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Compass June 27, 2013

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Art , Movies, Theater, Dining, Music, Dance, Recreation

June 27-July 3, 2013


Your Guide to Tri-State Events
Movies: World War Z
Plague and other problems, page 11
The Music Scene
An entrance, an exit, page 3
Theater: Life Science
Berkshire Playwrights Lab, page 7
The Art Scene
Giving art a little space, page 5
Dance:
Dance Theatre of Harlem
Like the lark, page 8
Calendar,
Auditions, crafts,
dance, theater,
food, page 12
Supplement to THE LAKEVILLE JOURNAL, THE MILLERTON NEWS and THE WINSTED JOURNAL
Noel Desiato plays the erce, even reckless, nun
in John Patrick Shanleys Doubt at TriArts,
page 10
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2 Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013
on our website LISTEN Live &
A BENEIT IOR THE RESTORATON OI THE MUSC SHED
SATURDAY R )ULY 6, 2013 R 800 PM
A once in a lifetime event.
This is your chance to say: "I was there..."
norfolkmusic.org t 860.542.3000
Test Drive a concert FREE. Visit our website for details.
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ROBERT BLOCKER, DEAN t PAUL HAWKSHAW, DIRECTOR
ELLEN BATTELL STOECKEL ESTATE t 20 LITCHFIELD RD., NORFOLK, CT
MUSIC FROM VIENNA
Wih Ransom Wilson, Richard Stoltzman, Peter Frankl,
Yale Brass Tio and Artis Quartet
FRIDAY t JULY 5 t 8:00 PM t MUSIC SHED
norfolkmusic.org t 860.542.3000
Featuring works by Haydn, Mahler, Schubert, Bruckner,
Mozart, Berg and Beethoven
WEDNESDAY t JULY 3 t 7:30 PM t BATTELL HOUSE
MUSC N CONTEXT LECTURE SERES
Bobert Holzer t Late Quartets
Free & Open to the Public
YOUNG ARTSTS' PERIORMANCE SERES
THURSDAYS t 7:30 PM t MUSIC SHED
SATURDAYS t 10:30 AM t MUSIC SHED
Free & Open to the Public
TICKETS: $55, $50, $45, $40, $35, $30, $20, $10 (ages 18-25)
& Kids Come Free!
STOLTZMAN
COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013 3











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FORTY YEARS OF PAINTING
MAY 4
TH
TO JULY 10
TH
SHARON HISTORICAL SOCIETY
18 MAIN STREET, SHARON, CT
W & S 10-2 and Th & F 10-4
ROBERT PITTENGER
Arts Entertainment
&
A
pair of concerts
with virtuoso
performers and
a fond farewell highlight
this weekends opening
of the Norfolk Chamber
Music Festival in Norfolk,
CT.
The farewell is to the
Tokyo String Quartet,
ending its remarkable
44-year run with a special
benet concert to restore
Norfolks Shed, its perfor-
mance space. After its two
longest-serving members
violist Kazuhide Isomu-
ra, a founding member in
1969, and second violinist
Kikuei Ikeda, who joined
in 1974 announced
their retirement, the
group decided to disband.
In an interview with
WGBH in Boston, Iso-
mura said that in the early
days critics sometimes
called the quartets play-
ing mechanical, likening
them, in an obvious bit of
racial proling, to Toyo-
tas or Hondas. Listening
to one of the ensembles
more than 30 recordings,
one hears anything but
mechanical.
A Queens Entrance,
A Quartets Finale at Norfolk
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Please turn to page 4
The Music Scene: Fred Baumgarten
4 Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013
a new play by
onno zieqler
direcfed by }oe Cacaci
erkshire Playwrighfs Lab
in associafion wifh WC Sfudios
presenfs
|une 2I-10 reviews. |une I9-20
Wed-Saf* 8pm, Sun 2pm *Saf }une 22 9.10pm
ard College af Simon's 8ock, Daniel Arfs Cenfer
84 AlFord 8d, Greaf arringfon, MA
1ickefs. Mahaiwe box oFFice 4!1-S28-0!00
S20Zsfudenfs S!S [Previews. S!SZsfudenfs S!0}
berksbirepIaywrigbtsIab.org
when qou're 17, if's onqfhinq buf exocf.
Arts Entertainment
&
Continued from page 3
Refned, clean, with a
silken, shimmering sound
is how I would describe
the quartets sound. Fit-
tingly for a group that
plays on stradivarius
instruments called the
paganini Quartet be-
cause they were originally
owned by the famed 19th-
century violinist Nicolo
paganini, they are indi-
vidually and as a group
highly virtuosic.
The program features
three jewels of the rep-
ertoire: Haydns string
Quartet in G major, op.
77, No. 1; Bartoks string
Quartet No. 6; and De-
bussys string Quartet in
G minor, op. 10.
Debussys youthful quar-
tet, his only composition
in that genre, paved the
way for his revolutionary
harmonic and stylistic
explorations, what we
often call musical impres-
sionism, that culminated
a year later, in 1894, in
his great prelude to the
afternoon of a Faun for
chamber orchestra. The
freedom with which the
music fows remains some-
thing special, more than a
century later.
at Norfolk on the
previous night, a concert
of music from Vienna
features a gaggle of vir-
tuoso performers: Ransom
Wilson, fute; Richard
stoltzman, clarinet; Wil-
liam purvis, French horn;
allan Dean, trumpet;
peter Frankl, piano; and
members of the artis
Quartet. The program
features Haydn, mozart,
Beethoven, schubert,
mahler, Bruckner and
Berg, in various instru-
mental combinations.
The balance of the
Norfolk season is notable
for its diversity of compos-
ers and works. Handels
Entrance of the Queen of
sheba, an incomparably
frothy confection that
used to introduce Rob-
ert J. Lurtsemas classical
music show on WGBH,
will be heard on July
20 along with a mozart
sinfonia Concertante and
the Brahms piano Quintet
opus 60, Werther.
The frst Friday in au-
gust features a wind con-
cert with works of Cheru-
bini, Gounod, arthur
Foote and Emile Bernard.
The following night, the
great Emerson Quartet has
included Benjamin Brit-
tens string Quartet No. 3
on a program that also has
a Haydn and a Beethoven.
music from Vienna
takes place tomorrow
night, Friday, July 5, at
8 p.m., and the Tokyo
string Quartet plays its
fnal concert on saturday,
July 6, at 8 p.m.

Tickets and information
on the Norfolk Chamber
Music Festival of the Yale
School of Music, can be
found at music.yale.edu/
norfolk, or by calling 860-
542-3000.
. . . And Many Gems of the
Chamber Music Repertoire
COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013 5
Arts Entertainment
&
THE BLUE HILL TROUPE
performing Gilbert & Sullivans The Mikado
5un. 6J30 * 2:00 PM
BIG AL ANDERSON AND THE
FLOOR MODELS
feat. JimChapdelaine, Lorne Entress, Paul Kochanski
5ol. 6J29 * 8:00 PM
www.InnityHall.com
Toll Free: 1-866-666-6306
presented by
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BEST CONCERT VENUE
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AARON CARTER
w/ Alexis Babini
5un. 6J30 * 7:30 PM
DEER TICK
5un. 7J7 * 7:30 PM
Summer Hours
Wed - Thu 4 pm - 9 pm
Fri - Sat - Sun
11:30 am - 9 pm
July 4th
11:30 am - 5 pm
Always open before shows!
InnityBistro.com
860-542-5531
See InnityHall.com for times
Benet the Norfolk Historical Society
--
W
hat a difference venues make. Two art
shows now hanging in Sharon prove the
point.
Robert Pittengers paintings at the Sharon Histori-
cal Society need space and distance between them
and the viewer of these difcult works. Up close
his rough undersurfaces, rolled on thickly, look like
stucco; and his trees, houses and land can seem
amateurish. But move back, look from farther away,
and the best paintings come together in a rigorous
whole.
Pittenger has been painting for many years; his
Green Trees was made in 1972. From the begin-
ning he has been obsessed with time and space, with
repetition and crowding in his landscapes, and with
trees.
Nothing in the paintings is from life or plein air.
The Art Scene: Leon Graham
Giving Works of Art
A Little Distance
Please turn to page 6
6 COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013
Continued from page 5
Everything springs from the artists imagination.
I look at trees. But I dont look at them while I am painting. Its not
what a tree looks like but what painting a tree looks like, he has said. And
certainly his trees look more surreal than real, more like objects crowded
together between austere yet elegant Italian villas (really big suburban
homes) with shapes like Monopoly pieces.
Pittengers work can make you reconsider what trees look like, how a
landscape is a mixture of forms and light. There is an ephemeral, almost
dreamy quality to many pieces. The landscapes owe homage to Nicholas
Poussin with their classical allusions, arrangements of forms and their hazy
colors. Bright and olive, even gray greens render trees dusty.
The three newest pictures, Our Pond and Sous-bois I and II, French
for undergrowth, are darker, tangled, hidden from the light. They would
show better in a larger space, too.
At the Sharon Hotchkiss Library, John Frederick Walker is exhibiting
24 pieces throughout the building. The show does not have the impact of
his smaller, better edited show at Kents Ober Gallery last year. There, all
the works were hung together in the relatively small gallery at eye level so
viewers could move from one work to another then back again.
Walker, of course, is a collector and alterer of old books. Most often he
tears out pages leaving torn remnants, or discards pages altogether and
works with the bindings or glues pages together and then cuts spaces in
their centers to display an illustration. Flayed Man shows drawings in an
anatomy textbook.
On the landing between oors are some small books impaled with mean-
looking screws. There are three old Baedeker travel guides, Italian and
Swiss, altered and resting together in a single frame. And among works on
the second oor is Truncated, showing lovely endpapers with a repeti-
tive, feathery, ame design in faded colors with a hint of gold.
Robert Pittenger 40 Years of Painting continues at the Sharon Historical
Society, 18 Main Street, through July 5. The exhibition is open Wednesday and
Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call
860-364-5688 or go to www.sharonhist.org.
John Frederick Walker Book Art will be at the Sharon Hotchkiss Li-
brary through July 31. The library, at 10 Upper Main Street, is open every day
except holidays. For hours, call 860-364-5041 or go to www.hotchkisslibrary.
org.
. . . And Imagination
Some Room
Arts Entertainment
&
Undermountain
Golf Course
Marvelous Mondays are Back
All players recieve senoir greens fee rate
Between 8 am and 2 pm
Offer valid Mondays
May 1 June 24 non-holiday
274 Undermountain Rd Boston Corner ,NY
518-329-4444 www.undermountaingolf.com
senior
Spend a Few Hours - Not a Fortune
Open 7AM-7PM Seven Days a Week
Weekend Tee Time Available
845-758-7900
fshercenter.bard.edu
lhoLo: laul 8. Goode
A new danceLheaLer work reecLlng on Lhe cenLennlal
o SLravlnsky's The Rite of Spring
sosnoff theater
1he klchard 8. llsher CenLer or Lhe lerormlng ArLs
8ard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New ork
!u|y 6 at 8 pm: post-performance dscusson wth the artsts
!u|y 7 at 3 pm, pre-performance conversaton at 2 pm
1ckets: $25, 40, 45, 55
"A serous, ntrcate, mu|tdrectona| centenna| trbute to a
work of art whose spe|| t deepens."-New York Times
A SummerScape Co-commsson
A RITE
8|| 1. !ones/Arne 7ane Dance Company
and S|1| Company
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Theater: Life Science at Berkshire Playwrights Lab
Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013 7
. . . And Imagination
Some Room
Arts &
Entertainment
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845-758-7900
shercenter.bard.edu
Annanda|e-on-Hudson, Nework
PhoIo: PeIer Aaron '68/LsIo

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8ard SummerScape 2013 presenLs seven lnsplred weeks o opera,
muslc, LheaLer, dance, lm, and cahareL. 1he huh o Lhese oerlngs
ls Lhe 24Lh annual 8ard Muslc lesLlval, Lhls year examlnlng Lhe
lle, work, and culLural mllleu o Lhe 20Lh-cenLury composer lgor
SLravlnsky. SummerScape Lakes place ln Lhe exLraordlnary klchard
8. llsher CenLer or Lhe lerormlng ArLs and oLher venues on 8ard
College's sLunnlng Mld-Hudson valley campus.
" 8ard 5ummer5cape and 8ard Music festivaI aIways unearth
piIes of buried treasures." 7he New Yorker
Dpera IuIy 26 - August 4
U.5. 5tage Premiere
Ok57l4
Music by 5ergey 1aneyev
American 5ymphony Drchestra, conducted by Leon 8otstein
Directed by 1haddeus 5trassberger
kusslan composer Sergey 1aneyev's exLraordlnary huL rarely sLaged opera
conveys Lhe searlng drama o Aeschylus' powerul Lrllogy ahouL Lhe
cursed House o ALreus.
Dance/1heater IuIy 6-7
4 kl7
8iII 1. Iones/Arnie Zane Dance Company and 5I1I Company
A newwork celehraLlng Lhe cenLennlal o SLravlnsky's The Rite of Spring.
1heater IuIy !!-2!
WorId Premiere Adaptation
7H M457k 4N0 M4kG4kl74
Directed by Inos 5zsz
Adapted by Inos 5zsz and Cideon Lester after the noveI by
MikhaiI 8uIgakov
AL once a pungenL pollLlcal saLlre, a maglcal anLasy, and an unorgeLLahle
love sLory.
8ard Music festivaI
1wenty-fourth 5eason
57k4VlN5kY 4N0 Hl5 WOkl0
1wo weekends o concerLs, panels, and oLher evenLs hrlng Lhe muslcal
world o kusslan composer lgor SLravlnsky vlvldly Lo lle.
WkND DN August 9-!!
8ecoming 5travinsky: from5t. Petersburg to Paris wlll Lrace SLravlnsky's paLh
romhls early kusslan years Lo hls rsL greaL successes ln larls wrlLlng or
Sergel Dlaghllev's legendary 8alleLs kusses, mosL noLahly Lhe scandalous
premlere o The Rite of Spring.
WkND1WD August !6-!8
5travinsky keinvented: from Paris to Los AngeIes wlll explore SLravlnsky's
creaLlve ouLpuL durlng Lhe lnLerwar years and Lhe muslc he composed ln
Lhe UnlLed SLaLes, where he seLLled ln 1939.
fiIm festivaI IuIy !2 - August 3
57k4VlN5kY'5 lG4CY 4N0 k055l4N MlGk ClNM4
5piegeItent IuIy 5 - August !8
CA8Ak1, MU5IC, fIN DININC, AND MDk
T
he complex but painfully funny drama Life science, written by anna
Ziegler and directed by Joe Cacaci, describes four high school seniors wor-
rying about getting into college and fguring out who they really are. They are
preoccupied by boyfriends, by girlfriends, by plans for the future, by their Jewish
heritage and by suburban life, not to mention world terrorism and war
The four characters, Leah, Dana, Tom and mike each have their own
struggles. Not only did the script ring true, but the set and special effects make
a huge impact as well. scenes involving only texting and instant messaging
instead of actual dialogue lent a note of realism to these 17- and 18-year-old
characters. The back drop was also very clever with black and white chalkboard
panels hiding or revealing different parts of the stage which were covered with
graffti like Dont grow up, its a trap.
Ellie Yohe is a summer intern at The Lakeville Journal.
Life Science runs at the Daniel Art Center at Simons Rock in Great Barrington,
MA, through June 30. For tickets, call 413-528-2544.
Young Lives, Big Problems
Theater: Life science at Berkshire playwrights Lab
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8 Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013


I
n a recent in-
terview, Dance
Theatre of
Harlem artistic
director Virginia
Johnson said
that when she
held auditions for the
company, newly restarted
this year after a nine-year
hiatus, very few african-
american dancers showed
up. Even in 2013, after
DTHs 40-plus year his-
tory of training young
dancers of color for ballet,
there are very few dancing
in principal roles in major
companies. so she turned
to the DTH school, which
never stopped operating,
and its junior troupe. she
was then faced with shap-
ing a mostly young and
inexperienced group of
dancers into a top inter-
national company.
Now, a few short weeks
since its april debut in
New York, the 18-member
company presented an
ambitious and varied pro-
gram at Jacobs pillow that
demonstrated an abun-
dance of talent, artistry,
and energy and promises a
bright future.
appropriately, the frst
dance was agon, the
groundbreaking collabora-
tion between Balanchine
and stravinsky that elec-
trifed audiences when it
premired in 1957. The
central duet was made
for a black man, arthur
mitchell, who went on to
found DTH, and a white
woman, and was both
shocking and well within
the mainstream of where
modern performing art
was going at that time.
The score was stravinskys
frst 12-tone work, and
while based on French
country dances, is without
rhythm or melody. Bal-
anchines choreography
is endlessly complex, and
technically demanding
and the young company
rose to the challenge.
Last Wednesday, Gabri-
elle salvatto and Fredrick
Davis performed the pas
de deux, navigating the
tricky dynamic shifts and
langorous seduction with
aplomb they had speed,
lightness and great chem-
istry. (Its truly an extraor-
dinary work of choreogra-
phy. Go to YouTube and
watch a few versions of it.
absolutely unforgettable.)
Taurean Green and Chry-
styn Fentroy also stood
out in solo variations.
michaela Deprince and
samuel Wilson performed
an excerpt from swan
Lake, the bravura act
III pas de deux. only 18,
Deprince has the jumps,
the turns, and the prize-
winning extension, but
not yet the maturity to
engage and seduce. (she
is also a lovely person. my
dancer daughter, waiting
for her at the stage door
after an open rehearsal,
was rewarded with some
excellent advice and kind
encouragement.)
Lark ascending, a
modern alvin ailey
piece with music by
Ralph Vaughan Williams,
was performed here on
pointe. It was exquisite.
Even if the addition of
pointe shoes added some
thumping after jumps and
changed the line of some
of the modern-inspired
movement, it brought
out the gentle lyricism
of the dancers, especially
salvatto, who futtered
with such delicate grace
she almost levitated to the
rafters.
Far But Close, with
choreography by John al-
leyne and a jazz-infected
score by Daniel Bernard
Roumain, took a turn
for the contemporary.
Two couples illustrated
a spoken-word text by
Daniel Beaty, the story of
a young black woman who
distrusts and fears intima-
cy and the man she meets
on the subway. The poem,
though heartfelt, never
rose above a clich, and it
distracted from the strong
fast-fowing dancing.
The evening concluded
with the joyous Return,
choreographed by Robert
Garland and featuring a
suite of songs by James
Brown and aretha Frank-
lin. The dancers com-
bined urban R&B dance
Dance: Dance Theatre of Harlem
Jenny Hansell
Like the Lark, Ascending
Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013 9
moves with classical ballet technique.
Deprince, slinky in her silver minidress,
started things off leading the company in
mother popcorn, and Taurean Green
brought it home in superbad. In be-
tween, stephanie Rae Williams, Dustin
James and Chrystyn Fentroy stood out,
and the whole company radiated joy. If
Return breaks no new ground choreo-
graphically, it still gives this young com-
pany the chance to let loose, show their
chops and set a promising path.
and one note as a long-time audience
member: Now that the pillow has replaced
its saggy uncomfortable seats with splendid
new ones, maybe it will address the sound
system. It doesnt seem right that recorded
music sounds tinnier and less pleasant
than what might be heard at any of our
local elementary schools. Let the fundrais-
ing begin.

Next week at the Pillow: Compagnie Kfg
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retraotable fabrlo awnlng. These awnlngs are deslgned tc prcvlde
sun prcteotlcn and years cf malntenanoe free cperatlcn.
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Dcn't suffer thrcugh ancther hct summer.
Ycu oan enjcy the occl ocmfcrt cf shade wlth an Lastern brand
retraotable fabrlo awnlng. These awnlngs are deslgned tc prcvlde
sun prcteotlcn and years cf malntenanoe free cperatlcn.
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Anthony Savoy and Francis Lawrence in George Balanchines Agon
Photo: Christopher Duggan
Like the Lark, Ascending
10 Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013
e Colebrook Book Barn
657 Colebrook Rd. (Rt. 183), Colebrook, CT 06021
(1 mile North of Colebrook Center)
(860) 379-3185
www.colebrookbookbarn.com
email: colebrookbooks@charter.net
OLD AND RE BOOKS
BOUGHT AND SOLD
OPEN THURSDAYSUNDAY
11 AM TO 4:30 PM
(OTHER TIMES BY CHANCE
OR APPOINTMENT)
Arts Entertainment
&
a CasIlo SIrooI GroaI arringIon, MA
a.z8.ooo www.maba|wo.org
INk MATINI
ACCLAIMLD LLND OI WOLD,
CLASSICAL, JA77 AND O
Tues Jul 2 at 8pm
THL IA IAUX
MASTL ATISTY OI THL
LATLLS' WOkS
Sat Jul 20 at 8pm
NATALIL MLCHANT
with the HUDSON VALLLY
HILHAMONIC
Sun Jul 21 at 7pm
MANHATTAN
TANSIL
Sat Jul 27 at 8pm
MAY CHAIN
CALNTL
& MAC COHN
Thurs Jul 25 at 8pm
IANCINL SLGAN:
VITUAL IOOD TOU OI
THL LkSHILS
Mon July 29 7pm
Sing-a-long
GLASL (1978)
COML IN COSTUMLI
Sat Jul 6 at 7pm
ITA UDNL
CLASSY COMLDY
Sun Aug 4 at 7pm
T
riarts has not mounted a non-mu-
sical since steel magnolias. That
was 2001. and, according to Execu-
tive Director alice Bemand, who
was not executive director at the time, steel
magnolias was not a hit.
musicals rule in the woodsy sharon play-
house: annie Get Your Gun, The sound of
music, The King and I, all have loaded the
stage, year after year, with familiar faces and
one or two pros for the tricky parts.
But change happens and Triarts has to at-
tract more than family, friends and neighbors
to this venerable playhouse. since michael
Berkeley quit last November, leaving John
simpkins as sole artistic director, change has
happened. a tight, well-rehearsed Gershwin
revue replaced the annual Divas fundraiser
and now a straight play, John patrick shan-
leys Doubt, a parable will be performed fve
times at Triarts Bok Gallery, July 7-11, after
the season opener, spamalot, on the main
stage.
shanley, known widely for moonstruck,
a charming movie about love and pain and
Brooklyn Heights, wrote Doubt, a gritty,
pulitzer-prize winning play about love and
pain and the priest-dominated, hierarchical
Catholic Church.
Based loosely on the experience of a family
member, shanleys play focuses on a parochial-
school boy who may or may not have had a
physical encounter with a parish priest, and
about the nun, a relatively worldly woman,
who aims to take this priest down.
Noel Desiato, a bold, vocal, daring person
herself (she used to ride a 10-speed bicycle
around manhattan to save subway fare), plays
sister aloysius, the nun who will protect a
child, whether he needs protection or not, and
will risk anything, even her relationship with
God, to punish the priest and the hierarchy
that protects him.
I can fght you, Father Flynn warns aloy-
sius.
You will lose, she replies.
Marsden Epworth
Doubt, A Parable, runs at TriArtsBok Gal-
lery in Sharon, CT, July 7-11. For tickets, call
860-364-7469.
Theater: Doubt
Drama at TriArts
COMPASS, Thursday, June 27, 2013 11
Movies: World War Z
FRED BAUMGARTEN
At The
Movies
354 Main St., Winsted
354 Main St. Winsted Ct 06098
1-860-379-5108 www.gilsoncafecinema.com
Doors open at 6 p.m. 21 Years & Older
Now Showing
6/28, 29, 30,
7/2, 3
CLOSED MONDAYS
MAINAUDITORIUMINDIGITAL
MUD PG-13 7PM
SHOWINGINUPSTAIRS THEATER
NOW YOU SEE ME PG-13 7PM
L
ured by ubiquitous
trailers showing
masses of people
moved by some unseen
force, scenes of mayhem
and destruction, and Brad
Pitts crystal eyes, I de-
cided to check out World
War Z.
Heres what I got: zom-
bies.
Now then, Ive gone
and said it. Perhaps Ive
spoiled it for you. Or
perhaps Im the only idiot
on the planet who didnt
know what the Z stood
for when I walked into the
theater.
But it hardly matters,
because after maybe 10
minutes of good old-
fashioned fright movie
build-up, the movie blows
its cover. Freshly-killed
bodies writhe and make
unpleasant noises, get
bloodshot eyes and sickly
skin, clack their teeth and
go looking for someone
else to chomp on.
Is there such a thing as
an undead origin story?
In this case, zombism is
a viral condition: Con-
tagion meets Dawn of
the Dead. As if theres a
living soul, or undead one,
who cares.
Pitt plays some sort
of UN operative called
out of retirement to help
solve the problem of what
causes the plague, which
in no time at has laid
waste to half the cities
of the world, and how to
stop it.
Conveniently, because
he is apparently the only
citizen of earth who can
do it, the entire military
establishment expends
its total effort on rescu-
ing Pitt and his epically
bland family. Everyone
else might just as well be
chopped liver.
Theres really not much
else to report, so Ill cut to
the chase. World War Z
is a ludicrously bad movie.
Try making sense of one
plot point or detail. I did,
and got fried brains.
Heres a good one:
When we see Pitt being
own into Jerusalem to
nd out why Israel has
been successful in seal-
ing off zombies, and again
while barely escaping the
predictable invasion, the
runways and taxiways are
humming with airliners as
if its, oh, just an ordinary
day at the airport.
Huh? Where are all
these people ying to?
Are they being airdropped
into war zones to feed the
enemy?
Heres another: Bombs
and explosions, including
one that looks like a small
nuke, happen with alarm-
ing regularity. Have the
suddenly undead stock-
piled a small arsenal?
When Pitt nally does
gure out a solution,
which involves some
pretty bad germs, he nds
them in a biohazard suite
that looks for all the world
like a china shop.
I could have walked
out there, and ended this
review, save for one last
thing. How much bad
judgment, if not bad taste,
does it take to use Israel as
the example of a country
that walls out the menac-
ing other, but cant hold it
back forever?
Thats not the only
place World War Z
goes way over the line. A
would-be test zombie in
a glass cage somewhere
in Wales happens to be
a dark-skinned African-
looking woman with
dreadlocks, viciously
gnawing at the wall. Oh,
moviemakers, what are
you trying to tell us?
Only they know the
answer.
World War Z is rated
PG-13 for intense, frighten-
ing zombie sequences, vio-
lence and disturbing images.
Additional viewer warnings:
Heroic limb-cutting a la
127 Hours!David Mr.
Potato Head Morse in a
cameo channeling Hannibal
Lecter!
It is playing at the Mov-
iehouse in Millerton and
elsewhere.
B
r
a
d

P
i
t
t

i
n

W
o
r
l
d

W
a
r

Z

A Plague and
Other Problems
12 Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013
TRI-CORNER CALENDAR
Bash Bish Bicycle
Proudly serving cyclists
for 16 years
SALES SERVICE RENTALS
Next to Taconic State Park and The Harlem Valley Rail Trail
Mon. - Sun. 9am - 5pm Closed Tuesdays
247 Route 344, Copake Falls, NY
www.bashbishbicycle.com 518-329-4962
Arts Entertainment
&
C12 COMPASS, Thursday, September 11, 2008
THE LAKEVILLE JOURNAL/MILLERTON NEWS/WINSTED JOURNAL
Listing deadline is Thursday
at noon for the next weeks
publication. Address your entry
to Calendar by fax at 860-435-
4802, by mail to PO Box 1688,
Lakeville, CT, 06039, or email at
compass@lakevillejournal.com.
tips on speaking with an Irish
accent, audition sides, and an
online copy of the script, which
is recommended reading, go to
www.theatreworks.us/actors
Books
Beardsley and Memorial Library,
40 Munro Pl, Winsted, CT, 860-379-
6043, www.beardsleyandmemorial.
org History Book Discussion
Group: Last Tues of each
month, 6:30 pm. Discussion led
by Virginia Schultz-Charette,
a different non-ction book is
chosen each month.
Hotchkiss Library, 10 Upper Main
St, Sharon, CT, 860-364-5041, www.
hotchkisslibrary.org Readings
by members of the Memoir
Workshop, Lifes Stages,July
23, 4-6 pm. Refreshments will
be served.
Scoville Memorial Library, 38 Main
St, Salisbury, CT, 860-435-2838,
www.scovillelibrary.org Book
Schmooze and Signup: Adult
summer reading program, June
27, 6-7 pm. For information
call 860-435-2838; Second Sat
book group, Anne Kremer
leads, Last Days of Ptolemy
Gray, 4 pm.
Classes
[The] Mark Twain House and
Museum, 351 Farmington Ave,
Hartford, CT, 860-247-0998, www.
marktwainhouse.org Tom Lee,
storyteller for adults, offers
a ve-week storytelling class
Tuesdays, July 2-30, 6-8 pm.
For information and to register
call 860-280-3130. Class size is
limited to 12.
Dance
Bard College, Sosno Theater,
Fisher Center for Performing Arts,
Red Hook, NY, 845-758-7900, www.
bard.edu Bill T. Jones/Arnie
Zane Dance Company and SITI
Company: A Rite, July 6, 8 pm,
July 7, 3 pm.
Jacobs Pillow, 358 George
Carter Rd, Becket, MA, 413-
243-9919, www.jacobspillow.
org Compagnie Kg, Ted
Shawn Theatre, through June
30; Leo, Doris Duke Theatre,
through June 30; Cedar Lake
Contemporary Ballet, Ted
Shawn Theatre, July 3-7;
Shantala Shivalingappa,
Doris Duke Theatre, July 3-7;
Companhia Urbana de Danca,
Ted Shawn Theatre, July 10-14;
Brian Brooks Moving Company,
Doris Duke Theatre, July 10-14.
Food
Amenia Farmers Market,
Amenia Town Hall parking
lot, Rte 22, Amenia, NY, www.
ameniafarmersmarket.com Open
every Friday, 3-7 pm. Fresh
local produce.
Cornwall Farm Market, West Cornwall,
CT, on the Wish House lawn just
above the Covered Bridge, www.
cornwallfarmarket.org Every Sat, 9
am-1 pm. Plenty of free parking
available in Railroad Square.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo Cooking
School, 44 Upland Rd, New
Milford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.
hunthillfarmtrust.org Chef Seth
Goldman, Slightly to the Left
of the Silk Road, June 29, 2
pm, with special guest Faith
Stewart-Gordon, Russian
Tea Room owner, 1967-1996.
Summer dishes using avors
from Russia, Georgia and
Central Asia.
Kent Farmers Market, Kent Green,
Kent, CT Every Sat, 9 am-noon.
Millerton Farmers Market, Railroad
Plaza, Millerton, NY, www.
millertonfarmersmarket.org Every
Sat, 9 am-1 pm through Oct 26.
Music and special events every
week.
Norfolk Farmers Market, 19 Maple
Ave, in front of Town Hall, Norfolk, CT
Auditions
Sherman Playhouse, 5 Rte 39 N,
Sherman, CT, 860-354-3622, www.
shermanplayers.org Seeking 7
men and 5 women, ages 25-65,
for drama, Book of Days.
Auditions take place July 15,
16, 7-9 pm at the playhouse;
auditioners will be asked to
read from the script. A resume
and headshot encouraged, but
not required. For information
go to www.shermanplayers.
org
TheatreWorks, 5 Brookside Ave,
o Rte 202, next to CVS, New
Milford, CT, 860-350-6863, www.
theatreworks.us
Seeking 5 men ages 18-60 and 4
women, ages 18-80 for the black
Irish comedy, The Cripple of
Inishmaan. Auditions will be
held, July 15, 16, 7-9 pm. All
actors must audition with an
Irish accent, a dialect coach
will be used during rehearsals.
For character breakdowns,
Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013 13
10 am-1 pm every Sat through
Oct 12. Local veg, cheese, meats,
wine, baked goods, fruits,
owers and artisan wares. Live
music. Free parking. Rain or
shine.
Galleries
Argazzi Art, 22 Millerton Rd, Rte
44, Lakeville, CT, 860-435-8222,
www.argazziart.com Paintings by
Miya Ando, Kathy Moss, Betty
Merken, Marilla Palmer and
Nellie King Solomon through
June 30. Gallery hours: Fri-Sun,
11 am-5 pm.
Bard College, The Center for
Curatorial Studies, Hessel Museum
of Art, Red Hook, NY, 845-758-7900,
www.bard.edu Haim Steinbach,
Once Again the World is Flat;
Helen Marten, No Borders in
a Wok that Cant be Crossed,
exhibits through Dec 20.
Chaiwalla Tea Room, 1 Main
St, Salisbury, CT, 860-435-9758
Intrepid, exhibition by street
photographer, Alex Krauss,
through June 30. Exhibition
may be viewed Wed-Sun, 10 am-
6 pm.
Cornwall Bridge Gallery, 131 Kent
Rd South,intersection of Rtes 7 and
45, Cornwall Bridge, CT, 860-672-
0096, www.corwallbridgegallery.
com Enjoy a special afternoon
of poetry, music and food, both
inside the main gallery and
outdoors in the backyard, July
21, 2 pm-late. Accomplished
poets, musicians and a delicious
pig roast. For information call
David Meharg at 860-672-0096.
Cozy Corner Cafe, 3330 Rte 343,
Amenia, NY, 845-789-1700 Art
exhibit by Virginia Tatsapaugh
Meili, Cow Paintings, through
July 3.
Darren Winston Bookseller, Main
St, Sharon, CT, 860-364-1890, www.
darrenwinstonbookseller.com
Works by Warren Prindle, on
display through June 30. Shop
hours: Tue -Sun, 11 am-5 pm,
or by appointment.
David M. Hunt Library, 63 Main St,
Falls Village, CT, 860-824-7424 www.
huntlibrary.org Works by Ben
Foster and Frank Grusauskas,
through July 5; John Hodgson
exhibition, New Paintings, July
12-Aug 9, reception, July 13, 4-6
pm.
Eckert Fine Art, 34 Main St,
Millerton, NY, 518-592-1330, www.
eckertneart.com American
Masters 1850-1990, Hudson
River to Larry Rivers, through
July 9. Show features art for sale
from private collections in CT
and NY. Open daily except Tues.
Call 518-592-1330 for hours.
Found Gallery, 52 Main St, Millerton,
NY Group exhibition featuring
Jeremy Francis Bell, Richard T.
Scott, Tom Hlas, David Valyou,
James Boeding, Collin Culbreth,
Frank Grusauskas through July
8. Gallery hours: Mon, noon-8
pm, Thurs and Fri, noon-7 pm,
Sat, 10 am-8 pm, Sun, noon-5
pm. Closed Tues and Wed.
[The] Gallery Arts Guild, 342 Main St,
Lakeville, CT, 860-596-4298, www.
galleryartsguild.co Fauna and
Flora, through July 13, works by
artists John Pirnak, Sayzie Carr,
Janet Newman, Anne Drager
and Lynn Curtis. Gallery hours:
Thurs-Sun, 11 am-4 pm or by
appointment.
[The] Gallery at Kinderhook Group,
19 Main St, Salisbury, CT, 860-
435-0700 Equestrian Light, oil
paintings by Marion Miller,
through June 30.
Good Purpose Gallery, 40 Main St,
Lee, MA, 413-394-5065 Earth and
Atmosphere, William McCarthy,
painter and David Bryce,
sculptor. Gallery hours: Mon,
Wed-Sat, 9 am-5 pm, Sun, 9
am-3 pm.
Gregory James Gallery, 93
Park Lane Rd, Rte 202, New
Milford, CT, 860-354-3436, www.
gregoryjamesgallery.com Meg
Lindsay, Poetry and Paintings,
through July 21. Gallery hours:
Mon, Wed, Fri, 10 am-6 pm,
Tues, Thurs, Sat, 10 am-5 pm,
Sun, 11 am-4 pm.
Gunn Memorial Library and Museum,
5 Wykeham Rd, Washington, CT,
860-868-7586, www.gunnlibrary.
org Stairwell Gallery: Ira
Mandelbaum exhibits his
photography through July 27.
Exhibits may be viewed during
normal library hours.
Hotchkiss Library, 10 Upper Main
St, Sharon, CT, 860-364-5041,
www.hotchkisslibrary.org Book
Art, John Frederick Walker
exhibiting through July 31.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo Gallery, 44
Upland Rd, New Milford, CT, 860-355-
0300, www.hunthillfarmtrust.
org Works by Helen Cantrell,
Jennifer Sabella and Clemance
Gregory, through July 7.
Kent Art Association, 21 South
Main St, Kent, CT, 860-927-3989,
www.kentart.org Member Show
II through July 14. Flower
sculptures and masks by
Andrew Richards. Free exhibit,
open to the public. Gallery
hours: Thurs-Sun, 1-5 pm.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, www.mahaiwe.
org, 413-528-0100 Great Art in
HD: Edvard Munch-A Once
in a Lifetime Exhibition, June
27, 7 pm, encore, July 8, 7 pm;
Winslow Homer, Making Art,
Making History, July 11, 7
pm; Greg Gorman: A Distinct
Vision, July 18, 7 pm.
Morrison Gallery, 8 Old Barn Rd,
Kent, CT, 860-927-4501, www.
themorrisongallery.com Henry
Klimowicz, July 20-Sept 1,
reception, July 20, 4-7 pm.
Gallery hours: Wed-Sat, 10:30
am-5:30 pm, Sun, 1 pm-4 pm.

[The] Re Institute, 1395 Boston
Corners Road, Millerton, NY, 518-
567-5359, www.thereinstitute.com
Exhibition by Terri Moore, June
29-July 27. Opening reception
June 29, 7-9 pm, closing party,
July 27, 7-9 pm with pot luck.
Gallery is open Saturdays from
1-4 pm and by appointment.
[The] Sharon Historical Society,
18 Main St, Sharon, CT, 860-354-
5688, www.saronhist.org Robert
Pittenger, Forty Years of
Painting, through July 5. Exhibit
may be viewed Wed and Sun,
10 am-2 pm, Thur and Fri, 10
am-4 pm.
[The] Souterrain Gallery, The
Wish House, 413 Sharon Goshen
Tnpk, West Cornwall, CT, 860-672-
2969 Catherine Noren and
Lazlo Gyorzok, Side by Side,
exhibition through Aug 25.
Gallery hours: Thur-Sun, 11
am-5 pm.
Tivoli Artists Gallery, 60 Broadway,
Tivoli, NY, 845-757-2667 Pop-up
Art Show, one weekend only,
June 28-30. Opening reception,
June 28, 6-8 pm. Fine Arts in
a variety of mediums. Gallery
hours: Fri, 5-9 pm, Sat, 1-9 pm,
Sun, 1-5 pm.
[The] Wassaic Project, Maxon Mills,
37 Furnace Bank Rd, Wassaic, NY,
www.wassaicproject.org Annual
Summer Festival, Aug 2-4.
[The] White Gallery, 344 Main St,
Lakeville, CT, 860-435-1029, www.
thewhitegalleryart.com Return
to Gotham, works by David
Dunlop, through July 14; Fran
Gormley, photography show,
Palette Earth: Recent Work
from Ethiopia and Iceland,
July 19-Sept 1. Artist reception,
July 20, 4-7 pm. Gallery hours:
Thurs-Sun, 11 am-4 pm or by
appointment.
Kids/
Family
[The] Childrens Museum, 950 Trout
Brook Dr, West Hartford, CT, 860-231-
2824, www.thechildrensmuseumct.
org The new Childrens
Museum offers hands-on fun
with science and nature for
younger children and families.
Members and visitors enjoy
exhibits and demonstrations,
education classes and activities,
a live animal wildlife sanctuary,
state-of-the art digital science
dome movies and planetarium
shows.Go online for
information.
[The] Cornwall Library, 30 Pine St,
Cornwall, CT, 860-672-6874, www.
cornwalllibrary.org Toddler Play
Group, each Thursday, 10:30-
11:30 am.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo Cooking
School, 44 Upland Rd, New
Milford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.
hunthillfarmtrust.org Little
Sprouts-Young Chefs Week, for
ages 5-10, July 8-12, 9 am-1 pm;
On the Farm-Culinary and Art
Week, for ages 9-12, July 15-19,
9 am-2 pm.
Lake Compounce Amusement Park,
822 Lake Ave, Bristol, CT, 860-583-
3300, www.lakecompounce.com
Family theme park. Kiddie
rides, roller coaster, water
rides, thrill rides, classic rides,
entertainment, dining and
snack areas. Open daily, through
Aug. Go online for driving
directions.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,
Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.
machaydntheatre.org Childrens
Theatre Season: The Little
Mermaid, June 28-29, July
5-6 and July 12-13. Call 518-
392-9292 for information and
reservations.
Norman Rockwell Museum, 9
Glendale Rd, Stockbridge, MA, 413-
298-4100, www.nrm.org Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs,
the creation of a classic,
through Oct 27. Explore the
development of Walt Disneys
rst feature-length animated
lm, with original artwork from
the movie.
Old Sturbridge Village, 1 Old
Sturbridge Village Rd, Sturbridge,
MA, 800-733-1830, www.osv.org A
re-created village and outdoor
history museum brings to life
the world of men and women
in the early 19th- century
rural New England. Animals,
games, events, demonstrations,
cafe, gift shop, 4th of July
reworks and more. Wheelchair
accessible, free parking, senior
discount.
TheatreWorks,TWKids, 5 Brookside
Ave,New Milford, CT, 860-350-
6863, www.theatreworks.us
TheatreWorks Kids Summer
Camp Production: Youre a
Good Man, Charlie Brown,
public performance over the
weekend of July 20.
Warner Theatre, 68 Main St, Nancy
Marine Studio, Torrington, CT, 860-
489-7180, www.warnertheatreorg
Shrek: the Musical, July 27-
Aug 4.
West Hartford Art League, 37 Buena
Vista Road, West Hartford, CT,
www.westhartfordart.org/classes
Summer camp starts July 1,
offering four one-week sessions
of morning classes for young
artists. Go online to check out
the schedule, call 860-231-8019
with questions or to register.
Movies
Bank Street Theater, 46 Bank St,New
Milford, CT, 860-354-2122, www.
bankstreettheater.com
Bantam Cinema, 115 Lake Rd, Rte
209, Bantam, CT, 860-567-0006,
www.bantamcinema.com Week of
June 28-July 4: The East and
Much Ado About Nothing.
Beacon Cinema, 57 North St,
Pittseld, MA, 413-358-4780, www.
thebeaconcinema.com
Cinerom, 89 Farley Place, Torrington,
CT, 860-489-4111, www.cinerom.com
See Compass movie page.
Gilson Cafe Cinema, 354 Main St,
Winsted, CT, 860-379-5108,www.
gilsoncafecinema.com See
Compass movie page.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, 413-528-0100, www.
mahaiwe.org Copperhead, July
13, 7 pm. Introduction by the
director, Q & A to follow.
[The] Moviehouse, 48 Main St,
Millerton, NY, 518-789-3408, www.
themoviehouse.net See Compass
movie page.
[The] Triplex, 70 Railroad St, Great
Barrington, MA, 413-528-8885, www.
thetriplex.com
Music
Bard College,Richard B. Fisher
Center for the Performing Arts,
Sosno Theater, Red Hook, NY,
845-758-7900, www.bard.edu
Aston Magna Concerts: June
28, July 5, July 12, 8 pm,
Olin Humanities Building;
Hudson Valley Chamber Music
Circle Concert:Kalichstein-
Laredo-Robinson Trio, June
29, 8 pm; Bard SummerScape
2013, seven-weeks arts festival
exploring the life and times of
Igor Stravinsky, July 6-Aug. 18.
Bard College at Simons Rock,Daniel
Arts Center, 84 Alford Rd, Great
Barrington, MA, 413-644-4400,
www.simons-rock.edu Aston
Magna Concert: July 6, July 13,
6 pm.

Club Helsinki Hudson, 405 Columbia
St, Hudson, NY, 518-828-4800
Young Paris, June 27; Rev Tor
Band, June 28; Ben Taylor,
July 3; Paul Cebar, July 4;
The Holmes Brothers, July 5;
Lake Street Dive, July 6; Ann
Hampton Callaway, Helsinki
on Broadway, July 7; The Soul
Rebels, July 12; Chris Smither,
July 13.
Hotchkiss School,11 Interlaken
Rd, Katherine M. Elfers Hall,
Lakeville, CT, 860-435-4423, www.
hotchkiss.org Summer Concert
Series: Mir Quartet, June 28;
Resident Quartet with Mir
Quartet, June 29, 7:30 pm; The
Dessoff Choirs, June 30, 4 pm;
Shanghai Quartet, July 5, 7:30
pm; Shanghai Quartet with
Resident Quartet, July 6, 7:30
pm; Brentano Quartet, July
12, 7:30 pm; Brentano Quartet
and Resident Quartet, July
13, 7:30 pm; Student Concert
with Instrumental and Vocal
Chamber Music, July 7, 4 pm
and July 21, 4 pm; Student
Instrumental Concert, July 14,
4:30 pm.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo Cooking
School, 44 Upland Rd, New
Milford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.
hunthillfarmtrust.org Cabaret
Night: Blini Blues with Ellen
Kaye, vocalist, June 29, 7:30 pm.
Innity Music Hall & Bistro, 8232
Rte 44, Norfolk, CT, 866-666-6306,
www.innityhall.com Rusted
Root, June 27, June 28; The Blue
Hill Troupe performing Gilbert
and Sullivans, The Mikado,
June 30, 2 pm; Aaron Carter,
June 30, 7:30 pm; Open mic
night, July 3; Forward Motion,
July 5; Blue Coupe, July 6; Deer
Tick, July 7.
Litcheld Jazz Festival, Goshen
Fairgrounds, Rte 63, Goshen, CT
www.litcheldjazzfest.com Aug
9-11. Children 12 and under
free on lawn. Childrens
activities, picnics allowed,
bring blankets, low lawn chairs.
Go online for information,
schedule, tickets.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,
Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.
machaydntheatre.org Mac-
Haydn Mondays! Bill McGrath
singing Elvis, July 15; Melissa
Giattino, Ron DeStefano and
Richard Schwartz, July 29;
Kathy Halenda, Aug 12, all
performances, 7 pm.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, www.mahaiwe.
org, 413-528-0100 Aston Magna
Festival Concert: Masterworks
by J.S. Bach and Marin
Marais, June 29, 8 pm; Pink
Martini, July 2, 8 pm; The Fab
Faux, July 20, 8 pm; Natalie
Merchant with The Hudson
Valley Philharmonic, July 21, 7
pm; Mary Chapin Carpenter
and Marc Cohn, July 25, 8 pm;
Manhattan Transfer, July 27, 8
pm; Menopause the Musical,
July 28, 3 pm.
MASS MoCA, 87 Marshall St, North
Adams, MA, 413-662-2111, www.
massmoca.org 12th Annual
Summer Music Festival, July
17-Aug. 3. Festival highlights
include: Bang on a Can All-
Stars, in Julia Wolfes Steel
Hammer, July 27, 8 pm;
Composer Premiere Concert,
July 29, 4:30 pm; Bang on
a Can Marathon, Aug 3,
4-10 pm; and Daily recitals,
July 17-Aug 2, 4:30 pm. For
information go to www.
bangonacan.org/summer
festival
Meeting House, Village Green,
Route 57, New Marlborough,
MA, 413-229-2785, www.
newmarlborough.org/music-
more Music and More Festival
2013, Saturdays, Aug 3-Oct
5, 4:30 pm. Xuerong Zhao,
pianist, Aug 3; The Art of the
Fugue, Aug 10; The Daedalus
Quartet, Aug 24; A sampling of
Connecticut Yankee composer
Charles Ives vocal and
instrumental works, Aug 31;
Letters, lyrics and music from
Chaucer to Donne, Sept 7; The
Apollo Trio, Sept 21; Karen
Akers sings Cole Porter, Sept
28; Award Winning Authors,
Elizabeth Graver, Katherine
Hall Page and Robert K.
Massie, hosted by Mitchel
Levitas, Oct. 5.
Music Mountain, 225 Music
Mountain Rd, Falls Village, CT, 860-
824-7126, www.musicmountain.
org The New York Gilbert and
Sullivan Players; Jive By Five,
June 29; St. Petersburg String
Quartet, June 30; Evans Haile,
pianist, July 6, 6:30 pm; St.
Petersburg String Quartet,
encore, July 7, 3 pm; Penderecki
String Quartet, July 14, 3 pm;
Arianna String Quartet, July 21,
3 pm; Dover String Quartet, July
28, 3 pm.
New Haven Symphony, New Haven
Green, Downtown New Haven, www.
newhavensymphony.org NHSO
Music on the Green Series:
Dueling Divas, July 20, 7 pm
with William Boughton leading
opera divas Jamilyn Manning-
White and Toby Newman.
Tanglewood Music Center,Seiji
Ozawa Hall & Koussevitzky Music
Shed, 297 West St, Rte 183,
Lenox, MA, 413-637-1600 String
Quartet Marathon, July 1, 11
am, and 2:30 pm, July 2, 11
am; Tanglewood Music Center
Orchestra: Jackson Browne,
July 4, 7 pm; Boston Symphony
Orchestra: All-Tchaikovsky
Program, July 5, 8:30 pm; BSO:
John Oliver-Mahler Symphony
No. 3, July 6, 8:30 pm; BSO:
Keith Lockhart and Vince Gill,
July 7, 2:30 pm.
Tannery Pond Concerts, Mount
Lebanon Shaker Village and
Darrow School, Route 20, New
Lebanon, NY, 888-820-9441, info@
tannerypondconcerts.org The
Mir String Quartet, July 27,
8 pm; Vassily Primakov and
Natalia Lavrova, pianists, Aug.
17, 8 pm.



Dining
14 Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013
10 am-1 pm every Sat through
Oct 12. Local veg, cheese, meats,
wine, baked goods, fruits,
owers and artisan wares. Live
music. Free parking. Rain or
shine.
Galleries
Argazzi Art, 22 Millerton Rd, Rte
44, Lakeville, CT, 860-435-8222,
www.argazziart.com Paintings by
Miya Ando, Kathy Moss, Betty
Merken, Marilla Palmer and
Nellie King Solomon through
June 30. Gallery hours: Fri-Sun,
11 am-5 pm.
Bard College, The Center for
Curatorial Studies, Hessel Museum
of Art, Red Hook, NY, 845-758-7900,
www.bard.edu Haim Steinbach,
Once Again the World is Flat;
Helen Marten, No Borders in
a Wok that Cant be Crossed,
exhibits through Dec 20.
Chaiwalla Tea Room, 1 Main
St, Salisbury, CT, 860-435-9758
Intrepid, exhibition by street
photographer, Alex Krauss,
through June 30. Exhibition
may be viewed Wed-Sun, 10 am-
6 pm.
Cornwall Bridge Gallery, 131 Kent
Rd South,intersection of Rtes 7 and
45, Cornwall Bridge, CT, 860-672-
0096, www.corwallbridgegallery.
com Enjoy a special afternoon
of poetry, music and food, both
inside the main gallery and
outdoors in the backyard, July
21, 2 pm-late. Accomplished
poets, musicians and a delicious
pig roast. For information call
David Meharg at 860-672-0096.
Cozy Corner Cafe, 3330 Rte 343,
Amenia, NY, 845-789-1700 Art
exhibit by Virginia Tatsapaugh
Meili, Cow Paintings, through
July 3.
Darren Winston Bookseller, Main
St, Sharon, CT, 860-364-1890, www.
darrenwinstonbookseller.com
Works by Warren Prindle, on
display through June 30. Shop
hours: Tue -Sun, 11 am-5 pm,
or by appointment.
David M. Hunt Library, 63 Main St,
Falls Village, CT, 860-824-7424 www.
huntlibrary.org Works by Ben
Foster and Frank Grusauskas,
through July 5; John Hodgson
exhibition, New Paintings, July
12-Aug 9, reception, July 13, 4-6
pm.
Eckert Fine Art, 34 Main St,
Millerton, NY, 518-592-1330, www.
eckertneart.com American
Masters 1850-1990, Hudson
River to Larry Rivers, through
July 9. Show features art for sale
from private collections in CT
and NY. Open daily except Tues.
Call 518-592-1330 for hours.
Found Gallery, 52 Main St, Millerton,
NY Group exhibition featuring
Jeremy Francis Bell, Richard T.
Scott, Tom Hlas, David Valyou,
James Boeding, Collin Culbreth,
Frank Grusauskas through July
8. Gallery hours: Mon, noon-8
pm, Thurs and Fri, noon-7 pm,
Sat, 10 am-8 pm, Sun, noon-5
pm. Closed Tues and Wed.
[The] Gallery Arts Guild, 342 Main St,
Lakeville, CT, 860-596-4298, www.
galleryartsguild.co Fauna and
Flora, through July 13, works by
artists John Pirnak, Sayzie Carr,
Janet Newman, Anne Drager
and Lynn Curtis. Gallery hours:
Thurs-Sun, 11 am-4 pm or by
appointment.
[The] Gallery at Kinderhook Group,
19 Main St, Salisbury, CT, 860-
435-0700 Equestrian Light, oil
paintings by Marion Miller,
through June 30.
Good Purpose Gallery, 40 Main St,
Lee, MA, 413-394-5065 Earth and
Atmosphere, William McCarthy,
painter and David Bryce,
sculptor. Gallery hours: Mon,
Wed-Sat, 9 am-5 pm, Sun, 9
am-3 pm.
Gregory James Gallery, 93
Park Lane Rd, Rte 202, New
Milford, CT, 860-354-3436, www.
gregoryjamesgallery.com Meg
Lindsay, Poetry and Paintings,
through July 21. Gallery hours:
Mon, Wed, Fri, 10 am-6 pm,
Tues, Thurs, Sat, 10 am-5 pm,
Sun, 11 am-4 pm.
Gunn Memorial Library and Museum,
5 Wykeham Rd, Washington, CT,
860-868-7586, www.gunnlibrary.
org Stairwell Gallery: Ira
Mandelbaum exhibits his
photography through July 27.
Exhibits may be viewed during
normal library hours.
Hotchkiss Library, 10 Upper Main
St, Sharon, CT, 860-364-5041,
www.hotchkisslibrary.org Book
Art, John Frederick Walker
exhibiting through July 31.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo Gallery, 44
Upland Rd, New Milford, CT, 860-355-
0300, www.hunthillfarmtrust.
org Works by Helen Cantrell,
Jennifer Sabella and Clemance
Gregory, through July 7.
Kent Art Association, 21 South
Main St, Kent, CT, 860-927-3989,
www.kentart.org Member Show
II through July 14. Flower
sculptures and masks by
Andrew Richards. Free exhibit,
open to the public. Gallery
hours: Thurs-Sun, 1-5 pm.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, www.mahaiwe.
org, 413-528-0100 Great Art in
HD: Edvard Munch-A Once
in a Lifetime Exhibition, June
27, 7 pm, encore, July 8, 7 pm;
Winslow Homer, Making Art,
Making History, July 11, 7
pm; Greg Gorman: A Distinct
Vision, July 18, 7 pm.
Morrison Gallery, 8 Old Barn Rd,
Kent, CT, 860-927-4501, www.
themorrisongallery.com Henry
Klimowicz, July 20-Sept 1,
reception, July 20, 4-7 pm.
Gallery hours: Wed-Sat, 10:30
am-5:30 pm, Sun, 1 pm-4 pm.

[The] Re Institute, 1395 Boston
Corners Road, Millerton, NY, 518-
567-5359, www.thereinstitute.com
Exhibition by Terri Moore, June
29-July 27. Opening reception
June 29, 7-9 pm, closing party,
July 27, 7-9 pm with pot luck.
Gallery is open Saturdays from
1-4 pm and by appointment.
[The] Sharon Historical Society,
18 Main St, Sharon, CT, 860-354-
5688, www.saronhist.org Robert
Pittenger, Forty Years of
Painting, through July 5. Exhibit
may be viewed Wed and Sun,
10 am-2 pm, Thur and Fri, 10
am-4 pm.
[The] Souterrain Gallery, The
Wish House, 413 Sharon Goshen
Tnpk, West Cornwall, CT, 860-672-
2969 Catherine Noren and
Lazlo Gyorzok, Side by Side,
exhibition through Aug 25.
Gallery hours: Thur-Sun, 11
am-5 pm.
Tivoli Artists Gallery, 60 Broadway,
Tivoli, NY, 845-757-2667 Pop-up
Art Show, one weekend only,
June 28-30. Opening reception,
June 28, 6-8 pm. Fine Arts in
a variety of mediums. Gallery
hours: Fri, 5-9 pm, Sat, 1-9 pm,
Sun, 1-5 pm.
[The] Wassaic Project, Maxon Mills,
37 Furnace Bank Rd, Wassaic, NY,
www.wassaicproject.org Annual
Summer Festival, Aug 2-4.
[The] White Gallery, 344 Main St,
Lakeville, CT, 860-435-1029, www.
thewhitegalleryart.com Return
to Gotham, works by David
Dunlop, through July 14; Fran
Gormley, photography show,
Palette Earth: Recent Work
from Ethiopia and Iceland,
July 19-Sept 1. Artist reception,
July 20, 4-7 pm. Gallery hours:
Thurs-Sun, 11 am-4 pm or by
appointment.
Kids/
Family
[The] Childrens Museum, 950 Trout
Brook Dr, West Hartford, CT, 860-231-
2824, www.thechildrensmuseumct.
org The new Childrens
Museum offers hands-on fun
with science and nature for
younger children and families.
Members and visitors enjoy
exhibits and demonstrations,
education classes and activities,
a live animal wildlife sanctuary,
state-of-the art digital science
dome movies and planetarium
shows.Go online for
information.
[The] Cornwall Library, 30 Pine St,
Cornwall, CT, 860-672-6874, www.
cornwalllibrary.org Toddler Play
Group, each Thursday, 10:30-
11:30 am.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo Cooking
School, 44 Upland Rd, New
Milford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.
hunthillfarmtrust.org Little
Sprouts-Young Chefs Week, for
ages 5-10, July 8-12, 9 am-1 pm;
On the Farm-Culinary and Art
Week, for ages 9-12, July 15-19,
9 am-2 pm.
Lake Compounce Amusement Park,
822 Lake Ave, Bristol, CT, 860-583-
3300, www.lakecompounce.com
Family theme park. Kiddie
rides, roller coaster, water
rides, thrill rides, classic rides,
entertainment, dining and
snack areas. Open daily, through
Aug. Go online for driving
directions.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,
Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.
machaydntheatre.org Childrens
Theatre Season: The Little
Mermaid, June 28-29, July
5-6 and July 12-13. Call 518-
392-9292 for information and
reservations.
Norman Rockwell Museum, 9
Glendale Rd, Stockbridge, MA, 413-
298-4100, www.nrm.org Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs,
the creation of a classic,
through Oct 27. Explore the
development of Walt Disneys
rst feature-length animated
lm, with original artwork from
the movie.
Old Sturbridge Village, 1 Old
Sturbridge Village Rd, Sturbridge,
MA, 800-733-1830, www.osv.org A
re-created village and outdoor
history museum brings to life
the world of men and women
in the early 19th- century
rural New England. Animals,
games, events, demonstrations,
cafe, gift shop, 4th of July
reworks and more. Wheelchair
accessible, free parking, senior
discount.
TheatreWorks,TWKids, 5 Brookside
Ave,New Milford, CT, 860-350-
6863, www.theatreworks.us
TheatreWorks Kids Summer
Camp Production: Youre a
Good Man, Charlie Brown,
public performance over the
weekend of July 20.
Warner Theatre, 68 Main St, Nancy
Marine Studio, Torrington, CT, 860-
489-7180, www.warnertheatreorg
Shrek: the Musical, July 27-
Aug 4.
West Hartford Art League, 37 Buena
Vista Road, West Hartford, CT,
www.westhartfordart.org/classes
Summer camp starts July 1,
offering four one-week sessions
of morning classes for young
artists. Go online to check out
the schedule, call 860-231-8019
with questions or to register.
Movies
Bank Street Theater, 46 Bank St,New
Milford, CT, 860-354-2122, www.
bankstreettheater.com
Bantam Cinema, 115 Lake Rd, Rte
209, Bantam, CT, 860-567-0006,
www.bantamcinema.com Week of
June 28-July 4: The East and
Much Ado About Nothing.
Beacon Cinema, 57 North St,
Pittseld, MA, 413-358-4780, www.
thebeaconcinema.com
Cinerom, 89 Farley Place, Torrington,
CT, 860-489-4111, www.cinerom.com
See Compass movie page.
Gilson Cafe Cinema, 354 Main St,
Winsted, CT, 860-379-5108,www.
gilsoncafecinema.com See
Compass movie page.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, 413-528-0100, www.
mahaiwe.org Copperhead, July
13, 7 pm. Introduction by the
director, Q & A to follow.
[The] Moviehouse, 48 Main St,
Millerton, NY, 518-789-3408, www.
themoviehouse.net See Compass
movie page.
[The] Triplex, 70 Railroad St, Great
Barrington, MA, 413-528-8885, www.
thetriplex.com
Music
Bard College,Richard B. Fisher
Center for the Performing Arts,
Sosno Theater, Red Hook, NY,
845-758-7900, www.bard.edu
Aston Magna Concerts: June
28, July 5, July 12, 8 pm,
Olin Humanities Building;
Hudson Valley Chamber Music
Circle Concert:Kalichstein-
Laredo-Robinson Trio, June
29, 8 pm; Bard SummerScape
2013, seven-weeks arts festival
exploring the life and times of
Igor Stravinsky, July 6-Aug. 18.
Bard College at Simons Rock,Daniel
Arts Center, 84 Alford Rd, Great
Barrington, MA, 413-644-4400,
www.simons-rock.edu Aston
Magna Concert: July 6, July 13,
6 pm.

Club Helsinki Hudson, 405 Columbia
St, Hudson, NY, 518-828-4800
Young Paris, June 27; Rev Tor
Band, June 28; Ben Taylor,
July 3; Paul Cebar, July 4;
The Holmes Brothers, July 5;
Lake Street Dive, July 6; Ann
Hampton Callaway, Helsinki
on Broadway, July 7; The Soul
Rebels, July 12; Chris Smither,
July 13.
Hotchkiss School,11 Interlaken
Rd, Katherine M. Elfers Hall,
Lakeville, CT, 860-435-4423, www.
hotchkiss.org Summer Concert
Series: Mir Quartet, June 28;
Resident Quartet with Mir
Quartet, June 29, 7:30 pm; The
Dessoff Choirs, June 30, 4 pm;
Shanghai Quartet, July 5, 7:30
pm; Shanghai Quartet with
Resident Quartet, July 6, 7:30
pm; Brentano Quartet, July
12, 7:30 pm; Brentano Quartet
and Resident Quartet, July
13, 7:30 pm; Student Concert
with Instrumental and Vocal
Chamber Music, July 7, 4 pm
and July 21, 4 pm; Student
Instrumental Concert, July 14,
4:30 pm.
Hunt Hill Farm, The Silo Cooking
School, 44 Upland Rd, New
Milford, CT, 860-355-0300, www.
hunthillfarmtrust.org Cabaret
Night: Blini Blues with Ellen
Kaye, vocalist, June 29, 7:30 pm.
Innity Music Hall & Bistro, 8232
Rte 44, Norfolk, CT, 866-666-6306,
www.innityhall.com Rusted
Root, June 27, June 28; The Blue
Hill Troupe performing Gilbert
and Sullivans, The Mikado,
June 30, 2 pm; Aaron Carter,
June 30, 7:30 pm; Open mic
night, July 3; Forward Motion,
July 5; Blue Coupe, July 6; Deer
Tick, July 7.
Litcheld Jazz Festival, Goshen
Fairgrounds, Rte 63, Goshen, CT
www.litcheldjazzfest.com Aug
9-11. Children 12 and under
free on lawn. Childrens
activities, picnics allowed,
bring blankets, low lawn chairs.
Go online for information,
schedule, tickets.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,
Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.
machaydntheatre.org Mac-
Haydn Mondays! Bill McGrath
singing Elvis, July 15; Melissa
Giattino, Ron DeStefano and
Richard Schwartz, July 29;
Kathy Halenda, Aug 12, all
performances, 7 pm.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, www.mahaiwe.
org, 413-528-0100 Aston Magna
Festival Concert: Masterworks
by J.S. Bach and Marin
Marais, June 29, 8 pm; Pink
Martini, July 2, 8 pm; The Fab
Faux, July 20, 8 pm; Natalie
Merchant with The Hudson
Valley Philharmonic, July 21, 7
pm; Mary Chapin Carpenter
and Marc Cohn, July 25, 8 pm;
Manhattan Transfer, July 27, 8
pm; Menopause the Musical,
July 28, 3 pm.
MASS MoCA, 87 Marshall St, North
Adams, MA, 413-662-2111, www.
massmoca.org 12th Annual
Summer Music Festival, July
17-Aug. 3. Festival highlights
include: Bang on a Can All-
Stars, in Julia Wolfes Steel
Hammer, July 27, 8 pm;
Composer Premiere Concert,
July 29, 4:30 pm; Bang on
a Can Marathon, Aug 3,
4-10 pm; and Daily recitals,
July 17-Aug 2, 4:30 pm. For
information go to www.
bangonacan.org/summer
festival
Meeting House, Village Green,
Route 57, New Marlborough,
MA, 413-229-2785, www.
newmarlborough.org/music-
more Music and More Festival
2013, Saturdays, Aug 3-Oct
5, 4:30 pm. Xuerong Zhao,
pianist, Aug 3; The Art of the
Fugue, Aug 10; The Daedalus
Quartet, Aug 24; A sampling of
Connecticut Yankee composer
Charles Ives vocal and
instrumental works, Aug 31;
Letters, lyrics and music from
Chaucer to Donne, Sept 7; The
Apollo Trio, Sept 21; Karen
Akers sings Cole Porter, Sept
28; Award Winning Authors,
Elizabeth Graver, Katherine
Hall Page and Robert K.
Massie, hosted by Mitchel
Levitas, Oct. 5.
Music Mountain, 225 Music
Mountain Rd, Falls Village, CT, 860-
824-7126, www.musicmountain.
org The New York Gilbert and
Sullivan Players; Jive By Five,
June 29; St. Petersburg String
Quartet, June 30; Evans Haile,
pianist, July 6, 6:30 pm; St.
Petersburg String Quartet,
encore, July 7, 3 pm; Penderecki
String Quartet, July 14, 3 pm;
Arianna String Quartet, July 21,
3 pm; Dover String Quartet, July
28, 3 pm.
New Haven Symphony, New Haven
Green, Downtown New Haven, www.
newhavensymphony.org NHSO
Music on the Green Series:
Dueling Divas, July 20, 7 pm
with William Boughton leading
opera divas Jamilyn Manning-
White and Toby Newman.
Tanglewood Music Center,Seiji
Ozawa Hall & Koussevitzky Music
Shed, 297 West St, Rte 183,
Lenox, MA, 413-637-1600 String
Quartet Marathon, July 1, 11
am, and 2:30 pm, July 2, 11
am; Tanglewood Music Center
Orchestra: Jackson Browne,
July 4, 7 pm; Boston Symphony
Orchestra: All-Tchaikovsky
Program, July 5, 8:30 pm; BSO:
John Oliver-Mahler Symphony
No. 3, July 6, 8:30 pm; BSO:
Keith Lockhart and Vince Gill,
July 7, 2:30 pm.
Tannery Pond Concerts, Mount
Lebanon Shaker Village and
Darrow School, Route 20, New
Lebanon, NY, 888-820-9441, info@
tannerypondconcerts.org The
Mir String Quartet, July 27,
8 pm; Vassily Primakov and
Natalia Lavrova, pianists, Aug.
17, 8 pm.



Dining
Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013 15
Time & Space Limited (TSL)
Warehouse, 434 Columbia St, Hudson,
NY, www.timeandspace.org Live
from the Metropolitan Opera:
Verdis, Il Trovatore, June 28;
Fossinis, Armida, July 12;
Verdis, La Traviata, July 19;
Puccinis, Turandot, July 26;
Rossinis, Barber of Seville, Aug
2. All performances at 7 pm.
TriArts Sharon Playhouse, 49 Amenia
Rd, Sharon, CT, 860-364-7469, www.
triarts.net Patio Cabarets: June 28,
29, July 4, 5, and 6, following the
performance of Monty Pythons
Spamalot.

Twelve Moons Coee House,
St. Johns Church, 12 Main St,
Salisbury, CT, (back door entrance),
TwelveMoonsCoee@gmail.com Tom
Kohl, Mark Minkler, Jon Doty,
Modern Jazz Trio, July 6, 7-
10 pm.
Ulster Performing Arts Center, (UPAC),
601 Broadway, Kingston, NY, 845-339-
6088, www.upac.org UPAC Benet
Concert: Tony Bennett, June 29,
8 pm.
Yale School of Music, The Music Shed,
20 Litcheld Rd, Rtes 44 and 272,
Norfolk, CT, 860-542-3000, www.
norfolkmusic.org Music from
Vienna, July 5; The Tokyo String
Quartet, The Last Concert, July
6, 8 pm.

Potpourri
Canaan Flea Market, Route 44,
North Canaan, Ct ( pavilion across
from McDonalds) 860-824-7346,
kevingodburn@yahoo.comMusicians
ea market, June 29, 10 am-3
pm. The sale will feature dozens
of vendors offering vintage and
new musical instruments and
accessories. Free admission, no
fee for vendors to set up a table.
Shoppers are welcome to bring
unwanted musical items to trade.
Colebrook Congregational Church
Meeting House, 471 Smith Hill
Rd, Colebrook, CT Annual Town
of Colebrook 4th of July
celebration, 11 am. Guest
speaker, Kenneth Andresen
followed by traditional buffet
luncheon on the Green. Children
are invited to assemble at the
Colebrook Consolidated School
at 10:15 am to participate in the
annual bicycle parade. All are
welcome.
Connecticut Junior Republic, Goshen
Rd, Litcheld, CT, 860-567-9423 ext
252, www.ctjuniorrepublic.org 66th
Annual Litcheld House Tour
to benet Connecticut Junior
Republic, July 13, 10 am-4 pm,
rain or shine. A private tour and
cocktail reception from 4-7:30
pm will be held as a separate
event. For information and
tickets call or go online at www.
litcheldhousetour.org
North East-Millerton Library, 75 Main
St, Millerton, NY, 518-789-3340, www.
nemillertonlibrary.org Book Sale in
the Anex Building, June 29, July
6, July 20, Aug 3 and Aug 17, 10
am-1 pm. Go online or call the
library if you have any questions.
Talks
[The] Falls Village-Canaan Historical
Society, South Canaan Meeting House,
Jct of Rtes 7 and 63, Falls Village,
860-824-8226 First Tuesdays at 7
series: Lakeville Diving: Its the
Pits with Donald Mayland, July
2, 7 pm. Mayland is a retired
economics teacher and owner
of Marine Study Program,
Inc. and will present a lecture
on local diving and recovery
of archaeological artifacts
found in Lakevilles abandoned
iron industry quarry pits. All
programs are free. Donations
welcome. For information call
860-824-8226.
Hotchkiss Library, 10 Upper Main
St, Sharon, CT, 860-364-5041, www.
hotchkisslibrary.org James Buckley,
Reections on the Place of
Religion in Public Life, July 7, 4
pm. Free and open to the public.
Litcheld Hills Audubon Society,
Litcheld Community Center,
Rte 202, Litcheld, CT Monthly
meeting and program, Wildlife
and Connecticuts Changing
Landscape, presented by Heather
Shirlock, July 8, 7:30 pm. Public
welcome.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, 413-528-0100, www.
mahaiwe.org Francine Segan
Lectures: Food Talk for Movie
Lovers, July 15, 6:30 pm; Virtual
Food Tour of the Berkshires,
July 29, 7 pm, Shakespeares
Kitchen, Aug 12, 6:30 pm.
[The] Mark Twain House and
Museum, 351 Farmington Ave,
Hartford, CT, 860-247-0998, www.
marktwainhouse.org Celebrated
Hints from Heloise, June 27,
7 pm, concluding with dessert
reception and booksigning.
Theater
Bard College, Fisher Center for
Performing Arts, Red Hook, NY,
845-758-7900, www.bard.edu Bard
SummerScape premieres,
The Master and Margarita,
July 11-21.
Bard College at Simons Rock, 84
Alford Rd, Great Barrington, MA,
413-644-4400, www.simons-rock.
edu Berkshire Playwrights Lab
presents its rst full workshop
production, Anna Zieglers
Life Science, through June
30; Shakespeare & Co presents:
Leap Year, Aug 23- Sept 1.
Barrington Stage Co, Mainstage, 30
Union St, Pittseld, MA, 413-236-8888
Linda Lavin, Possibilities, with
Billy Stritch on piano, July 8,
8 pm.
Barrington Stage Co, Sydelle and
Lee Blatt Performing Arts Center,
36 Linden St, Pittseld, MA, 413,
499-5446 Muckrakers, through
July 6; Mr. Finns Cabaret Series:
Up close with the cast of On
the Town, June 29, 10:30 pm,
an informal evening of cabaret
songs; Paul Green and the Jewish
Jazz Project: traditional Klezmer
favorites and Jewish jazz fusion,
June 30-July 1, 8 pm; Mr. Finn
and his all-star song writers, Take
#I, July 6, 9 pm, July 7, 8 pm;
Liz Callaway and Ann Hampton
Callaway, July 14 and July 15,
8 pm; Gutlss and Grateful: A
Musical Feast, Amy Oestreicher,
July 16, 8 pm; Joe Iconis and
Family, July 27, 10:30 pm, July
28, 8 pm.
[The] Center for Performing Arts,
Route 308, Rhinebeck, NY, 845-876-
3080, www.centerforperformingarts.
org Jekyll and Hyde, July 5-28.
Chester Theatre Company (Chester
Town Hall) 15 Middleeld Rd,
Chester, MA, 413-354-7771, www.
chestertheatre.org Arms on Fire,
through July 7; Tryst, July
11-21; Body of Awareness, July
31-Aug 11; An Iliad, Aug 15-25.
Mac-Haydn Theatre, 1925 Rte 203,
Chatham, NY, 518-392-9292, www.
machaydntheatre.org LaCage
Aux Folles, through June 30;
Singin in the Rain, July 4-21;
Les Miserables, July 25-Aug 4;
The Best Little Whorehouse In
Texax, Aug 8-18; Gypsy, Aug
22-Sept 1.
Mahaiwe Theatre, 14 Castle St, Great
Barrington, MA, www.mahaiwe.org,
413-528-0100 Londons National
Theatre in HD: The Audience,
encore, July 7, 3 pm; Staged
readings of new plays, July 10,
24, Aug 7, 21; Rita Rudner, Aug
4, 7 pm.
[The] Mount Estate & Gardens,
Home of Edith Wharton, 2
Plunkett St (Corner of Rte 7),
Lenox, MA, 413-551-5111, www.
edithwharton.org Theatre at the
Mount: Shakespeare & Co, A
Midsummer Nights Dream,
July 20-Aug 17.
Shakespeare & Company,Bernstein
Theatre, 70 Kemble St., Lenox, MA,
413-637-3353, www.shakespeare.org
Master Class, through Aug 18;
Heros, through Sept 1.
Sherman Playhouse, 5 Rte 39 N,
Sherman, CT, 860-354-3622, www.
shermanplayers.org Anne of
Green Gables, June 28-July 27.
TheatreWorks, 5 Brookside Ave, o
Rte 202, next to CVS, New Milford, CT,
860-350-6863, www.theatreworks.us
Earnest or Whats in a Name?,
July 12-Aug 3.
TheaterWorks, City Arts on Pearl,
233 Pearl St., Hartford, CT, 860-
527-7838 Becoming Dr. Ruth,
through July 14.
TriArts Sharon Playhouse, 49 Amenia
Rd, Sharon, CT, 860-364-7469,
www.triarts.net Monty Pythons
Spamalot, performances
through July 7; Doubt, July 11-
14; Theyre Playing Our Song,
July 19-28; 13 The Musical, Aug
2-4; Next Thing You Know, Aug
8-11; Damn Yankees, Aug 14-
25; The Playhouse Stomp, Aug.
20, 7 pm.
Vassar College,Powerhouse Theater,
124 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie,
NY, 845-437-5599, www.vassar.edu
Downtown Race Riot, through
July 7; When the Lights Went
Out, July 17-28.
Vassar College,Susan Stein Shiva
Theater, 124 Raymond Ave,
Poughkeepsie, NY, 845-437-5599,
www.vassar.edu Inside Look
Workshops, semi-staged:
Found, July 12-14; Mother of
Invention, July 19-21.
Warner Theatre, 68 Main St, Nancy
Marine Studio, Torrington, CT, 860-
489-7180, www.warnertheatreorg
My Mother Has Four Noses,
June 29, 7 pm.
Theater
Workshops
For Kids
[The] Center for Performing Arts,
Route 308, Rhinebeck, NY, 845-876-
3080, www.centerforperformingarts.
org Theres still time to sign up
for summer camp! Workshops
and camps for ages 5-7, 7-10 and
middle and high school students.
Tuition assistance for Dutchess
and Ulster county children. Call
845-876-3088 ext. 13. Go online
to review all the workshops
available. All camps require
advance registration.
TriArts Sharon Playhouse, Youtheatre
2013, 49 Amenia Rd, Sharon, CT,
860-364-7469, www.triarts.net
Musical Theatre Performance
Workshops:Grumbling
Gryphons, through June 28,
ages 6-12; Spamalot, July 3
and July 6, ages 8-18, one-day
intensive behind the scenes
workshop, attend a matinee
performance, meet the cast; The
Phantom Tollbooth, July 8-19,
ages 8-16; Creative Dramatics,
July 15-26, ages 5-7; Theatre
Rocks!, July 22-26, ages 8-16;
Dance Style for Musical Theatre,
July 29-Aug 2, ages 8-16; Disney
on Broadway, Aug 5-9, ages 8-16;
Thoroughly Modern Millie
Jr., Aug 5-24, ages 8-18. For
information or to register go to
www.triarts.net or call 860-364-
7469 x 100. Tuition assistance
is available for all programs.
Applications online.
For our complete calendar,
go to our website at
www.tricornernews.com




16 Compass, Thursday, June 27, 2013
Lakeville Journal due June 21, 2013 Publication date June 27, 2013
1/2 page Compass
4
th
of JULY SALE
Up to 50% off
on all Perennials & Nursery Stock
All Annuals at Clearance Prices.
Sale Starts June 29th - July 7th
Now picking
our own Lettuce
Broccoli, Beets
Radishes, Turnip
Swiss Chards
Kale, Collard
Sugar Snap Peas
and more.
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK
PALEYS
FARM MARKET & GARDEN CENTER
Open 7 Days 8 AM - 6 PM
230 Amenia Road, Sharon, CT 06069
860-364-0674 www.paleysfarmmarket.com
41 GAY STREET
Sharon, CT
a private training studio
Pilates mat & machine
spin group classes personal training yoga
860-364-9350
helenkillmer@earthlink.net

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