Showing posts with label Arts Advocacy Day and Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arts Advocacy Day and Awards. Show all posts

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Readers Theater, "Buyer and Cellar", Monday 3/12

Readers Theater returns to the Hubbard Room of The Russell Library, 123 Broad Street, in Middletown on Monday March 12 to present "Buyer & Cellar."  The 2013 play, written by Jonathan Tolins, takes place (mostly) in the basement of Barbra Streisand's home in Malibu, California, where the mega-star keeps a mall in her basement.  No, really, she does - there are pictures to prove it (see below - there is no "fake news" in the EYE).  The one-person play tells the fictional story of an out-of-work actor who gets the job of managing the mall and his relationships with his boyfriend, Ms. Streisand's personal secretary, James Brolin, and the STAR!!  It's a delightful premise and a very funny "What if?" story.


For the Readers Theater production, co-directors Anne Cassady and Richard Kamins decided to create a five-person cast instead of one actor playing all the parts.  To that end, the staged reading features the talents of Robert Donahue, Julie Greeman, Elizabeth Dougan, Michael D'Agostino, and Jerry Rankin.



Doors to the Hubbard Room (not pictured) open at 6:30 p.m. and the play commences at 7.  Since the Library closes at 6 p.m., you just enter from the Court Street doors in the parking lot.  The play is free and open to the public.

At 5:30 p.m. that day, the City of Middletown and its Commission on the Arts celebrates Arts Advocacy Day by honoring the works of Vintage Players and artist David Schulz.  The event takes place in City Hall on DeKoven Drive and should leave you enough time to get to the Library.  You can and should do both - I understand the next snow storm starts later in the evening.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Much Deserved

Tuesday April 20 is Arts Advocacy Day in Middletown and, on Monday evening at 5 p.m. in the Middletown Room of First & Last Tavern on Main Street, the Middletown Commission on the Arts presented its choices for the 2010 Arts Advocacy AwardsMarco Gaylord, music director of both the Middletown High School Band and the Middletown Symphonic Band, was recognized for his stellar work upgrading the instrumental music offerings in town (his cohort at MHS, choir director Michael Gosselin could not attend as he was stranded in England due to the ash strewn by the Icelandic volcano.) Gaylord's work with "MHS Goes to the Symphony", the biennial joint concert with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra, has raised the quality of the school's music and musicians and provides keen insights into the workings of a major music ensemble and the professional lives of its members.

Also honored was the Greater Middletown Chorale and its music director Joseph D'Eugenio.  Maestro D'Eugenio has shaped the vocal ensemble into one of the most impressive amateur singing groups in the state, if not the Northeast.  In its 3+ decades, the GMC has presented major choral works, sung for the Governor, traveled to Europe, and not once shied away from difficult material.  On May 2, the Chorale, augmented by voices from other choral groups and supported by a large orchestra, will present Mendelssohn's magnificent oratorio, "Elijah", at 4 p.m. in the Performing Arts Center at Middletown High School.  To find out more about the GMC and the next performance, go to www,greatermiddletownchorale.org

MCA Chair Joyce Kirkpatrick served as Master of Ceremonies and Mayor Sebastian Giuliano bestowed the awards upon the recipients and spoke about their contributions to the people of Middletown.  All in all, a delightful late afternoon.