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Cultural calendar, April 22-29, 2004
THURSDAY,
April 22
WALKABOUT
Making it Better: Town meeting City Councilor Kevin
Lynch and other government officials to discuss community
values relating to the environment. Richard Collins of the
UVA Institute for Environmental Negotiation moderates. Panel
members also include representatives of local environmental
groups the Piedmont Environmental Council and the Southern
Environmental Law Center. City Council Chambers, 7pm.
243-6421.
TJ Loved to Dig: Peggy Cornett,
Monticello's director of gardens and grounds, speaks on
"Thomas Jefferson, Gardener" as part of Historic Garden
Week. A tour of the Monticello gardens follows. 2pm.
Monticello Visitors Center. Free. 984-9822.
Break Out the Cranberry Sauce: A
silent auction and traditional turkey dinner highlight a
Thanksgiving in Spring fundraiser to benefit On Our Own,
Charlottesville's peer-run mental health and housing
resource. 6-8pm. $25. Thomas Jefferson Unitarian Church,
Rugby Road. Tickets, 979-0067.
FAMILY
Toad Tales: Toads are the topic for today's preschool
story time at Barnes & Noble. Storyteller Amanda
Petrusich entertains the five-and-under crowd with a reading
of Frog and Toad are Friends by Arnold Lobel. 10:30am. Free.
Barracks Road Shopping Center. 984-6598.
Which Craft: In celebration of
TV-Turnoff Week, Crozet Library invites kids ages 8 and up
bring their favorite handwork projects and share it with
friends at the library. 3:30pm. Free. In the old train
station on Three Notch'd Road. 823-4050.
Turn it Off: Northside Library
celebrates TV-Turnoff Week with an after school program for
kids in kindergarten and up. They'll read about what
happened for one family when the TV was broken-- they got
crafty. 4pm. Free. Registration required. Albemarle Square.
973-7893.
Dogwood Daze: Dogwood Festival
amusement rides are circling 'round at McIntire Park this
week. Ride all night for one price tonight. Opens at 6pm
tonight. More details at dogwoodfestival.org.
PERFORMANCE
Swing Swap: The Charlottesville Swing Dance Society
hosts this weekly Thursday-night swing dancing session, with
an hour of East Coast Swing, an hour of West Coast Swing,
and a DJ taking requests. Singles and couples welcome, no
partner needed. 7-9pm. Albemarle County Office Building
Auditorium, 401 McIntire Road. Free. 980-2744.
WORDS
Greg Orr: The UVA poet reads from his award-winning
memoir, The Blessing. Part of the Charlottesville Writing
Center / Streetlight book fair. Barnes & Noble, Barracks
Road Shopping Center, 7pm. 984-0461.
Ghosts: PVCC Theater performs
Lanford Wilson's adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's classic drama.
Closes April 18. V. Earl Dickinson Building, 500 College
Drive. 7:30pm. $6-10. 961-5376.
The Importance of Being Earnest:
Shenandoah Shakespeare presents a new production of
Oscar Wilde's comic masterpiece in the Blackfriars Theater.
10:30AM!! 10 S. Market St., Staunton. $10-26.
540-885-5588.
Play About the Baby: Catch this
preview of Edward Albee's sinister drama of mind games and
manipulation. 100 free tickets available for pickup; call
Live Arts for details. $10-15. 8pm. Live Arts Down Stage,
123 E. Water St. 977-4177. See
Performance feature.
Two Gentlemen of Verona:
Shenandoah Shakespeare presents a new production of the
Bard's early comedy in the magnificent Blackfriars Theater.
7:30pm. 10 S. Market St., Staunton. $10-26.
540-885-5588.
Teen Acting Studio: This weekly
workshop focuses on opening up the text within a
Shakespearean monologue through extensive language work:
scanning the verse, exploring rhythm and sound, and working
the breath. Students need to bring three sample
Shakespearean monologues with them to the first class.
Prerequisite: prior Latte acting studio experience or
instructor permission. Runs until June 3. 5-7pm. Live Arts,
123 E. Water St. $60 members, $75 general.
977-4177.
PERFORMANCE AND TUNES
Animating Music: UVA's McIntire Department of Music
presents a concert and symposium on the intersections
between performance and composition. Featuring Tomie Hahn
and Curtis Bahn's composition "Pikapika," musicians John
D'earth, Dawn Thompson, and Matthew Butner. Tonight's event
explores "how ideas of performance determine compositional
choices." 3:30pm. Old Cabell Hall. $5-10.
924-3984.
TUNES
John Cowan Band at the Prism: John Cowan, former
vocalist and bassist for the band New Grass Revival, returns
to the Prism with his latest group, including guitarist Jeff
Autrey and banjo player Rex McGee. $25/$20 advance,
8pm.
Jim Waive (country-folk) at the Blue Moon
Diner. Free, 8pm (W)
Karaoke Night with DJ Wild Wes at Buffalo
Wild Wings. Free, 9pm (W)
Chicken Head Blues Band at Dürty
Nelly's. $4, 9pm. (W)
Susan Greenbaum with Amanda French at
Gravity Lounge. $5, 8pm.
Thompson/ D'earth and friends (freeform
jazz) at Miller's. $4, 10pm. (W)
Robert Jospé (jazz) at Rapture. No
cover, 7:30pm. (W)
Satisfaction (dance party) at Rapture. No
cover, 10:30pm. (W)
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm. (W)
Hogwaller Ramblers (bluegrass mayhem) at
Shebeen. No cover, 10pm. (W)
Kait and Thom (modern jazz duo) at Tokyo
Rose upstairs. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Fair Weather Bums ('60s folk) at Twisted
Branch Tea Bazaar. No cover, 9pm.
FRIDAY, April
23
FAMILY
Storybook Dance: Young thespians ages 2-5 can climb on
stage at the Virginia Discovery Museum as they sing and
dance and bring to life the story of The Little Mermaid.
Come in costume if you like. 10:30-11:10am and 11:15-11:55.
Included in the price of admission. East end of the Downtown
Mall. 977-1025.
Out of Africa: Zokela Seko de
Centrafrique, an African family dance group, comes to the
Village Playhouse for a dancing and drumming performance.
Pizza and drinks included. 5-7pm. $7 children, $5 adults, $3
siblings. 313 Second St. SE, in the rear of the Glass
Building. 296-9390. villageplayhouse.net.
Skin Deep: It's not the same old
Beauty and the Beast at Old Michie Theatre. This live
performance is set in rhymed couplets and staged as an
audience participatory English pantomime. 7pm. $7.50. 221 E.
Water St. 977-3690. oldmichie.com.
Dogwood Daze: See Thursday, April
22.
WALKABOUT
Art Auction: The Kiwanis Club of Charlottesville hosts a
benefit art exhibition and auction featuring wine, cheese,
door prizes, and chamber music, all to support the J.T.
Graves Memorial Youth Scholarship Fund. $12 ($20/couple).
6:30pm. Holiday Inn, Emmet street. 971-2094 or
avenue.org/Kiwanis.
Organ Concert: The Westminster
Organ Concert series concludes with a performance of the
music of J.S. Bach by Eric Plutz and guest soprano Rachel
Barham. Let the organ rattle your fillings, then mingle with
the musicians at a post-performance reception. 8pm. Free.
963-4690 or avenue.org/organconcerts.
Gaited Horse Show: Over 100 gaited
horses show off their smooth and stylish walking skills at
the Virginia Horse Center this weekend, culminating in the
Evening of Champions final round at 7pm Saturday. A Saturday
auction features gaited breeds. 10am each day. Free.
horsecenter.org.
WORDS
Poetry Reading: Poets Cathryn Hankla (Last Exposures: A
Sequence of Poetry) and Bill Van Every (Devoted Creatures)
read from their work. 7pm. Part of a book fair for the
Charlottesville Writing Center and Streetlight magazine.
Barnes & Noble, Barracks Road Shopping Center.
984-0461.
Really Warm Fronts: A look at the
battles of Normandy and Baghdad. Mortimer Caplin, former
Navy Beachmaster at Normandy, 1944, joins Walter Slocombe of
the DOD for a retrospective of two major military hot zones.
11am, Miller Center, 2201 Old Ivy Road. 924-0921.
PERFORMANCE
No Shame Theatre: Up for a theatrical nightcap? Join
performers at this alternative venue for original material
by anyone about anything. The first 15 people who show up
get a spot on stage. Or you can just watch the carryings on.
Guidelines can be found under "How to No Shame" at
noshame.org/charlottesville/. 11pm. Live Arts Up Stage
Theater, 123 E. Water St. $5. 977-4177.
The Hills are Alive:
with
The Sound of Music, performed at Monticello High School,
featuring cameos by local teachers and administrators. 7pm.
PVCC's V. Earl Dickinson Building, 500 College Drive. $5-7.
977-7377.
The Improfessionals:
Charlottesville's local improv comedy troupe performs in
their Nelson County home. 8pm. Rapunzel's Coffee and Books,
924 Front St., Lovingston. $5. 977-9957.
Jazz Ensemble Spring Concert:
UVA's Jazz Ensemble, under the direction of John
D'earth, presents as their guest artist one of the world's
great trumpet players, Rex Richardson. $5-!0. 8pm. Old
Cabell Hall. 924-3984.
The Play About the Baby: Catch
Live Arts' new production of Edward Albee's sinister drama
of mindgames and manipulation. Runs through May 8. $10-15.
Arts DownStage, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177. See
Performance feature.
Happy Birthday, Shakespeare:
Professor Ralph Cohen hosts an evening in honor of the Bard
featuring songs, scenes, games, and swordplay, followed by
cake and refreshments. Festivities continue with a free
concert by Ruffian, a band featuring the alter-egos of nine
Shenandoah Shakespeare actors. 7:30pm. Blackfriars
Playhouse, 10 S. Market St., Staunton. Free.
540-885-5588.
TUNES
SongSharing IV: Concert to Benefir Ellen Luksch
featuring Faster Than Walking, Proutt & McCormick, and
Julie Goldman & Kevin Caran at Live Arts Upstage. $7,
8pm.
The Charlottesville Improfessionals at
Rapunzel's: Join the comedy troupe for another evening
of mirth and merriment. $5, 7:30pm.
John D'earth & friends:
Special guest Rex Richardson joins the UVA Jazz ensemble
in a show including Thad Jones' "Don't Git Sassy," Bobby
Brookmeyer's "ABC Blues," and Charles Mingus' "Fables of
Faubus," among others. $10/$5 students. 8pm. Old Cabell
Hall.
Eli Cook & the Red House blues band
at the Dew Drop Inn. No cover, 9:30pm.
The Zing Kings outside on the Downtown
Mall. Free, 11am-3pm. (W)
The Tateres and Scuffletown at Gravity
Lounge. $5, 8:30pm.
Vernon Fisher ("romantic side of jazz")
at Keswick Hall. No cover, 6:30pm. (W)
Cannonball Coming at Orbit. $3, 10:30pm.
Max Collins (otherwordly guitar) at
Shebeen. No cover, 11pm. (W)
Carbon Leaf with The Whiles at Starr
Hill. $10, 9pm.
Aleuchatistas and Tulsa Drone at Tokyo
Rose. $5, 10pm.
Folkskünde (riff-rock) at Twisted
Branch Tea Bazaar. No cover, 9pm.
SATURDAY, April
24
WORDS
Streetlight: A reading of the works of contributors to
the Spring edition of Streetlight, the literary journal of
the Charlottesville Writing Center. 2pm. Barnes & Noble,
Barracks Road Shopping Center. 984-0461.
FAMILY
Dancing in the Streets: The much-anticipated Dogwood
Festival Parade winds its way through downtown streets
beginning at 10:50am. Marching bands, clowns, floats, and
Miss Virginia and the Dogwood Queen too. More details at
dogwoodfestival.org.
Whale of a Tale: Did you know that
Richmond and I-95 were once totally covered by water?
Virginia Museum of Natural History paleontologist Dr. Nick
Fraser talks about ancient whales and other marine life that
lived in Virginia's coastal waters 14 million years ago. See
ancient whale, shark, crocodile, and turtle fossils at
Gordon Avenue Library. 10:30am. Free. 1500 Gordon Ave.
982-4605.
Blast Off: Starry-eyed science
types can get a close look at the sun without hurting their
vision at the annual National Astronomy Day at the Science
Museum of Virginia. Build a rocket and blast it off. Touch a
meteorite. Find out what your weight would be on the moon.
Move a 29-ton model of the Earth with your bare hands. Build
a sundial to take home. And lots more. 1-4pm. Included in
the price of admission. 2500 W. Broad St., Richmond.
800-659-1727. smv.org.
Survival Challenge: Young
adventurers can test their skills as they learn the basics
of survival in the wild. Identify plants and animals, use a
compass, make a nature journal and collection bag, build a
debris hut, and more. This all-day Science Days program
includes hands-on science workshops, demonstrations,
exhibits, an IMAX® film, and planetarium show. $18 per
child. For every six children, one adult chaperon is
required. Required adults $9. Additional adults $18. Call
804-864-1447 to register. 2500 W. Broad St., Richmond.
800-659-1727. smv.org.
Flutter By: The butterflies have
arrived at the Danville Science Center's Butterfly
Station and Garden. Colors fly as the first of this year's
Lepidoptera take to the air in their new home. Wander
through the gardens, play butterfly games, build a paper
caterpillar, and enjoy other hands-on activities. 10am-2pm.
Butterfly release is at noon. Open through October 17.
Butterfly Station admission is free; donations are
appreciated. Science Center admission $3 children, $4
adults. 677 Craghead St., Danville. 434-791-5160.
dsc.smv.org.
Yippy Ki-yay: Families can round
up the doggies and get into some cowpoke fun at Northside
Library with stories, songs, and crafts. 10:30am. Free.
Albemarle Square. 973-7893.
Arbor Ardor: Come celebrate Earth
Day at Scottsville Library by planting a tree on the
library's lawn. Other activities honor our mother earth.
11am. Free. 330 Bird St. 286-3541.
Name Game: A tricky old troll
finds his way into a miller's daughter's life in the Old
Michie Theatre's latest marionette puppet show,
Rumplestiltskin. 11am, 2pm, and 4pm. $5. 221 E. Water St.
977-3690. oldmichie.com.
Dogwood Daze: See Thursday, April
22. Opens at 1pm today.
Skin Deep: See Friday, April
23.
WALKABOUT AND FAMILY
Back to Basics: The Living Earth School brings people
closer to the earth with two adult workshops, "The Art of
Pine Needle Basketry" and "Introduction to Tracking."
Presented by Kate and Hub Knott, who have studied with
legendary trackers Tom Brown Jr. and Jon Young. Cost for
basket making is $35, tracking is $50. 258 Rocky Bottom
Lane, Afton. 540-456-7339. circleofseeds.com.
WALKABOUT
Dogwood Ball: Dance the night away the night at this
year's Dogwood Ball. This year the Rhythm Kings from
Virginia Beach play Motown, swing, and rhythm & blues,
and there's a cash bar and hors d'oeuvres. $15 (tickets at
the door and elsewhere). 8pm-midnight. Monticello Events
Center. 295-4837 or dogwoodfestival.org.
Basic Peyote: Studio Baboo
instructor Louise Smith teaches students to make a pair of
elegant tailored earrings while learning one of the most
versatile off-loom beading stitches. 10-2pm. 106 Fifth St.
244-2905. To register or for information,
studiobaboo.com.
Wanna Buy a Horse?: In the market
for a new mount? The Lexington Spring Sale at the Virginia
Horse Center is a good place to start looking. 140 paint and
quarter horses up for auction. 888-828-7653 or
turnbullbrokerage.com or horsecenter.org.
Garden Maintenance Day: The
perennial flower gardens at the Nature Conservancy's
Charlottesville office demonstrate how various plants help
wildlife and water quality in urban areas. Volunteers needed
to tend flower beds to get them ready for summer. 10am-4pm.
To sign up, contact Scott, sboven@tnc.org or
951-0585.
Trail-Building Workday: Celebrate
Earth Day by building a hiking trail in Fortune's Cove in
Nelson County. The Nature Conservancy needs volunteers to
cut branches, move rocks, and dig the new trail. Sign up:
sboven@tnc.org or 951-0585.
Monticello trees: Dig into some
local history on a two-hour walking tour that explores the
natural history of Monticello's exotic and native trees.
9:30am. Monticello Garden Shop. $10. Registration required.
984-9822.
Wine in the Mountains: Celebrate
11 years of the Wintergreen Winery with wine (of course),
food, and live music. 10am-6pm. $5 admission includes a
souvenir glass and special discounts. For info, call
361-2519.
Glass art: The Virginia Hot Glass
Festival returns for its second year this weekend at Sunspot
Studios in Staunton. More than 20 Virginia artists will be
on hand to heat, shape, and sell their wares. 540- 885-0678
or sunspots.com. See
Walkabout feature.
It's a Bluegrass Spring: Grave's
Mountain Lodge in Syria celebrates the arrival of spring
with their 13th annual Spring Fling Festival, featuring the
Battle in the Blue Ridge bluegrass band competition, craft
fair, horseback rides, food, fishing, wine tasting, and
more. All day today and tomorrow. Free. 540-923-4231 or
gravesmountain.com.
PERFORMANCE
Black Voices: The UVA vocal ensemble presents its spring
concert. 8pm. Old Cabell Hall. $5. 924-3984.
The Hills are Alive: See Friday,
April 23.
The Play About the Baby: See
Friday, April 23 and Performance feature.
Icons: The Richmond Triangle
Players in association with Vicarious Productions presents
the final weekend of Icons: The Lesbian and Gay History of
the World, Vol. 1, directed by Jeff Wills and starring Jade
Esteban Estrada. Fielden's Cabaret Theatre, 2033 W. Broad
St., Richmond. $12-$14. 804-346-8113.
Master Workshop: Live Arts and
Foolery present the first session of Plot and Passion, a
material-generation workshop investigating the culture of
American melodrama. Bring in all your material; compare,
contrast, argue, combine, riff, steal. Prepare a melodrama
scene and plotline for the second session on May 1. 1-5pm.
$30 for two Saturday sessions. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St.
944-4177.
Big Band Swing: The Swing Club of
UVA presents a 1930/'40s big band swing dance. Brooks
Tegler's 15-piece big band from D.C. plays music by Krupa,
Goodman, Shaw, Dorsey, Miller and others. Lesson at 8pm,
dancing 9pm-midnight. Newcomb Hall Ballroom. $15.
979-3346.
The Importance of Being Earnest:
Shenandoah Shakespeare presents a new production of
Oscar Wilde's comic masterpiece in the magnificent
Blackfriars Theater. 10 S. Market St., Staunton. $10-26.
540-885-5588.
Two Gentlemen of Verona:
Shenandoah Shakespeare presents a new production of the
Bard's early comedy in the magnificent Blackfriars Theater.
7:30pm. 10 S. Market St., Staunton. $10-26.
540-885-5588.
Latin Groove: Studio 206 Belmont
presents a new weekly class. Learn salsa, samba, merengue,
and other Latin forms of dance in an exercise setting. Dress
comfortably for a great workout. 11:15am. Studio 206
Belmont, 505 Monticello Road. $12 drop-in; 5-class card $45.
973-2065.
PERFORMANCE AND TUNES
Charlottesville and University Symphony Orchestra: The
orchestra's 29th season draws to a close with the dazzling
Sibelius Violin Concerto and Brahms' First Symphony.
Pre-concert lecture by Professor Milos Velimirovic 45
minutes before the concert in Minor Hall. Old Cabell Hall.
8pm. $22-orchestra and loge seats, $15-balcony. 924-3984.
See
Performance feature.
TUNES
The Johnson County Sheriffs at Rapunzel's: "With the
energy of the Kingston Trio" describes folk group the
Johnson County Sheriffs. Get a little education into just
what that means tonight. $5, 7:30pm.
Victor Cabas (blues) at Basic
Necessities. No cover, 6:30pm. (W)
Jimmy Fortune at Charlottesville
Performing Arts Center. $20, 8pm.
Populist Dancing at Club Rio. $10, 9pm.
(W)
Johnny & the Lowdowns CD release
party at the Dew Drop Inn. No cover, 9:30pm.
Dr. Bottleneck and Sparky's Flaw at
Gravity Lounge. $8, 8pm.
Vernon Fisher ("romantic side of jazz")
at Keswick Hall. No cover, 6:30pm. (W)
The 55th Annual Dogwood Festival Ball
featuring: The Rhythm Kings at Monticello Event &
Conference Center (201 Monticello Avenue Charlottesville).
$15, 8pm.
Synthetic: Dance Party with Stroud, Chris
Mocella, DJ Lost at Rapture. $5, 10pm.
The Johnson County Sheriffs at
Rapunzel's. $5, 7:30pm.
Fair Weather Bums (bluegrass) at Shebeen.
No cover, 11pm. (W)
Martin Sexton (soul) with Colleen Sexton
at Starr Hill. $15, 9pm.
DJ Night: Rock Dance Party at Tokyo Rose.
$5, 10pm.
SUNDAY, April
25
FAMILY
Skin Deep: See Friday, April 23.
Dogwood Daze: See Thursday, April
22. Opens at 1pm today.
WALKABOUT
March for Women's Lives: Reserve your seat today for a
hassle-free bus ride to the March in D.C. with other
Charlottesville residents. $20, $5 students; some subsidized
tickets available. 989-1514.
Wine in the Mountains: See Friday,
April 24.
Glass Art: See Saturday, April 24,
and Walkabout
feature,.
Bluegrass Spring: See Saturday,
April 24.
Plant Sale: In celebration of
Earth Day, the Ivy Creek Foundation will host its annual
Natural History Day and Native Plant Sale at the Ivy Creek
Natural Area. 1-3pm. Enviro-fun for the whole family, and a
chance to purchase garden-grown native wildflowers and ferns
from the Jefferson Chapter of the Virginia Native Plant
Society. 973-7772.
Historic garden tours: Stroll
through the backyards of some of Staunton's oldest homes
with the Beverley Garden Club and help raise money to send
local kids to nature camp. Learn about homes, trees, and the
city's garden styles along the way, and enjoy tea and cake
at the Twelfth Night Inn at the end. 10:30am-12:30 and
1-3pm. $5. 540-885-1733.
At the Pen Park Copa: Discover the
music, food, and culture of Brazil as the Brazilian
Association of Charlottesville hosts a party in celebration
of Brazil's Discovery Day. $5 members, $8 non-members, free
under 12. Pen Park Pavilion #3. 760-1056 or
Brasilemcville@aol.com.
WALKABOUT AND PERFORMANCE
Grateful Dead-centric Benefit: A spaghetti dinner, a
wide-open dance floor, and a day of the good old San
Francisco sound, all to benefit the Rockfish Valley
Community Center. Alligator, Charlottesville's "All star
Grateful Dead Experience," headlines 2-6pm, with Jalapeno
Corn Bread playing the dinner show 6-8pm. The spaghetti will
be served from 6-7pm for an additional $10 per plate and
will include the infamous psychedelic Jell-O. Tickets for
this alcohol-free event are $15 at the door.
361-0100.
PERFORMANCE
Sunday Salsa&emdash; Live!: Shake loose your winter
cobwebs with a Live! Sunday Salsa featuring Bio Ritmo. The
complete salsa dancing experience must be done to live music
with the band and dancers sharing and building on one
another's energy. Bio Ritmo has energy to share! DJ'd music
to warm you up starts at 8pm, Bio Ritmo begins their first
set at 9:30pm. The Outback Lodge, 917 Preston Ave. $8.
979-7211.
Dance Benefit: Seed Dance Exchange
presents a dance benefit for the Living Education Center for
Ecology and the Arts. Performing ensembles include the Zen
Monkey Project, Presence Center for Applied Theater Arts,
Prospect Dance Group, Kimberly Gladysz and Nature Dances,
The Swift Project, Seed Dance Exchange, and others. 3 and
7pm. $7. Live Arts UpStage, 123 E. Water St.
979-2547.
I Vocalisti: Charlottesville Vocal
Arts Society (formerly The Opera Society) announces a return
engagement of I Vocalisti, performing Brahms' Quartets for
Solo Voices. 3pm, Municipal Arts Center, 1117 Fifth St. Ext.
Free. 296-2238.
Early Music Ensemble: The music of
J.S. Bach and his German and Italian predecessors is
featured in this UVA Early Music Ensemble concert. 3:30pm.
$5-10. Old Cabell Hall. 924-3984.
Richmond Symphony Orchestra:
Today's program includes Tchaikovsky, Brahms, and
Shostakovich. 7:30pm. R.E. Lee High School, 1200 N. Coalter
St., Staunton. $18, $5 students. 540-886-6186.
The Hills are Alive: See Friday,
April 23.
Improv Lab II: Live Arts' resident
expert Rush Howell leads this intermediate-level weekly
Sunday afternoon workshop in long-form improv. Class runs
until May 2. 3-5pm. $50 members, $65 general. Live Arts, 123
E. Water St. 977-4177x100.
Henry IV, Part I: Shenandoah
Shakespeare presents a new production of the Bard's
best-loved history play in the magnificent Blackfriars
Theater. 2pm. 10 S. Market St., Staunton. $10-26.
540-885-5588.
Chamber Music Seminar Concert:
UVA's McIntire Department of Music presents a concert of
classical chamber works. 8pm. Garrett Hall Commons, UVA
Central Grounds. Free. 924-3984.
TUNES
Sparky's Flaw at Gravity Lounge. $5, 7pm.
Irish Music Session at Shebeen. No cover,
3-6pm. (W)
B.C. at Miller's. No cover, 10:30pm.
(W)
The Hogwaller Ramblers (bluegrass mayhem)
at Escafé. No cover, 10pm. (W)
Stephanie Nakasian and Hod O'Biren at
Gravity Lounge. $12/$8 with Student ID, 8pm.
Irish Music Session at Shebeen. No cover,
3-6pm. (W)
B.C. at Miller's. No cover, 10:30pm.
(W)
Movie Night: Kill Bill & Crouching
Tiger Hidden Dragon at Rapture. No cover, 7pm.
MONDAY,
April 26
ART
Painters Meet: The Central Virginia Watercolor Guild
meets today. Members and guests are encouraged to bring a
matted, but not framed, painting for the critique. Visitors
are always welcome to attend. 1pm. Thomas Jefferson Memorial
Church, 717 Rugby Road.
WALKABOUT
Montpelier Gardens: Tour the renovated landscape
arboretum and the two-acre Annie Rogers duPont formal garden
at James Madison's former abode. For times and more info,
visit montpelier.org.
More on Brown: In recognition of
the 50th anniversary of this historic case, Mildred
Robinson, UVA law professor, talks about "Voices from the
Brown Generation" at the Legal Aid Justice Center, 1000
Preston Ave. Free. 7-8:30pm. 293-5981.
Candidates' Forum: NAACP members
and interested members of the public pepper the six City
Council candidates with questions relating to
African-American affairs in the city. 6-8pm. City Council
Chambers.
PERFORMANCE
Vocal Concert: UVA's McIntire Department of Music
presents student vocal recitals from the studio of Stephanie
Nakasian. 8pm. Garrett Hall Commons. Free.
924-3984.
Virginia Gentlemen: The UVA vocal
ensemble performs a charity concert. 8pm. Old Cabell Hall.
$5-10. 924-3984.
TUNES
Open Mic Night with Charles Davis at Baja Bean. No cover,
signup 8:30pm/9pm. (W)
Jackson Gibson at Coupe DeVille's. No
cover, 10:30pm. (W)
George Melvin (piano merriment) at South
Street Brewery. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Elf power and Zumm Zumm at Tokyo Rose.
$5, 10pm.
Travis Elliot (pop) and John Figura at
the Virginian. No cover, 10pm. (W)
TUESDAY, April
27
FAMILY
Culture Camp: All members of the adoption community are
invited to an adoptive families panel discussing
International Heritage Camps and Homeland Tours. A panel of
parents who have adopted internationally talk about family
culture camps that address a child's birth culture and
adoption issues. 7pm. Free. Westminster Presbyterian Church,
190 Rugby Road. 293-5286.
PERFORMANCE
Beth Chandler Recital: UVA's McIntire Department of
Music presents a student recital. 8pm. Garrett Hall. Free.
924-3984.
African Drum & Dance Ensemble:
The Ensemble presents a celebration of African drumming
and dance "from rainforest to nightclub." 8pm. Old Cabell
Hall. $5-10. 924-3984.
WORDS
Jihad: Its concept and practice as analyzed by Michael
Knapp of the US Army National Ground Intelligence Center.
Miller Center, 5:15pm. 2202 Old Ivy Road.
924-0921.
WALKABOUT
Venture Capital: Gilman Louie, president and CEO of
In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital organization, speaks at
the Darden School's Abbott Center Auditorium 1:30-2:30pm,
followed by a public forum on trends in technology, venture
capital, and national security. Free, but registration is
required. Linda Bowling, 924-4065.
TUNES
Karaoke Night (what you make of it) at Baja Bean. Free,
8pm. (W)
Jamie and Rolland (partial bluegrass
mayhem) at the Blue Moon Diner. No cover, 8pm.
(W)
Glen Mack at Coupe DeVille's. No cover,
10:30pm. (W)
Mary Lou Lord with Vyktoria Keating
(folk) at Gravity Lounge. $12/$10, 8:30pm.
SNUG (funk improv) at Michael's Bistro.
$3, 10pm. (W)
The George Turner Trio (jazz, funk) at
Orbit. No cover, 10pm.
Thuggery Lounge: The Murder City Beat
Jackers (hip-hop, disco, etc.) at Rapture. $5/Ladies Free
Before Midnight, 10pm.
Dierks Bentley at Starr Hill. $15,
8pm.
International Improv: Itakura on the
wurlitzer, Flinn on drums Eisenbiel on guitar.
WEDNESDAY, April
28
PERFORMANCE
Henry IV, Part I: See Sunday, April 25. Today's show is
an early morning show at 10:30am.
Digitalis: UVA's McIntire
Department of Music presents a free concert by Digitalis.
8pm. Old Cabell Hall. Free. 924-3984.
The Play about the Baby: See
Friday, April 23 and Performance
feature.
Country Dance Night: Couples and
line dancing at Fry's Spring Beach Club. Dance lesson free
with cover. Lesson 7pm, dancing 8-11pm. 2512 Jefferson Park
Ave. $7 cover, $4 full-time students; students $2 every
fourth Wednesday through May. 977-0491.
Salsa Night: Whether you're
mastering the basic step or working on learning some cool
new moves, this class will help you reach your next level.
No partner necessary. 8-9:30 salsa partnering lesson;
9:30-10 practice. Lesson and practice, $8, $6 students.
Berkmar Ballroom, 652 W. Rio Road. 975-4611 or
berkmarballroom.com.
The Importance of Being Earnest:
See Saturday, April 24. Tonight's show is at
7:30pm.
Berkmar Salsa Night: Learn hot
nightclub salsa moves at this weekly Wednesday-night lesson
and practice. No partner necessary. 8:00-9:15pm lesson,
9:15-10:00pm practice. Berkmar Ballroom, 652 Rio Rd. West
#7. $8, $6 students. 975-4611.
Teen Acting Studio: Designed for
the serious teen actor, this weekly workshop will focus on
actor's vocal production and physical movement, skills that
will then be put to practical use in work with monologues.
Students should bring three sample contemporary monologues
with them to the first class. $60 members, $75 general.
5:30-7pm. Runs until June 2. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St.
977-4177.
WORDS
Pollster par Excellence: Pew Research Center director
Andrew Kohut discusses "The Long and Winding Road to the
Presidential Election." Miller Center, 11am. 2201 Old Ivy
Road. 924-0921.
WALKABOUT
Bead Basics: Studio Baboo instructor Terri Gable offers
a class in bead stringing basics. 5:30-7:30pm. $25 fee
includes materials. 106 Fifth St. Downtown Mall.
244-2905.
Scientific Inquiry: Delve into the
mysteries of the scientific method with Dr. Francis Macrina
as he discusses how scientific discoveries are made. Part of
the Funsten Science Lecture Series at the Science Museum of
Virginia. 7-9pm. No fee. For info, call 804-864-1400 or
visit smv.org.
Ash Lawn Birthday Celebration:
Celebrate the 246th birthday of our fifth president,
James Monroe, where he would have likely spent it: his
house. Ash Lawn Highland is offering free admission for all
local residents today including actors in period costume, a
special exhibit on Monroe's library, and tours of the
plantation's historic gardens. Open 9am-6pm. 293-9539 or
ashlawnhighland.org.
Finding Homes for Children: The
Rev. W.C. Martin, who has been featured on the "Oprah
Winfrey Show" and "48 Hours," led his church in Texas in
finding permanent homes for 76 foster children. He received
the Essence award in 2000, and is speaking at First Baptist
Church at 6:30pm. 979-9631.
FAMILY
Tales for Tots: Books by Audrey Wood entertain the
five-and-under crowd at Barnes & Noble's preschool story
time. Hear Sally, Sally, King Bidgoods in the Bathtub, and
Big Hungry Bear. 10:30am. Free. Barracks Road Shopping
Center. 984-6598.
TUNES
Cheesy Trivia with M&M Express at Buffalo Wild
Wings. No cover, 8:30pm. (W)
Open Mic Night at Dew Drop Inn. No cover,
8pm. (W)
John Gorka with Paul Curreri
(country-blues) at Gravity Lounge. $25/$20, 8pm.
The Mike Rosensky Jeff Decker Quartet
(jazz) at Miller's. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Jamal Millner and friends at Outback
Lodge. Free, 10pm.
Open Jam at Rapunzel's Coffee &
Books. Free, 7pm. (W)
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm. (W)
Ellen Kovac at South Street Brewery. No
cover, 10pm.
Blind Boys of Alabama (gospel-soul) at
Starr Hill. $25, 7:30pm.
Kathy Olsen Trio (jazz) upstairs at Tokyo
Rose. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Jim Davies (acoustic rock and blues) at
the Virginian. No cover, 10pm. (W)
THURSDAY, April
29
WORDS
Great Game: Spy craft for Le Carré readers.
Former CIA guy Frederick Hitz reads from his new espionage
primer. New Dominion Bookshop on the Downtown Mall. 5:30pm.
295-2552. See Words
feature.
More April Poetry: In national
poetry month's dramatic conclusion at PVCC, Half Moon Bay
poetry chapbook editor David Dodd Lee and PVCC's own
Charlotte Matthews (A Kind of Devotion) join for an evening
of poetry entitled "The Moon and a Tree." 7:30pm. Black Box,
V. Earl Dickinson Building, 500 College Drive.
961-5203.
FAMILY
Tales for tots: See Wednesday, April 28.
PERFORMANCE
Swing Swap: The Charlottesville Swing Dance Society
hosts this weekly Thursday-night swing dancing session, with
an hour of East Coast Swing, an hour of West Coast Swing,
and a DJ taking requests. Singles and couples welcome, no
partner needed. 7-9pm. Albemarle County Office Building
Auditorium, 401 McIntire Road. Free. 980-2744.
Two Gentlemen of Verona: See
Saturday, April 24. Tonight there's a post-show Talk Back!
Session with the cast at 9:45pm.
Teen Acting Studio: This weekly
workshop will focus on opening up the text within a
Shakespearean monologue through extensive language work:
scanning the verse, exploring rhythm and sound, and working
the breath. Students need to bring 3 sample Shakespearean
monologues with them to the first class. Pre-requisite:
Prior LATTE acting studio experience or instructor
permission. Runs until June 3. 5-7pm. $60 members, $75
general. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177.
Jazz on the Lawn: UVA's McIntire
Department of Music presents live outdoor jazz. 1pm. Steps
of Old Cabell Hall. Free. 924-3984
Lost Classic: Ibby Roberts gives
Virginia premiere of a recently discovered concerto
attributed to Rossini. The orchestra is the Waynesboro
Community Orchestra, Eric Stassen conducting, Susan Black is
concert master. The program also includes Schumann's
Symphony No. 3, the "Rhenish." 8pm. First Presbyterian
Church, 11th & Wayne, Waynesboro. Price TBA. 924-3984.
The Play about the Baby: See
Friday, April 23, and Performance
feature. Tonight's show is at
7:30pm.
PERFORMANCE AND TUNES
Relay for Life: Singer/Songwriter/Survivor David M.
Bailey performs in a Kick Off Concert/Fundraiser for Relay
For Life 2004. 7pm. Church of the Incarnation, 1475
Incarnation Drive. Suggested donation $10.
973-2244.
Silent Film Music: The Devil Music
Ensemble scores live The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, a classic
of German Expressionism that tells the story of a town
racked by a string of murders that seem to coincide with the
arrival of a stranger, Dr. Caligari. The Devil Music
Ensemble performs it live, followed by locals Tulsa Drone,
Tone from DC, local kickers Bucks and Gallants, and a final
performance of rock by the Devil Music Ensemble. Price TBA.
7pm. Satellite Ballroom behind Plan 9 on the Corner:
979-9999.
PERFORMANCE AND TUNES
Relay for Life: Singer/Songwriter/Survivor David M.
Bailey performs in a Kick Off Concert/Fundraiser for Relay
For Life 2004. 7pm. Church of the Incarnation, 1475
Incarnation Drive. Suggested donation $10.
973-2244.
Silent Film Music: The Devil Music
Ensemble scores live The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, a classic
of German Expressionism that tells the story of a town
racked by a string of murders that seem to coincide with the
arrival of a stranger, Dr. Caligari. The Devil Music
Ensemble performs it live, followed by locals Tulsa Drone,
Tone from DC, local kickers Bucks and Gallants, and a final
performance of rock by the Devil Music Ensemble. Price TBA.
7pm. Satellite Ballroom behind Plan 9 on the Corner:
979-9999.
TUNES
Cerberus Shoal at Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar: Strange as
a talking dog, Cerberus Shoal's beautiful world-pop is
transfixing, and might lead to an evening of quiet
contemplation. $4, 9pm. See
Tunes feature.
Jim Waive (country-folk) at the Blue Moon
Diner. Free, 8pm (W)
Karaoke Night with DJ Wild Wes at Buffalo
Wild Wings. Free, 9pm (W)
Pre-Relay Kick Off Concert/Fundraiser for
Relay For Life 2004 at Church of the Incarnation, 1475
Incarnation Dr. Suggested donation $10, 7pm.
Chicken Head Blues Band at Dürty
Nelly's. $4, 9pm. (W)
Eileen Edmonds at Gravity Lounge. $5,
8:30pm.
Thompson/ D'earth and friends (freeform
jazz) at Miller's. $4, 10pm. (W)
Robert Jospé (jazz) at Rapture. No
cover, 7:30pm. (W)
Satisfaction (dance party) at Rapture. No
cover, 10:30pm. (W)
Middle Eastern Belly Dance Class at
Rapunzel's Coffee & Books. Free, 6:30pm. (W)
Hogwaller Ramblers (bluegrass mayhem) at
Shebeen. No cover, 10pm. (W)
Sharif CD Release Party at Starr Hill/
$8/$6 advance, 9pm.
Kait and Thom (modern jazz duo) at Tokyo
Rose upstairs. No cover, 9:30pm. (W)
Upcoming and
Ongoing
WORDS
Come into the Library: Ash Lawn-Highland exhibits rarely
seen selections from James Monroe's collection of 3,000 late
18th- and early 19th-century French and English volumes.
Open daily through April 30, 10am-6pm. 293-9539.
ART
The Piedmont Pastelists: Artists group meets the second
Monday of the month in the classroom at Michael's Craft
Store in Barracks Road Shopping Center. 1pm. 974-
6010.
FAMILY
Roots and wings: The Living Earth School brings kids
closer to the earth with their summer residential youth
camps. Three programs &emdash; Earth Roots (ages 8-11),
Ancient Ways (advanced camp for ages 8-13), and Wilderness
Quest (8-day backpacking trek for ages 12 and up) &emdash;
are designed to help children get back to their roots and
learn the philosophy of living close to the earth. These
camps teach survival skills and much more. They are personal
growth oriented, educational, and down right fun. Enrollment
limited and fills fast, so register as soon as possible.
Applications available on-line. 258 Rocky Bottom Lane,
Afton. 540-456-7339. circleofseeds.com.
River Ramble: Call now for your
tickets to join one of the James River Rambler railroad
excursions happening on May 8 and 22 and June 5. This
popular train ride wanders through the rolling hills and
deep forests of Buckingham County from Dillwyn along the
historic Buckingham Branch rail line. Choose from a
90-minute or 3.5-hour tour. Sponsored by the Old Dominion
Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. Call
between 10am-4pm on Saturdays, 1-4pm on Sundays:
800-451-6318. odcnrhs.org.
Moving Heaven and Earth: Kids
aren't the only things in constant motion. At the Virginia
Discovery Museum the earth and its movement is the subject
of the Back Gallery exhibit that explores Patterns, Cycles,
and Change. Kids can move the planets, create a rainstorm,
and journey through the seasons through May 16. Free with
museum admission. East end of the Downtown Mall. 977-1025.
Martian Chronicles: The Virginia
Discovery Museum gets into the Mars mania with a new display
in the Discovery Corner. Maps, globes, artifacts, and new
NASA images let earth-bound explorers probe the Red Planet.
Included in the price of admission. East end of the Downtown
Mall. 977-1025.
Filling the Void: Stella is a
black hole. Stella bats her lilac eyelashes and reminisces
about her glory days as a giant star, how she explodes and
becomes a black hole, and about the mysteries she still
keeps to herself in the Science Museum of Virginia's
multimedia planetarium show Black Holes now through June 13.
Included in the price of admission. 2500 W. Broad St.,
Richmond. 800-659-1727. smv.org.
World Beat: Discover how rhythm
and movement link different cultures, locations, and musical
traditions in the new IMAX film "Pulse: A Stomp Odyssey" at
the Science Museum of Virginia. Two long-time Stomp
performers guide visitors through grand landscapes and
cultural celebrations in Brazil, South Africa, Spain,
England, Japan, India, the United States, and various
countries in Africa to learn how people from around the
world experience music and dance. Runs through July 16. Call
or see website for schedule and cost. 2500 W. Broad St.,
Richmond. 800-659-1727. smv.org.
WALKABOUT
Bocce and Brunch: This and every Sunday through June,
the Spruce Creek Gallery in Nellysford hosts their popular
ãBrunch and Bocce.ä Enjoy a catered brunch, and
then try to figure out what this whole bocce thing is all
about. Reservations required. For info, call
361-1859.
Downtown Tours: The
Albemarle-Charlottesville Historical Society offers walking
tours of historic downtown Charlottesville every Saturday at
10am. Tours leave from the McIntire Building across from Lee
Park and cover over 250 years of community history in one
hour. $3 suggested donation. For info, call
296-1492.
Visit Montpelier: Montpelier
offers two outdoor walking tours each Saturday, one focusing
on the plantationâs slave community, and another on
the more recent duPont estate. Afterwards, go behind the
scenes and see rooms that are not regularly open to the
public and areas of the house that are under renovation.
Offered every half-hour from 10:30am-4pm.
montpelier.org/>montpelier.org for more info.
Single Mothers' Support Group:
Safe environment for women dealing with the challenges
of raising children on their own. Facilitated by Deborah
Frazer, LCSW. Nominal fee required, negotiable according to
the needs of group participants. Pre-registration interview
required. Child care available. 6:30-8pm. Focus Women's
Center. Grady Avenue. 293-2222.
Women in Change: Support group
allows women experiencing personal issues of transition to
meet in a supportive and confidential setting, facilitated
by Betsy Cochran, LPC. 7-8:30pm. Fee and pre-registration
interview required. Focus Women's Center. Grady Avenue.
293-2222.
ART LIST
The Second Street Gallery
presents two shows running through May 1. In the Main
Gallery, view the language-inspired art of Kay Rosen's "New
Word Order," including "Blurred," a 37-foot-long
site-specific piece. In the Dové Gallery, experience
"You Kill Me," an installation investigating the nature of
romance, by D'nell Larson. City Center for Contemporary
Arts, corner of Second and Water streets. 977-7284.
The University of Virginia Art Museum
presents "A Taste for Grace: Italian Prints from the 15th
through 18th Centuries," which continues through August 15.
In addition, the museum features Carrie Mae Weems' "The
Jefferson Suite" through May 23. Also on view: "Exploring
Identy: Work by Southern Jewish Women Artists," featuring
pieces by Jan Aronson, Marcia R. Cohen, Johanna Drucker,
Linda Gissen, and Alyssa C. Salomon, through April 25, plus
"American Collage," including work by Andy Warhol, Adja
Yunkers, and Robert Motherwell, among others, through August
24. 155 Rugby Road. 924-3952.
Java Java displays the work of St.
Anne's-Belfield School students Ji-Hyae Kim and Maggie
Wilson through May 1. Town Side Shopping Center, Ivy Road.
220-2534.
During April, the Gravity Lounge features
"Safari," recent photographs of Kenya by Jeff James. 103 S.
First St. 977-5590.
The Virginia Photography Club presents
its first public exhibition at Michael's Bistro. The show
will be up through May 10. 1427 University Ave.
242-0139.
The Renaissance School hosts its fifth
annual student art show. 406 E. Main St. on the Downtown
Mall. 984-1952.
The Piedmont Pastelists offer an
exhibition of members' work at Michaels Arts and Crafts
through May 2. Barracks Road Shopping Center.
977-3506.
The Kluge-Ruhe Collection of Aboriginal
Art presents "Family Business: Kinship in Australian
Aboriginal Art" through June 5. 400 Worrell Drive, Peter
Jefferson Place. 244-0234.
"Dalgliesh Unframed," a show of pastel
and oil paintings by Betsy Dalgliesh, is on display at
Angelo through April 30. 220 E. Main St. on the Downtown
Mall. 971-9256.
During April, view "Fusion," a show of
paintings, collage, and tapestry by artists Doris deSha,
Nancy deJarnette Frye, Joan Griffin, Anne Warren Holland,
and Sylvia Thompson, at C'ville Coffee. 1301 Harris St.
979-4402.
Spencer's 206 shows work by Lisi Stoessel
during April. 295-2080.
At the C&O Gallery, view "On the
Water," paintings by John Howard, through April 30. Next
door to the C&O Restaurant, 511 E. Water St.
971-7044.
Nature Visionary Art shows "New Work by
Matt Sesow!" through May 1. 110 Fourth St. 296-8482.
See Art
feature.
During April, CODG presents "Play of
Light," an exhibition of paintings and photographs by Leslie
Allyn, Dana Grant, and Clare Zusky. 112 E. Main St., under
the Jefferson Theater. 242-4212.
View the Central Virginia Watercolor
Guild's 2004 Members Exhibition, featuring 67 paintings by
33 members, at the Albemarle County Courthouse, through
April 30. McIntire Road. 296-8484.
The Dave Moore Studio features works by
Dave Moore and several Richmond artists. Hours vary, so call
first. 414 E. Main St. (under The Twisted Branch Tea
Bazaar). 825-1870.
David Cochrane's abstract/geometric
paintings and Matisse- and Picasso-influenced portraits are
on view at the architectural firm of Stoneking/Von Storch.
Also on display are photographs by Sarah Hormel-Everett and
paintings by Priscilla Whitlock. Fifth and Water streets.
295-4204.
Les Yeux du Monde@dot2Dot presents Edie
Read's "Figured" in its downstairs gallery through May 3.
Upstairs, view Stanley Woodward's "Spring Flowers" through
April 30. 115 S. First St. 973-5566.
Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church features
an exhibition of "nuptial paintings" and clay sculptural
wall relief by Linda Cappacione. 717 Rugby Road.
293-8179.
Leo Charre shows his paintings at the
Mudhouse in April. 213 W. Main St. on the Downtown Mall.
984-6833.
L'étoile Restaurant displays
paintings by local artists Barry Gordon and Malcolm Hughes.
Gordon's abstract works feature interiors and everyday
objects; Hughes portrays landscapes in the Impressionist
style. 817 W. Main St. (across from the Amtrak Station).
979-7957.
Take a stroll through the 57 acres of
Virginia's first-ever Sculpture Park, located on the grounds
of Baker-Butler Elementary School. 2740 Proffit Road.
974-7777x1402.
Paintings by Gloria Mitchell are on
display at The Artful Lodger, 1807 Seminole Trail.
970-1900.
During April, Virginia Paul's "Maine
Islands and Beyond," a series of landscapes inspired by the
artist's travels, is on view at Art Upstairs. 316 E. Main
St., above The Hardware Store, on the Downtown Mall.
923-3900.
"Art and the Natural World," an exhibit
featuring science themes, is on display at the Science and
Engineering Library's new reading room. The exhibit is a
highlight of the library's grand opening in Clark Hall, and
will be up through the academic year. The exhibit features
work by UVA art faculty. 924-3628.
The Charlottesville-Albemarle Art
Association is exhibiting the work of Betty Brubach, Blake
Hurt, Phyllis Frame, Amy Howard, Coy Roy, Judith Ely, and
Karen Jaegerman Collins on the upper level mezzanine of the
Charlottesville Airport through May 2. 295-2486.
Jerry O'Dell's paintings and stained
glass creations are on view at Blue Ridge Glass &
Crafts. 1724 Allied St. 293-2876.
During April, The McGuffey Art Center
presents Kristin Onuf's "Shades," an exhibition of gelatin
plate monotypes, as well as "Three Painters," featuring
still lifes by Pattye Leggett, seascapes by Robin Braun, and
figural paintings by Rick Weaver. "Cat Women," drawings and
paintings by Bob Anderson, is also on view. In addition,
fourth- and fifth-year UVA students present a group show on
the theme "Collage." 201 Second St. NW. 295-7973.
Transient Crafters displays "Beeswax
Luminaries: Capturing Nature's Radiance," a series of
luminaries created by Lauren Amacher of "Hive," during
April. 118 W. Main St. on the Downtown Mall.
972-9500.
The Bozart Gallery presents "2D by 1," a
series of Charlottesville-centered paintings by Tom Walsh,
through April 30. 211 W. Main St. 296-4669.
Selected landscapes by Richard Crozier
are on view at Hotcakes through May 2. Barracks Road
Shopping Center. 295-6037.
Martha Jefferson Hospital presents a show
entitled "The Creative Process" through June 4. 459 Locust
Ave. 982-7000.
Radar
The Arts Center in Orange presents oil
paintings by Lou Schellenberg through May 15. 129 E. Main
St., 540-672-7311, artcenter@nexet.com.
Sun's Traces Gallery displays baskets by
Charlotte LaRoy (featured in The Fiber Arts Design Book), as
well as clay works by Paula Brown-Steedly, handmade paper by
Rebecca Humphrey, and weaving by Barbara Gentry and Pat
Hoover. Barboursville. 540-832-7044.
The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts presents
"Bonjour, Monsieur Corbet! The Bruyas Collection from the
Musee Fabre, Montpelier," and "Van Gogh and Gauguin: An
Artistic Dialogue in the South of France," through June 13.
Also on view: "Best Friends: Portraits of Sydney and Francis
Lewis," a series of portraits by a range of artists,
including Chuck Close and Andy Warhol, through July 11. 2800
Grove Ave. 804-924-2704.
Ombra's Café displays "Recent
Still Lifes," oils by painter Vidu Palta, through April.
5773 The Square, Crozet. 296-4669.
The Front Street Gallery presents
"Natural Bridges," drawings and paintings by Jim Langer,
through April 30. 773 Front Street, Lovingston.
434-263-8526.
Sunspots Studios in Staunton offer live
glassblowing demonstrations every day by master glassblower
Phillip Nolley and art glass artist Minh Martin, both in
residence. Corner of Lewis and Middlebrook streets in
downtown Staunton, across from the train station.
540-885-0678. See Walkabout feature, page 38.
The Artisans Center of Virginia presents
work by sculptor and potter Susan Coville during April. 601
Shenandoah Village Drive (exit 94 off I-64), Waynesboro.
540-946-3294.
During April, Caffé Bocce displays
paintings by Lindsay Michie Eades. 330 Valley St.,
Scottsville. 286-4422.
Sybil Heerdegan's acrylic paintings are
on view during April at Harrisonburg's John Clore Gallery in
the Wachovia Bank lobby. Corner of E. Market St. and Mason.
540-810-2777.
FEATURES/FEATURES/FEATURES
ART
Much to say: Sesow's visual chatter
BY LAURA PARSONS
ART@READTHEHOOK.COM
Brace yourself. Maybe even toss back a stiff drink before
you go. Because to encounter Matt Sesow's paintings is to
enter a maelstrom. Undiluted primary colors fly off the
wall, blinding, dazzling. Frenetic lines thrash violently.
And Sesow's disturbing, distorted images needle and
jab.
The experience can be overwhelming--
especially when presented as a pulsating floor-to-ceiling
mosaic of expressionism, as it is at Nature Visionary Art.
But stay with it, and a strange vocabulary of images
emerges: figures with missing limbs, coffee cups with
stitches, crosses, odd cartoon rabbits. What is going on in
this guy's head?
"A lot of these paintings are about me,"
says Nebraska native Sesow, who lost his left arm to an
airplane propeller at age 8. When he began painting 19 years
later, Sesow discovered a therapeutic means for grappling
with issues arising from his childhood trauma.
"I would call it negative emotion I
hadn't dealt with before," he says.
In "Baby's First Step," a blue-hued
toddler in green overalls balances unsteadily, one foot
lifted, as a shirtless, seated boy, with missing feet, looks
on from the side. Sesow explains that it's a reversal of his
childhood experience. In this fantasy, he is the physically
whole center of attention, while his brother-- in real life
a gifted athlete-- sits on the sidelines.
In addition to autobiographical
explorations, Sesow often expresses his reactions to current
events. For instance, Saddam Hussein and personified figures
of Israel and Palestine figure in two of his paintings.
Other references are less obvious. "A
Basic Human Right, a Human Need," depicts a flat, bluish
green head, the edge of its eye and the side of its nose
charged with yellow above red lips and gritted teeth. Sesow
explains he painted this image while listening to Pacifica
Radio's report of Aristide's removal by U.S. forces from
Haiti.
The rawest paintings on display-- heads
scribbled with intensity against yellow, black, or red
backgrounds-- are Sesow's most recent. "I'm trying to get a
little more energetic, a little more aggressive," he says,
adding that his heroes are Bacon, De Kooning, and
Basquiat.
Sesow paints a full eight-hour day and
often churns out 12 or more works in a session. Among his
current projects is a portrait series of every G.I. killed
in Iraq.
Viewing the current wall of Sesow's
work is like eavesdropping on the artist's ongoing argument
with the world. With paint he shouts down and wrestles with
his tangled personal and political issues. And we get to
watch wide-eyed.
WORDS
Spy clichés: Falling for
the honey-trap
By ELIZABETH KIEM
WORDS@READTHEHOOK.COM
The first thing you need to know about
Frederick P. Hitz's new book The Great Game is that it's not
about the Hindu Kush. The phrase, usually a reference to
imperial adventurists mucking about in Central Asia, is here
reserved solely for espionage.
Hitz, a former inspector general of the
CIA, draws on spy cases from fiction and reality to see how
they stack up. Covert activities are discussed via The Spy
Who Came in from the Cold and the Bay of Pigs; recruitment
is studied through the words of George Smiley and real-life
spycatcher Dewey Clarridge; and for the motivations of
turncoats, we hear from both Kim Philby and Graham Greene.
Hitz promises that with a few exceptions,
the truth is stranger than fiction.
To his credit, the book does provide a
handful of outlandish details. (My favorite is the "acoustic
kitty" mobile listening device to be attached to the feline
of the house.) But overall, the author is too focused on the
organization of his materials to allow the stories to test
their own strangeness. Perhaps this is to be expected of an
intelligence operative turned college professor.
Even when dealing with the juicy themes
endemic both to spy novels and Cold War embassies worldwide,
Hitz is relentlessly academic. It's odd to read of a state
department official's "expensive appetite for heterosexual
sadomasochistic sex" couched in terms of "controlled
circumstances under which the Soviets
applied the
'honey trap'" and "the disparate cultural vulnerabilities of
the two sides during the Cold War."
The bottom line is that if I were Robert
Hanssen, or Aldrich Ames or Oleg Penkovsky, I'd pick Alan
Furst to immortalize me over Hitz any day.
Still, The Great Game raises some
relevant concerns. Hitz reminds us of the furor over
perceived breaches of civil liberties and abuse of power by
the intelligence agencies in the mid-'70s. The revelations,
he writes, proved that "Americans were being victimized by
the very forces they had unleashed to counter the Communist
threat."
Many fear we are right back there today,
minus the Communists. But Hitz correctly points out that
Osama bin Laden (more Dr. No than Jamal Ramlawi) poses a
very different challenge for our spies. Today we're asked if
creating a secret police is the best route to improved
intelligence.
Maybe the 9/11 commission should call
Rudyard Kipling to the stand.
Frederick P. Hitz reads from The Great
Game: The Myth and Reality of Espionage at New Dominion
Bookstore on the Downtown Mall. Thursday, April 29, 5:30pm.
Ask him to use lots of "bafflegab."
FAMILY
Happy trails: Walkways for wheels
BY LINDA KOBERT
FAMILY@READTHEHOOK.COM
Diehard outdoor types may decry the
resurfacing of the Rivanna Greenbelt trail near Riverview
Park as another attempt at taming wild places ["Pave
Paradise? Greenbelt trail asphalted" News, April 15],
but those who must get around on wheels see this development
as one of their only paths into paradise.
The Greenbelt trail meanders along the
river through surprisingly secluded and mercifully flat
terrain that parents with babies in strollers, young
children just learning to ride a bicycle, and
wheelchair-dependant nature lovers can really roll with.
It's one of the few nature trails around town that's really
suited to this purpose.
"You have to be careful on some trails,"
mothers Lisa and Tanya told me as they strolled their
six-month-old baby boys around the half-mile paved loop at
Pen Park. "Your wheels have to be really sturdy if you go on
some of those gravel trails."
Wood chips or unimproved paths would be
out of the question for these moms who, despite the
hilliness of Pen Park's fitness and nature trail, enjoy its
wide, paved path where they can stroll side-by-side and
chat.
Ivy Creek Natural Area has a
stroller-friendly walking path, too, that takes a mostly
flat route through varied scenery for nearly a mile. Pet
lovers must leave their four-legged friends at home, however
(seeing-eye dogs are the exception). Bikes and roller blades
are a no-go here, too.
Saunders-Monticello Trail, which wanders
slowly up the Thomas Jefferson Parkway at no more than a
five-percent grade, is another ideal walking trail for wee
ones on wheels. Damage to a boardwalk over Carter Mountain
Road caused by Hurricane Isabel, however, has closed the
trail from that point to the top of the mountain since last
fall. Trail manager Matt Sensabaugh says construction is
nearing completion on the damaged boardwalk, and by mid- to
late May, high rollers and others will be able to make their
way all the way to the Monticello entrance.
Still, the 1.2-mile stretch from the
trailhead to the damaged section continues to be a wonderful
wander along tightly packed crushed-stone paths and
boardwalks through secluded woods. A loop of trail circles
the pond, and another spur winds up (yes, it's steep) to
Carter's Overlook where on a clear day you'll think you can
see forever. Pets are allowed on the paths but not on the
boardwalks, and they must be on a leash.
Access to Rivanna Greenbelt is at the
end of Chesapeake Street. Pen Park is on Pen Park Road off
Rio. Ivy Creek Natural Area is on Earlysville Road (Rt.
743). 973-7772. Saunders-Monticello Trail is
part of the Thomas Jefferson Parkway. Trailhead and parking
is on Rt. 53 at Rt. 20.
WALKABOUT
Glowing goo: Glass festival shapes up
BY TIM SPRINKLE WALKABOUT@READTHEHOOK.COM
How interesting is glass? Considering
that it's found in everything from bathroom mirrors to Crate
and Barrel goblets, not very. But add a little color to the
equation-&endash; bend, twist, and coax it into some wild
and fantastic new shapes-&endash; and you're looking at a
different beast altogether.
Do all that, apply your skills to all
sorts of useful and beautiful objects, and manipulate a
red-hot ball of syrupy goo with a crowd watching, and glass
becomes downright entertaining.
That's the general idea behind the
Virginia Hot Glass Festival, the only art show in the state
devoted to the molten glass craft, being held this weekend
at Sunspots Studios in Staunton. The festival, now in its
second year, brings together more than 20 of the finest hot
glass artisans in Virginia for a weekend of demonstrations,
workshops, and an all-around celebration of the
glassworker's art.
More than just an art fair, these
practitioners blur the line between craft and art-- creating
lamps, vases, and other household object that are as wildly
original and creative as stand-alone art pieces.
Fans of glass art will find a bit of
everything here: live demonstrations of glass blowing,
lampworking, sand casting (in which molten glass is poured
into a moist sand mold), slumping (a technique of molding
warm glass into bowls, glasses, and other popular shapes),
and fusing (the practice of blending different pieces of
glass into dramatic swirls of color). After watching the
artists ply their trade, you can buy the pieces directly
from them. Proceeds from the sale of objects made during the
Festival will benefit the Staunton Augusta Arts
Center.
"There's really no place else in Virginia
where people can see hot glass being shaped like this," says
Caroline Sheridan, event organizer with Sunspots Studios.
"This is a unique opportunity to see many different kinds of
hot glass art all in one place.
Besides," she says, "where else can
people see 2000-degree balls of glass being shaped into
amazing works of art?"
Sunspots Studios is located near
Staunton's historic train depot, five minutes from I-81 and
I-64, in the Klotz Building at 202 S. Lewis St. 9-6pm
Saturday, 9-5pm Sunday. Free. Info: Caroline Sheridan,
540-885-0678 or sunspots.com.
PERFORMANCE
Waaaa!: Playful play about a baby
BY STEPHEN BOYKEWICH PERFORMANCE@READTHEHOOK.COMWas
there any one of us who didn't dream as a child of being
plucked out of our ordinary life by rich glamorous parents
who would adopt us as their own and whisk us off to an
island fortress where we could eat pizza every day, have
dessert before dinner, and where the social studies teacher
we had a crush on would be in a special room only we had the
key to, wearing something from the naughty pages of the
Sears catalog?
Well, the details aren't the important
part.
Edward Albee, author of The Play About
the Baby, which opens at Live Arts this weekend, had a
childhood almost that fantastical. Barely two weeks old, he
was adopted into a semi-legendary and very wealthy
vaudeville family. When he was five, mom and pop were
sending him to see Broadway shows in the family Rolls.
Little Edward got himself kicked out of quite a few schools
and eventually drifted into the bohemian Eden of mid-century
Greenwich Village. Something clicked at the age of 30: plays
started to pour out of him. He's 76 now, and they haven't
stopped yet.
The Play About the Baby is one of Albee's
most recent works-- it premiered in 2001-- but it recalls
elements of many of his classics, including Who's Afraid of
Virginia Woolf?, his biggest popular success and the subject
of a 1966 screen adaptation. In Woolf, a bitter, aging
academic couple devastate two newlyweds (and each other)
over the course of an increasingly drunken and vicious
evening. It's a lot more fun than it sounds.
Baby also focuses on an innocent young
couple and the havoc their older counterparts wreak on them,
but it's a far more playful, and in some ways more
unconventional, play. The artifice of the stage is
acknowledged at every turn. The man and woman are called Man
and Woman; the boy and girl, Boy and Girl. The characters
delight in odd stories and verbal games-- until Man and
Woman decide to start a much darker, nastier
game.
Baby is directed by longtime Live Arts
collaborator Boomie Pedersen, who was most recently seen on
the stage in the theater's production of Copenhagen. Baby is
latest in a powerhouse season that has included new works by
David Mamet, Michael Frayn, Stephen Adly Guirgus, and will
come to a spectacular conclusion this May with a production
of Angels in America: Millennium Approaches.
Whatever happened to the days when
community theaters strained to pull off Arsenic and Old
Lace?
The Play About the Baby opens Friday,
April 23-24, and shows April 28-May 2, and May 4-8. All
shows at 8pm, except Thursday night shows at 7:30pm and the
May 2 matinee at 2pm. Tickets $10-15. Live Arts DownStage,
123 E. Water St. 977-4177.
TUNES
Eclectic crew crowds TBTB
Published April 22, 2004, in issue #0316
of the Hook
April 29 will find two worthy events
competing for the same chunk of your evening-- the
performance of Cerberus Shoal at Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar,
and the evening of music at the Satellite Ballroom behind
Plan 9 featuring the Devil Music Ensemble's live score for
the silent German Expressionist horror film The Cabinet of
Dr. Caligari.
Next week I will be previewing the
latter, but this week the former catches the limelight. If
you've already decided to go to hear Devil Music, perhaps I
can convince you otherwise (and then back next
week).
Forming in 1994 as a punk outfit,
Cerberus Shoal has seen many changes in genres, which might
account for the large number of members the group has had
(its present incarnation boasts six). From punk to pop to
far-out rock to the world-folk of their newest album,
Bastion of Itchy Preeves, the group has been a sort of sonic
mood ring, changing at the whims of its oldest members,
guitarist Caleb Mulkerin, bassist and vocalist Chriss
Sutherland, and drummer Tom Rogers.
Bastion of Itchy Preeves begins with
"Grandire," an instrumental of cascading wind chimes and
synthesizer, building to a tumultuous peak somewhere around
five minutes into the piece. Clanging, careening squeals,
and roaring (not unlike how I imagine hell sounds to those
in the observation gallery) fill your head with a sonic
mishmash of textures and noises, all centering on a few
notes.
"A Cloud No Bigger than a Man's Head,"
track two, begins with simple four-note xylophone riff,
coupled with a constant tinkling background, as if a bike
bell was being controlled by the whims of the wind.
Powerfully plucked electric/acoustic guitar and bass provide
a two-note background drone until 90 seconds into the piece,
when a noticeably cheap (Casio perhaps) synthesizer plays
the song's melody line. And then, at 2:24, the magic
happens: to a simple, slow melody, a chorus of voices sing
in unison lines like "Never saw what makes sense," and
"Women are package deals."
The only possible comparison I might be
able to drag up from the depths of my musical subconscious
is The Flaming Lips, but Cerberus Shoal sounds much more
foreign-- as if, by chance, some group as isolated as the
Tibetan monks had decided to make a pop album. Further on in
the album, there's a strong reliance on repetition-- open,
airy instrumental pieces, and what sounds like a vocoder--
the device Peter Frampton made famous. "Baby Gal," my
favorite tune on the disc, sounds like a chant you can
imagine being sung during a death procession in the Middle
Ages.
The Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar is a pretty
eclectic locale all by itself. Add in Cerberus Shoal and you
have an evening where your sense of time, space, and what
music should sound like just might take a leave of
absence.
Cerberus Shoal at Twisted Branch Tea
Bazaar, April 29. $4, 9pm.
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