist track.

 

It’s best to begin the series with the first book, Death at La Fenice, since the author often refers to earlier incidents. Here, in the celebrated opera house, the world-famous conductor Maestro Helmut Wellauer, is poisoned during a performance of La Traviata. Brunetti, accustomed to the mazey corruptions of Venice, is surprised at the number of enemies Wellauer has made on his way to the top. That title is followed by Death in a Strange Country, in which the body of an American soldier is found in a canal. Next in the series is Uniform Justice, in which a cadet from Venice’s elite military academy is found hanged. The investigation leads to a wall of silence and hostility.

 

The series is very popular throughout Europe, and is gathering lots of fans in the U.S., many of whom also couldn’t vacation in Venice this year.

 

By Bill Hill, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

March of the Penguins
by Luc Jacquet and Jerome Maison

It is a strange life.

 

The Emperor penguins are born into darkness at the coldest end of the earth. To get to their mating territory 70 miles inland, they must waddle in short steps for a week through a hazard of up thrust ice scored by crevasses. As deep winter comes on, the females hatch one egg each, pass it to their partner and make the long march to the shore to feed and recover. The male Emperors stay behind cradling their precious eggs on the tops of their feet. They will huddle together through the long Antarctic winter going without food for as much as four months.

 

The darkness and terrible cold ease as the sun climbs higher. Shortly after the eggs hatch the females return, ready to spell the exhausted males who now must totter to the sea. The parents take turns shuttling to the sea for food till their chicks are old enough to make the journey themselves, and the cycle begins again.

 

Despite its billing as the “Official companion to the major motion picture,” this book is a distillation of the movie in 160 pages of photos with the movie’s narration for text. There is a short end chapter on the making the film. The publisher, National Geographic, has produced a handsome and fascinating book, one that could be shared with the rising generation.

 

By Bill Hill, Grand Rapids Public Library, Main Branch

Dakotah Treasures Series (Ruby; Pearl; Opal; Amethyst)
by Lauraine Snelling

Hearing that her father is dying, Ruby Torvald takes her little sister Opal and leaves New York City for the wilds of Little Missouri in Dakota Territory. When they arrive in this pioneer town, they are shocked to discover their father is very near death and owns Dove House — a sordid bar, complete with barmaids. Before he dies, Per Torvald makes Ruby swear she will “take care of the girls” — the soiled doves in residence. Ruby finds herself suddenly faced with life on the frontier in a barely-there town.

 

Over the course of four books, Snelling tells the story of Ruby Torvald and Little Missouri. The author focuses on each of four women: Ruby Torvald, Pearl Hossfuss, Opal Torvald, and Amethyst O’Shaunasy. These women find themselves in circumstances often beyond their control in a time when women were not considered strong in body or emotion.
Ruby finds herself taking on the reform of Dove House while her younger sister Opal confronts societal views of women in the West. Pearl goes from riches in Chicago to a one-room schoolhouse in Little Missouri, and Amethyst comes to find her lost nephew Joel in Medora. The four women learn something about themselves and about God in this Inspirational Fiction series.

 

By Megan Andres, Grand Rapids Public Library, Seymour Branch