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Key Magazine Contents 4
Blast Off into Fun at Grapevine’s 5th Annual SummerBlast
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AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE VOL. 19
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FORT WORTH KEY MAGAZINE 3805 Ivywood Court Arlington, Texas 76016 817-654-9740 e-mail address keymagfw@aol.com INTERNET ADDRESS www.keymagfw.com NATIONAL INTERNET ADDRESS www.KeyMagazine.com A. KEITH POWELL Publisher
West is Among the Best for Culture and Shopping-and- Dining Delights
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Cultural District, West 7th St., Hospital District, Magnolia Ave. Map
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Dining in Fort Worth
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Key Points of Interest Fort Worth Stockyards Calendar of Events Glen Rose, TX
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Sundance Square, Cultural District, Fort Worth Stockyards, Downtown Fort Worth Map
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Fort Worth, Arlington, Mid-Cities, DFW Airport Map
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FONCELL F. POWELL Editor ALTON DEE POWELL Vice President-Marketing Manager MICHAEL H. PRICE Contributing Writer COPYRIGHT 2013. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, including photocopy, without permission in writing from the publisher. All ads designed by KEY Magazine may not be reproduced for publication elsewhere. Distributed monthly to hotels, inns and other distribution points throughout Fort Worth, Arlington, Glen Rose, Granbury, and Grapevine. SUBSCRIPTION RATE: $20 per year, first class mail. Single copies mailed at $1.75.
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Let Us $how You the Money! The Bureau of Engraving and Printing, located in Fort Worth, Texas, produces over half of the nation’s paper currency. Come experience the Tour and Visitor Center to see billions of dollars and learn about the production and history of United States paper currency. currenc • • • •
Two floors of interactive exhibits and displays Self-guided tour on an elevated walkway 75-seat theater showing a 15-minute high-definition movie Moneyfactory Gift Shop
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Blast Off into Fun at Grapevine’s 5th Annual SummerBlast
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Join the fun at Grapevine’s 5th Annual SummerBlast! Now through Labor Day weekend, Grapevine’s SummerBlast features fun for the whole family including water activities, fireworks, special exhibits, outdoor activities and much more. See the skies light up over Lake Grapevine every Friday night at the SummerBlast Fireworks Show starting at 9:30 p.m. This weekly show can be viewed from the rooftop of the parking garage at Gaylord Texan Resort, as well as parks throughout Grapevine. For even more fun, download the show and music at www.GrapevineTexasUSA.com/Summer. And then there is the 31st Annual July 4th Fireworks Extravaganza which is free. Have an out of this world experience at the Grapevine NASA Blast, June 1-August 25. This space-themed exhibit features more
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than 100 items on loan from the Kennedy Space Center in Houston including an original Apollo Space Suit and a model Space Shuttle. Get an up-close and personal look at space exploration and the impact of NASA on today’s society. Open MondaysFridays, 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturdays 10 a.m.6:30 p.m. and Sundays, noon-5 p.m., free. 636 S. Main St. May the LEGO® bricks be with you! On June 8, Grapevine’s LEGOLAND® Discovery Center debuts the brand new Star Wars™ MINILAND Episode IV. This full-room Star Wars display features a life-size Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker in battle along with exciting scenes from this iconic film. Grapevine’s LEGOLAND Discovery Center is the only place in the nation to experience this one-of-a-kind LEGO scene.
Ahoy mates! Debuting this summer at SEA LIFE Grapevine Aquarium is the brand new Turtle Rescue Sanctuary. This exciting new exhibit offers new educational and conservation opportunities and will encourage even the youngest guests to think about turtles and turtle rescue in a new way. During the summer, visit Grapevine Mills’ newest attraction, Magic Maze’s Emporium, offering guests an opportunity to enjoy an amazing mirror maze with more than 100 projectors. Kids can navigate their way through themed mazes such as the Candy Adventure and search for hidden jewels to help them win a prize when they reach the end. Bring the kids to Grapevine’s Palace Theatre to see Le Theatre de Marionette’s adaptation of Hans Christian Anderson’s The Little Mermaid. This impressive presentation will leave children spellbound by the beautifully carved marionettes and the underwater kingdom. Shows are June 12-August 14 at 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. Weekday admission is $10 for adults and $8 for children. Weekend admission is $12 for adults and $10 for children. Start your Grapevine getaway at Gaylord Texan Resort’s Paradise Springs. Drift down a winding lazy river or make a splash in the 6,000-square-foot family lagoon featuring a 27-foot-tall winding waterslide, two horseshoe-shaped hot pools, and a toddler pool. Waterpark fans will also delight in Great Wolf Lodge’s 80,000 square foot water park, the only indoor water park in North Texas. Enjoy the slides, rides, lazy river, and more at this exciting family-friendly resort. Both
water parks are reserved for hotel guests only so book your rooms early! Crack the case at the Texas Star Dinner Theater! Railroad tycoon Horace Grimsby has been murdered and a deadly gunslinger is in town! Come along with Marshal Jim Courtright as he and the rest of the audience figure out which of the zany characters is guilty of the crime. Dinner is included and shows are on select Thursdays, as well as Fridays and Saturday evenings. Sail away on the 8,000 Lake Grapevine with Black Watch Sailing Charters, Lake Grapevine Cruises,Tranquil Sails, or Waterway Adventures. Create your own water adventure with jet skis, pontoon boats, and other gear at Silver Lake Marina. Stop by Bass Pro Shops to get all your equipment, licenses, and other necessities for a day of fishing fun on Lake Grapevine. Wheel away the hours on the more than 22 miles of paved and natural trails with equipment from Grapevine Bike Center or Mad Duck Cyclery or on a Segway PT x2, rented from Grapevine Segway. And, of course, a visit to Grapevine wouldn’t be complete without a visit to the Grapevine Vintage Railroad and a trip to the Grapevine Market and Grapevine Farmers Market. To find the perfect hotel option to c o m p l e t e yo u r g e t a w a y, v i s i t w w w. GrapevineTexasUSA.com/getaways and click on the Family Fun section. For other information about Grapevine, call the Grapevine Convention & Visitors Bureau at 800-457-6338 or 817-410-3185 or visit www.GrapevineTexasUSA.com.
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West is Among the Best for Culture and Shopping-and-Dining Delights
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by Michael H. Price
As long as we’re “out where the West begins,” as an iconic figure in Fort Worth’s history described this Cowtown, then we might as well look even further westward within the city itself. Pioneering publisher and civic booster Amon Carter may have intended to give Dallas the razz when he coined that phrase — but the West hardly could have picked a keener starting point than Fort Worth. And Fort Worth, in turn, hardly could have picked a site more right for its burgeoning west side Cultural District. Rippling with heavyduty commercial, artistic and residential growth since the dawn of the 21st century, the west side overall has seen its very skyline change with the transformation of a busy West Seventh Street into a streamlined conduit connecting the downtown area’s Sundance Square development with the Cultural District. Heading west (naturally) from downtown Fort Worth, one finds the Cultural District radiating from the intersection where Seventh Street crosses University Drive and, in the process, morphs into the historic, brick-paved Camp Bowie Boulevard. Visitors in search of western-style discoveries — from plain-and-fancy dining to fine art and varied entertainment — will find such delights in volume on the west side. Cultural attractions, restaurants, mainstream and specialinterest shopping, and lavish natural gardens flourish as a reminder of how Fort Worth has built upon its frontier origins. Several of the world’s finer museums, playhouses and galleries anchor a vast Cultural District. The hand-laid red-brick pavement of Camp Bowie Boulevard is an attraction in itself, lined with an everexpanding array of art galleries, stage-and-screen auditoriums, boutiques, scholarly museums, restaurants and lounges, and shopping malls. The Cultural District The Fort Worth Museum of Science & History, commands the westward view of the district from Montgomery Street and just 6
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northward are additional cultural touchstones: An expanded and redesigned Amon Carter Museum of American Art, houses a definitive collection of American paintings, photography, and sculpture, from essential historic works by Charles M. Russell and Frederick Remington to a new acquisition of last-century Native American photography by Edward S. Curtis. Close by is the Kimbell Art Museum, itself preparing for an expansion and still living up to Newsweek’s description as “arguably the most beautiful museum in America.” The neighboring Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth is the oldest such museum in Texas — housed in a work-of-art 2002 building designed by world-renowned Japanese architect, Tadao Ando, and featuring bold gallery exhibitions, concert attractions and, every weekend, leading-edge independent-studio films. The Museum of Science & History, anchoring a campus within the Cultural District, has been designed by similarly renowned architects Ricardo and Victor Legorreta. Inside the Museum of Science & History, one finds vast galleries of Texas-bred dinosaur specimens and the state’s oil-and-gas heritage, in addition to the Cattle Raisers Museum, the Fort Worth Children’s Museum, Stars Café, and a new digital Noble Planetarium . The Omni Theater, an IMAX® superscreen dome, links with the Museum of Science & History and boasts a new digital sound system and enhanced lighting. The National Cowgirl Museum & Hall of Fame is next door to the FMS&H. The NCM&HF honors women of the American West from those who have lived and worked on ranches or who led an expedition, or sat before an easel, aimed a rifle and hit the bull’s eye, or sat on the Supreme Court. When the museum meanderings trigger an appetite for fine dining, two long-established, museum-based cafés stand ready to serve. The Kimbell Buffet Restaurant offers indoor or patio lunch and a light evening
More than 1,000 years ago, before the Incas, the Wari ruled Peru. OPENS JUNE 16
3333 CAMP BOWIE BOULEVARD | FORT WORTH, TEXAS 76107-2792 | 817.332.8451
www.kimbellart.org This exhibition is organized by the Cleveland Museum of Art and has been made possible in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities: Exploring the human endeavor. It is supported in part by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Promotional support is provided by Above: Tunic (detail), 600–1000, camelid fiber and cotton. The Textile Museum, Washington, DC. Acquired by George Hewitt Myers in 1941; Right: Standing Dignitary (detail), 600–1000, wood with shell-and-stone inlay and silver. Kimbell Art Museum
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menu within one of the most beautiful modern buildings in America. The Modern Art Museum’s 250-seat Café Modern, with an outdoor terrace, overlooks a serene reflecting pond. The Modern’s full-service kitchen delivers superb cuisine for lunch, Sunday brunch, and scheduled seasonal dinners. The Great Outdoors offers breakfast subs, lunch and dinner subs, soups, salads and all natural ice cream. Off University on White Settlement Road, a Texas barbecue tradition reigns at Angelo’s, offering a half-century of first-class BBQ and ultra-chilled beer. The Fort Worth Community Art Center, at the district’s western edge, showcases work by the city’s homegrown community of artists, in addition to live-theater venues. Neighboring the museum community is the city’s landmark Will Rogers Memorial Center, a versatile 85-acre entertainment complex — with 45 acres housing the Will Rogers Coliseum & Auditorium. Its majestic Pioneer Tower dates from the Texas Centennial Celebration of 1936. Still the most imposing
Monday-Saturday: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday: noon-5 p.m. $10 Adults • $8 Children and senior citizens Children 3 and under - free with paid adult
Bring in this ad for $1 off admission.
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site within the district, the coliseum holds pride of place as the first domed structure of its kind in the world. The complex also boasts an equestrian center and exhibit halls, home to the annual Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo. Showplaces of Heritage and Artistry and Nature Shoppers can find a broad selection of merchandise in the Cultural District’s specialty shops. European antiques and upholstery can be found at Domain XCIV and the dh collection boasts progressive furniture designs in an appetite-whetting environment. Southward off University Drive, visitors can experience the glories of nature at Trinity Park, a pristine oasis bordered by a fork of the placid Trinity River. Here, picnickers, joggers, and strollers can explore meandering pathways or travel on a miniature railroad. Opposite the park, across University Drive, Fort Worth’s Botanic Garden beckons — the oldest such site in Texas, a lush 109-acre tapestry of dappled shade accented by vibrant splashes of color. The Garden is home to thousands of species of native and exotic plants in 21 specialty gardens. The European-designed Rose Garden features more than 3,400 roses, and the 10,000-square-foot Conservatory houses tropical flowers and foliage from around the world. An on-site Gardens Restaurant serves light lunches and refreshments — with a view of the Garden and a varied gallery that often displays the work of local artists. A short distance southward lies the illustrious Fort Worth Zoo, nationally ranked among the finest. The Zoo is home to thousands of animals, both native and exotic. Viewing facilities and natural habitat exhibits are set up for optimal views of the animals, often separated from their observers by only a river, a waterfall, or a large window. Shaded rest spots and picnic tables are available, with several on-site eateries. Across from the Zoo, Log Cabin Village offers another view of the city’s rich frontier history boasting seven authentic log homes, dating from the mid-to-late 1800s. Perioddressed interpreters greet visitors inside each cabin offering a living history of the home and its origin. The mood to explore might be triggered by art, dining, shopping, or the wonders of nature. Fort Worth’s west side meets all these interests and then some!
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DOMAIN X C I V
3100 W. 7th Street Suite 112 Fort Worth, TX 76107 (next to Eddie V’s Restaurant)
10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Saturday
817-336-1994
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COPYRIGHT 2013, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MAP MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM, NOR ANY PORTION THEREOF.
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Dining in Fort Worth
ANGELO’S - Enjoy Hickory Smoked Ribs & Beef. The beef can be on a sandwich or part of dinner. If chicken is your choice, it comes in half or quarter portions on either a dinner or in a basket. Ribs & chicken served each day while they last. Choose from either beans, potato salad or cole slaw to accompany your meat course. Soft drinks, milk, tea, fruit juices or beer–draft, or bottled or in cans, and wine by the glass, are all available. For dessert have a fried pie. Angelo’s opened on St. Patrick’s Day 1958. People who have moved to New York often ask visitors coming that way to bring them some Angelo’s Barbecue. No credit cards. 2533 White Settlement Rd., 817-332-0357, www.angelosbbq.com.
THE BUFFET RESTAURANT - Dining in Kimbell Art Museum’s Buffet Restaurant, guests can enjoy Shelby Schafer’s homemade soups, salads, sandwiches, quiche and desserts. Lunch is served Tuesdays through Thursdays and Saturdays from 11:30 a.m. until 2 p.m., and Fridays and Sundays from noon until 2 p.m. Beverage and dessert times are Tuesdays through Thursdays and Saturdays and Sundays from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. Friday times are 2 p.m. until 5:30 p.m. Friday evenings, from 5:30 p.m. until 7:30, features a light dinner buffet of soups, salads, pasta dishes, and a vegetable torte, accompanied by a selection of wines and other beverage choices. After dinner, guests may tour the galleries or sit back and listen to musicians perform near the Maillol Courtyard. Groups of 8 to 24 people may make reservations for 11:30 a.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays by calling 817-332-8451, ext. 277. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. THE Café Modern - The renovated Café Modern now has Friday evening dinner seating from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. and cocktail service at the new bar until 10 p.m. Cocktails are inspired by the Modern’s permanent collection of art works. Other changes include brunch on both Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m.–3 p.m., and the Museum will open an hour earlier on Sundays, allowing guests to eat and visit the galleries before the new noon screenings of Magnolia at the Modern films. Those who would like a bite to eat between 11 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday may order one of the freshly prepared small plates, either hot or cold, available in the bar. Lunch is served from 11 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. Tuesday–Friday. Executive Chef Dena Peterson’s use of fresh fruits, vegetables, meats, breads, and desserts is magical. Never a disappointing taste, never a regret in what you order. Café Modern has been named one of the nation’s top restaurants by Gourmet Magazine. A children’s menu lists the foods they usually enjoy. For reservations, call 817-8402157. New hours at the Modern are Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. & Fri. 10 a.m. -8 p.m. 3200 Darnell St., 817-738-9215 or www.themodern.org. Cattlemen’s Fort Worth Steak House: Steak Isn’t Only For Dinner. Try the daily lunch menu. You can get a luncheon steak that includes a baked potato, salad and their famous homemade rolls. Start your meal off with a savory appetizer: “Shoot’em Up Shrimp,” Crab Cakes, Calf or Lamb fries, Onion Rings and the list goes on! The Cattlemen’s offers BBQ ribs, Lobster, Chicken, Pasta, Pork Chops, and “The Old Texas Standby” Chicken Fried Steak. Prime Rib is served on Friday & Saturday nights. Cattlemen’s charcoal-broiled extensive steak selection is “The Ultimate in a Fine Steak!” Steaks can be ordered with a variety of enticing sauces: Teriyaki,
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Cognac Pepper Corn, Béarnaise, or Gorgonzola. Seafood selections include Lobster, Jumbo Shrimp, Crab Cakes, Halibut, Salmon, Tilapia, and Catfish. Top off your dinner with a homemade dessert: Apple or Pecan Pie, Cobbler, Banana Pudding, Chocolate Cake or New York Style Cheesecake. Private banquet rooms offer seating for 10 to 120. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. & Sun. noon-9 p.m. 2458 N. Main St., 817624-3945, www.cattlemenssteakhouse.com.
CHAPPS Hamburger Cafe - Chapps serves hamburgers made with 1/2 lb. fresh ground chuck on a homemade bun. Or pick one of the 6 combination cheeseburgers. Sandwich choices range from grilled chicken, cajun or mushroom chicken with Swiss cheese to chicken fried steak. Dinner options can be chicken strips with gravy or chicken fried steak served with fries and Texas toast. Salads & a kid’s menu are also available. Side dish options go from onion rings to stuffed Jalapeño. Sodas, tea & beer are drink choices. Chapps serves lunch & DINNER. In Fort Worth at 6219 Oakmont Blvd., (Hulen & Oakmont), 817-263-5172 & Burleson, TX, 251 S.W. Wilshire, #126, 817-295-9972, www.chappscafe.com. EDDIE V’S PRIME SEAFOOD - Seafood, steaks and rhythm. Eddie V’s Prime Seafood was inspired by the great classic seafood restaurants of New Orleans, San Francisco and Boston. Eddie V’s offers the freshest seafood, right off the docks and USDA prime, center-cut, steaks - aged 28 days and broiled to perfection. The atmosphere is warm and inviting. Get in rhythm in the V-Lounge with dining and live music nightly. Open daily at 4 p.m. Eddie V’s Museum Place, 3100 W. 7th St., 817336-8000, www.eddiev.com. FRED’S TEXAS CAFE - The burgers at Terry Chandler’s funky little Fort Worth joint have snagged arm loads of awards and even earned national attention, most recently from the Food Network and Guy Fieri’s Diners, Drive-ins and Dives. Authentic, mile-high hamburgers made from 100% pure Texas raised ground beef are Fred’s claim to fame. Try the Fredburger, the Big Fred, or the Diablo burger with hand cut french fries. Chicken fried steaks, quail, sandwiches, tacos, quesadillas, and salads are also served. Established in 1978, Fred’s offers visitors a taste of what the Fort Worth locals have enjoyed for over 30 years. Tue.-Sat. 10:30 a.m.midnight, Sun. 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m., closed Mondays. 915 Currie St., 817-332-0083, www.fredstexascafe.com. GRACE delivers a dining experience like no other in Fort Worth. Adam Jones, known as the city’s host for the unparalleled level of hospitality and service in his restaurants, invites you to enjoy Modern American Classic fare, created by award winning Chef Blaine Staniford. In a comfortable modern setting that embodies the city’s energy, guests can enjoy the outdoor terrace on Main Street and a spectacular bar featuring unique seasonal cocktails with a separate menu for bar snacks. Glass-enclosed temperature controlled wine cellars house a selection of Old and New World wines. For private events four private dining rooms with multimedia capabilities seat 12 to 60 guests. Appetizers include crab cake, oysters, sashimi, and steak tartare. From the dinner menu, choices are prime rib, beef, lamb, pork, chicken, fish, pasta, soups and salads. Mon.-Thu. 5:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 5:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m. 777 Main St., 817877-3388, www.gracefortworth.com.
THE GREAT OUTDOORS - Options for breakfast (served anytime of day), include a breakfast sub, white or whole wheat, toasted and buttered or croissants filled with eggs, ham or pastrami and cheddar, Swiss or cream cheese. For lunch choose from roast beef, turkey, ham or The Outdoor BBQ™, The Great Special™ or The Outdoorsman™. Cheese, mushrooms & black olives may all be added to these subs. Add either a salad from the Shades ’o Green menu or cheese broccoli or chicken noodle soup. Dessert can be cheesecake with a special topping or the Great Outdoors all natural ice cream. (Cookies & white & whole wheat sub rolls are baked fresh daily, on location, with no preservatives.) Drinks range from assorted sodas to fresh lemonade to IBC Root Beer. Giant party subs and meat & cheese platters for home or office gatherings are also available with 24 hrs. notice. Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. & Sun. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 3204 Camp Bowie Blvd. at University. 817877-4400, www.greatoutdoorsubs.com. HOFFBRAU STEAKS - True rustic atmosphere with good “ole” Texas hospitality. Hoffbrau is famous for its chargrilled steaks, cut fresh daily at their own USDA meat plant. They serve up chicken, pork chops, seafood and more. Great lunch specials and a large variety of award winning beers. GREAT STEAKS - NO BULL. Full service bar. Hoffbrau is open 7 days a week. In Fort Worth, 1712 S. University Dr., 817-870-1952, Haltom City, 4613 Denton Hwy. (Hwy. 377) 817-498-1212, Granbury, 315 E. Hwy. 377, 817-776-4982, and in Dallas, 311 N. Market, 214-742-4663, www.HoffbrauSteaks.com. The Lonesome Dove Western Bistro Tim Love, Iron Chef winner, changes the menu at The Lonesome Dove daily but here is an idea of some of the dishes he creates. A first course choice could be RabbitRattlesnake Sausage, spicy Manchego Rostia and Crème Fraiche or Wild Boar Ribs, Lonesome Dove BBQ, and House Pickles. The Main course could be Red Lobster En Papillote, squash, chilies and mint or Rocky Mountain Elk Loin, spring Vegetable Ragu and Crispy Potatoes. Two items from the dessert menu are Tuaca Milkshake with Assorted Cookies & Truffles and Red Velvet Roulade with Mascarpone Cream. Lonesome Dove’s wine cellar is well stocked and Whites and Reds are available by the glass. 2406 N. Main St., 817-7408810, www.lonesomedovebistro.com. Reata Restaurant - Choosing from the best that Southwestern food has to offer, Reata (Spanish for rope), offers a menu that ranges from steaks to Creole to Southern dishes. An example for the first course is Field Greens with Texas Goat Cheese, San Saba pecans with Sherry Wine Vinaigrette. The main course could be Reata’s Chicken Fried Steak with Cracked Pepper Cream Gravy and a couple of sides like Jalapeno and Cheddar grits and bacon wrapped asparagus. End with Texas Pecan Pie. Reata has a carefully selected wine list that “complements” its Texas cuisine. Reata is the name of the ranch in the movie Giant made in 1956, based on the novel by Edna Ferber. 310 Houston St. in Sundance Square, 817-336-1009 or www.reata.net. St. Emilion - Le restaurant Français de Fort Worth. Since 1985, St. Emilion has been serving classic French cuisine such as Les Escargots in garlic butter and French Onion Soup as a precursor to a main course of prime beef, duck, pork and fresh seafood accompanied by sauces such as a black peppercorn or sour cherry sauce or Black Truffle Demi-Glace. Desserts include Crème Brulée, Brandy Ice, or Raspberry Tarte. A full wine list is available as well as Red or White wine by the glass. Nightly Blackboard Specials lists additional appetizers and main courses. St. Emilion will also customize a vegetarian plate. The Zagat Guide listed St. Emilion as one of the top five restaurants in the Dallas/Fort Worth area in 2010. 3617 W. 7th Street, 817-737-2781, www.saint-emilionrestaurant.com.
From the
Fort Worth CVB Experience Texas-Style Summer Fun this June in Fort Worth
By Merianne Roth, CTA, Vice President of Marketing & Communications, Fort Worth Convention & Visitors Bureau Welcome summer visitors! Gather your friends and family for all the fun that summer brings to Fort Worth. 2013 Texas Motor Speedway- Firestone 550 NASCAR/INDYCAR Doubleheader June 6-8, Texas Motor Speedway, 817-215-8500 www.texasmotorspeedway.com Rev up your engines for three full days of race excitement at Texas Motor Speedway! Ticket prices vary: visit www.texasmotorspeedway.com for information. June 6: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Qualifying Night June 7: WinStar World Casino 400 June 8: Firestone 550 3rd Annual “Rockin’ the River – Live on the Trinity” Summer Tubing and Music Series June 6-27, Panther Island Pavilion, 817-698-0700 www.pantherislandpavillion.com Beat the Texas heat and float up to the best seat in the house for a summer of free concerts! Bring your own floats, kayaks, and paddleboards. June 6: Josh Weathers with Steve Helms Band June 13: Six Market Blvd with Matt Kimbrow June 20: Jonathan Tyler and the Northern Lights June 27: Thieving Birds with Union Hill Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra presents the 23rd annual Concerts in the Garden June 7-July 6 (weekends), Fort Worth Botanic Garden, 817-665-6000, www.fwsymphony.org Enjoy a picnic under the stars while listening to the beautiful sounds of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra, local, and national musicians. Ticket prices and artists vary. Reel Adventures Scavenger Hunts—Night at the Museum June 15, 22, & 29, Fort Worth Museum of Science & History, 817-255-9300, www.fwmuseum.org Night at the Museum: The IMAX Experience is back for a limited engagement! And you’ll have the opportunity to see Galileo in the Planetarium, Cleopatra in the sands of Dino Dig, Cowboys and Indians in the Cattle Raiser’s Museum, and more! Visit www.fwmuseum.org for ticket information. For other information call 800-433-5747 or visit www.FortWorth.com. Information is also available at one of our Visitor Information Centers downtown or in the Stockyards. June 2013
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Key Points of Interest
Amon Carter Museum OF AMERICAN ART -
Located in Fort Worth’s cultural district, the Amon Carter Museum offers visitors a stunning survey of American art, from the first landscape painters of the 1830s to modern artists of the twentieth century. The collection includes masterworks by such luminaries as Alexander Calder, Thomas Cole, Stuart Davis, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, Georgia O’Keeffe, John Singer Sargent, and Alfred Stieglitz. The museum also houses founder Amon G. Carter’s collection of works by the two greatest artists of the American WestFrederic Remington and Charles M. Russell. The Carter’s holdings by these two artists are recognized as the finest and most comprehensive in the world. The museum’s photography collection ranks among the top five in the country, with more than 30,000 exhibitionquality prints that cover the breadth of the medium’s history. Continuous programs of special exhibitions, docent-guided tours, gallery talks, and lectures. Hrs. Tue., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sun. noon 5 p.m., closed Mondays & major holidays. Admission is free. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd., 817738-1933, www.cartermuseum.org. Bureau of Engraving and Printing - Learn
how billions of dollars are printed at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing’s (BEP) state-of-the-art Tour and Visitor Center located in Fort Worth, Texas, where over half of the nation’s currency order is produced. As the U.S. Government’s security printer, the BEP is responsible for the design, engraving, and printing of all U.S. paper currency. Visitors will experience two floors of interactive exhibits and displays, view the theater movie on currency production, take a 45-minute guided tour on the elevated walkway, and purchase uncut currency and souvenir items in the Moneyfactory Gift Shop. From August through May, general public tours are conducted every 30 minutes from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and for the months of June and July, every 30 minutes from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Visitor Center is closed on weekends, Federal holidays, and the week between Christmas and New Year’s Day. Admission is FREE! For more info, go to www.moneyfactory.gov, or call 817-231-4000 local, or 866-865-1194 toll-free (for either line, press 2 to speak directly with the tour scheduler). 9000 Blue Mound Road, Fort Worth, TX 76131. FORT WORTH BOTANIC GARDEN - 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd. The Rose Garden was started in 1933. It now has more than 3,400 roses with peak blooming times from April to October. Walk into the Fragrance Garden for the visually impaired, stroll through the Japanese Garden with its waterfalls, pools and Koi fish, smell the herbs in the Perennial Garden, examine the large collection of begonias in the Exhibition Greenhouse, and go into the Conservatory to see orchids and bromeliads. A fee is charged to view the Conservatory and the Japanese Garden. The main garden is free and open from 8 a.m. until sunset daily. The Japanese Garden is open from 9 a.m.-7 p.m., also daily. 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd., 817-871-7689 or www.fwbg.org. THE FORT WORTH HERD-TEXAS LONGHORNS -
Daily cattle drives through the Stockyards National Historic District recall Fort Worth of the late 1800s. Twice daily, weather permitting, and it’s not a major holiday, cowhands, dressed in 19th century ranching gear, drive 10 to 15 Texas longhorn steers down Exchange Ave. Best viewing areas for the 11:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. drives
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are the front lawn of the Livestock Exchange Building or across the street near the Stockyards Visitor’s Center. The Herd also offers education programs based on the trailing life of a cowboy for school groups and other organizations by appointment only. 817-336-4373, www.fortworthherd.com.
FORT WORTH MUSEUM OF SCIENCE & HISTORY’s
new facility, designed by Legorreta+Legorreta, features innovative learning studios, the Cattle Raisers Museum, the Fort Worth Children’s Museum, Stars Café, exhibits focusing on energy, history and dinosaurs, special exhibitions, and a new digital Noble Planetarium. The Omni Theater, an IMAX dome, is now part of the Museum. The theater has been upgraded with a new digital sound system and enhanced LED lighting. Open daily. 1600 Gendy St., 817-255-9300, www.fortworthmuseum.org. Fort Worth Water Gardens - Built in 1974,
Philip Johnson and John Burgee’s design for the Fort Worth Water Garden was to be a “cooling oasis in the concrete jungle.” The main elements of the design are three pools of water: the meditation pool; the aerating pool and the active pool where water runs over layers of rocks and steps to a small pool 38 feet below. Special lighting makes the night sparkle. Numerous plants and trees also decorate the Water Gardens. The site was used as the backdrop for some scenes from the film Logan’s Run in 1976. 1502 Commerce St., Hrs. 7 a.m.11:30 p.m. Information: 817-392-7111; reservations 817-5718.
FORT WORTH ZOO - A trip to the Fort Worth Zoo is an
adventure where you’ll see creatures from around the world who all seem right at home in their lush, natural habitats. In many settings, visitors are only separated from the animals by a river or waterfall, and are often face-to-face with the animals through large viewing windows! The Zoo is home to more than 5,000 exotic animals, including lowland gorillas, Asian cats, bears, a world-famous reptile collection and an insectarium. Visitors exploring Texas Wild!, a turn-of-the-century area featuring six different regions of the state, will experience the different sights and sounds of all those areas. Hrs. are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The Zoo is open Thanksgiving & Christmas from noon to 4 p.m. & New Year’s Day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Zoo tickets include entry into Texas Wild! Gen. Ad. $12, Seniors 65+, $9, children 3-12, $9, 2 & under free. Parking is $5 per vehicle. Half-price tickets on Wednesdays. 1989 Colonial Pkwy., 817-7597555, www.fortworthzoo.org. KIMBELL ART MUSEUM - One of the outstanding art
museums in the U.S. The award-winning building was the last completed work under personal supervision of architect Louis I. Kahn. As well as an excellent permanent collection, the museum offers a full program of changing exhibitions, lectures, concerts, films, workshops and tours. Bookstore, lunch and snack bar (The Buffet). Open Tue.-Thurs. & Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. noon-8 p.m. & Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed Mondays. 3333 Camp Bowie. 817-332-8451, www.kimbellart.org.
LOG CABIN VILLAGE - 2100 Log Cabin Village Ln. (off
University Dr. across from the Ft. Worth Zoo)- Set on 2.5 acres in historic Forest Park, Log Cabin Village consists of seven log homes dating back to the mid-1800s. Pioneer history comes to life through the authentic log homes and artifacts, a blacksmith shop, a one-room
schoolhouse, a water powered gristmill and an herb garden. See historical interpreters demonstrate various pioneer chores such as candle making, spinning and weaving. Special tours available. Hrs. Tue.-Fri. 9 a.m.4 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Gen. Ad. $4.50, Seniors and youths, $4. 817-392-5881, www.logcabinvillage.org. Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth -
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth - Designed by the world-renowned architect Tadao Ando, this striking building is composed of 5 pavilions of concrete and glass arranged around a 1.5 acre reflecting pond. The Modern maintains one of the foremost collections of postwar art in the central United States, consisting of more than 3,000 significant works of modern and contemporary international art, including pieces by Anselm Kiefer, Robert Motherwell, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Gerhard Richter, Susan Rothenberg, Richard Serra, Andre Serrano, Cindy Sherman, and Andy Warhol. Visitors to the museum can also enjoy lunch in Café Modern’s elliptical dining room set on the reflecting pond or shop for unique gifts at The Modern Shop. Educational programming and the Museum’s film series, Magnolia at the Modern, take place in the Museum’s state-of-the-art auditorium. Located in the Cultural District at 3200 Darnell St. Gen. Ad. 13 to adult $10, Seniors & students with an ID, $4, & children under 13, free. Half-price Wednesdays. First Sunday of each month, admission is free. Access to the Grand Lobby, Café Modern, and The Modern Shop is free. Hrs. Tue.Thurs., Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Closed Mondays, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Day & Independence Day. 817-738-9215, www.themodern.org. NATIONAL MULTICULTURAL WESTERN HERITAGE
MUSEUM - Filling in the gaps of history is easy to do at the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum. Through artifacts, artwork, historical records, and current events, this collection offers a true perspective and a fuller and richer cultural view of the people and activities that contributed to the building of the historical American West. The mission of the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum is to offer the visitor a complete recognition of this historical process. The building’s layout, with a large central room, easily accommodates many chairs for storytelling, meetings and lectures. The smaller rooms are specifically themed with topics such as the Buffalo Soldiers, the Tuskegee Airmen, Native American and Hispanic contributions to the settlement of the American western frontier. Other rooms are dedicated to the Hall of Fame inductees and research of potential nominees. Hrs: Wed.-Sat. from 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Closed major holidays. Gen. Ad. $6, seniors $4, students with an ID $3, & children under 5, free. Group rates are available. 3400 Mount Vernon Ave., 817-534-8801, e-mail: info@cowboysofcolor.org, web site: www.cowboysofcolor.org. NATIONAL COWGIRL MUSEUM & HALL OF FAME
- Women of the American West are honored here. Not only those who have lived and worked on ranches or who have sat a horse in a rodeo arena, but also the woman who led an expedition to the Pacific Ocean, or the ones who have stood on a stage, sat at an easel, stood before a classroom, sat to put words on paper, aimed a rifle and hit the bulls eye, or sat on the highest court in the land, all these are celebrated for their spirit and determination. The museum with its more than 5,000 artifacts and information on over 400 women is located in Ft. Worth’s Cultural District next to the Ft. Worth Museum of Science & History. The Museum, whose motto is “The Women Who Shape the West…Change the World” also has an award winning gift shop you will not want to miss. Hrs: Tue.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed Mon. except Memorial Day through Labor Day & during the Stock Show. Closed Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve Day,
Christmas Day, & New Year’s Day. Gen. Ad. $10, seniors & children $8, children 3 & under free with paid adult. 1720 Gendy St., 817-336-4475, 800-476-3263, www.cowgirl.net. Sid Richardson Museum - Enjoy vibrant paintings of the Old West by Frederic Remington (1861-1909), Charles M. Russell (1864-1926), and other Western artists from the personal collection of Texas oilman and philanthropist Sid W. Richardson (1891-1959). Established in 1982, this museum has one of the nation’s most significant small collections of Remington’s and Russell’s. Second Saturdays of each month, at 1 p.m., a docent leads a free public tour followed by For Love of Russell where a docent takes the role of Nancy Russell, Russell’s wife, and relates stories about his career. Fourth Saturdays from 2 p.m. to 3, the Musuem holds Gallery Chats and a free tour. Group tours are by appointment only. Mon.Thurs. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sun. noon to 5 p.m. Closed major holidays. Free admission. 309 Main Street downtown in Sundance Square. 1-888332-6554, www.sidrichardsonmuseum.org. STOCKYARDS & Stockyards Station are unique places in Texas: an exciting blend of old and new. The livestock industry began to develop here in the 1880s. There were cattle, sheep, and hog pens and horse and mule barns. The original wooden barns burned in 1911 and were replaced with concrete and steel buildings. Stockyards Station is proudly dedicated to the preservation of the livestock industry. Evidence of that is the twice daily cattle drives at 11:30 a.m. & 4 p.m. Refurbished livestock pens and sheds, some with the original brick floors, now house 25 shops including restaurants offering everything from roasted suckling pig to enchiladas. This is also where you can go to Billy Bob’s, the world’s largest honky tonk, historic Cowtown Coliseum and the Livestock Exchange Building. Stockyards Station’s event calendar is at www.stockyardsstation.com. Along Exchange Ave., 817-625-9715, www.fortworthstockyards.org. STOCKYARDS MUSEUM - is located in the historic Livestock Exchange building. Displays include cattlemen and cowboy photographs and equipment, photographs and artifacts of meat packers Swift & Co. and Armour & Co. and their employees, and a section devoted to women’s activities in the early 20th century. A Native American exhibit features artifacts from several tribes with special emphasis on Commanche Chief Quannah Parker. An electric light bulb first turned on in 1908 at the Byers Opera House in Fort Worth is still burning at the museum. The North Fort Worth Historical Society sponsors the Stockyards Museum. Hours are Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed on Sundays. A donation of $2 per adult helps support this nonprofit museum. Students and young children get in free. 131 E. Exchange Ave., 817625-5082, www.stockyardsmuseum.org. The Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame - housed in the renovated Horse & Mule Barns in the Stockyards National Historic District, honors Texas Cowboys & Cowgirls who have excelled in their rodeo careers. Many multiyear champions are featured: for example Ty Murray, Larry Mahan, Harry Tompkins and Charmayne James. Display booths for each honoree contain saddles, chaps, belt buckles, trophies and photos that highlight their careers. Most booths in the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame are equipped with continuous-play videos detailing a cowboy or cowgirl’s career. Also featured are the Sterquell Wagons and the John Justin Trail of Fame. The 60-plus Sterquell Wagons from the 1700s to the 1900s, are fully restored and showcase the horse-drawn vehicles used for work and pleasure during that period. Hrs. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. & Sun. noon-6 p.m. Gen. Ad. $5, Seniors 60+, $4 & children 3-12, $3. Group rates available for 20 or more. 128 E. Exchange Ave., Barn A, 817-626-7131, www.texascowboyhalloffame.org.
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11 Time Country Music Club of the Year
1 Sammy Kershaw 7 Will Hoge 8 Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band 14 Reckless Kelly 15 Mark Chesnutt 21 Bleu Edmondson 22 Merle Haggard 28 Cody Johnson 29 Bob Schneider 7/4 Willie Nelson’s 4th of July Picnic
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N A T I O N A L
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817.332.CATS fwcats.com
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Dates & prices are subject to change. Please confirm all information with the attraction or sponsoring organization.
Ongoing Grapevine Vintage Railroad’s steam engine “Puffy” and the 1953 GP-7 diesel locomotive, runs Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, until September, to and from the Fort Worth Stockyards and back again to its starting point in Grapevine. The Grapevine to the Stockyards run departs Grapevine at 1 p.m. and arrives in the Stockyards around 2:15 p.m. The return trip departs the Stockyards at 4:15 p.m. and arrives back in Grapevine about 5:45 p.m. The hour-long Trinity River Fun Run leaves from the Stockyards at 2:45 p.m. Tickets for the Grapevine to Fort worth run are Touring Class $20, 1st class $28, seniors 55+ $18 & $26, and children, 3-12, $10 & $18. Tickets for the Trinity River run are $10 & $15, seniors $9 & $14, and children $6 & $10. One-way tickets are available for both runs. Plan to be at the depot 30 minutes before departure time – Grapevine at 707 S. Main St., open 11 a.m.-1 p.m., & the Fort Worth Stockyards Station, noon-4: 30 p.m., at 140 E. Exchange Ave. 817-4103123, or www.gvrr.com. Ongoing The National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame houses over 2,000 artifacts and information about more than 400 remarkable women. The 33,000 square foot museum honors women who have distinguished themselves while exemplifying the pioneer spirit of the American West. Hrs: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve Day, Christmas Day, & New Year’s Day. Gen. Ad. $10, seniors & children $8, children 3 & under free with paid adult. 1720 Gendy St., 817-336-4475, 800-476-3263, www.cowgirl.net. Ongoing Fort Worth Stockyards Historical DistrictThe Texas Longhorn Cattle Drive occurs twice daily, weather permitting, but they don’t mosey along on major holidays. Herders dressed in 19th-century cowboy gear drive 15 to 17 head of cattle down
The Original and Only
Exchange Ave. Best viewing areas for the 11:30 a.m. & 4 p.m. drives are the front lawn of the Livestock Exchange Bldg. or across the street near the Stockyards Visitor’s Center. Free. Along E. Exchange Ave., 817-336-4373, www.fortworthherd.com. Ongoing Ft. Worth Botanic Garden-Wander among trees, flowers and along waterways of the 109-acre park. A greenhouse, cafe, and gift shop are three detours in the journey. The main gardens are free & open daily from dawn until dusk. A small fee is required for the 7.5 acre Japanese garden, which is open daily 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and offers tours that take about an hour. A small fee is also required for the conservatory-open Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. & Sun. 1-6 p.m. The Gardens Restaurant is on site. Off University Dr. at 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd., 817871-7689, www.fwbg.org. Ongoing Ft. Worth Trinity Park-The Log Cabin Village living history museum depicts the lifestyle of pioneers who settled this area in the mid-to-late 1800s. Hrs: Tues.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 1-5 p.m. Gen. Ad. $4.50, seniors & youths 4-17, $4, children under 4, free. 2100 Log Cabin Village Ln., 817-392-5881, www.logcabinvillage.org.
Ongoing The Christian Arts Commission of Fort Worth’s Museum is now home for the wax sculpture based on Leonardo da Vinci’s tempera wall masterpiece in Milan titled The Last Supper. The sculpture has not been exhibited since 1997 and was put back on display Aug. 7, 2009. One of the few works of art featuring Jesus and all twelve disciples, Katherine Stubergh sculpted these life size figures in 1956, which was commissioned by Fort Worth oilman William Fleming. The Museum also holds a wall of 28 crosses of Christendom in puddle bronze and burnished copper. Open Wed. through Sat. from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Admission is free. Donations
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welcome. For more info go to www.cacmuseum.org. 3205 Hamilton Ave., 817-332-7878. Ongoing The Ft. Worth Zoo, home to more than 500 animal species and a world-famous reptile collection, housed in the Museum of Living Art, is ranked no. 5 in the nation by USA Travel Guide and the no. 1 attraction in the DFW Metroplex by the Zagat survey. “Texas Wild!” an 8-acre area of the Zoo, allows guests to encounter more than 300 creatures and visit 6 different regions of the Lone Star State in just hours. Hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. The Zoo is also open Thanksgiving & Christmas from noon to 4 p.m. & New Year’s Day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. General Admission is $12, seniors 65+ and children 3-12, $9. Ticket price includes entry into “Texas Wild!” Parking $5. Half-price tickets are available every Wednesday. 1989 Colonial Pkwy. For more information call, 817-871-7050, or go to www.fortworthzoo.org. Ongoing Fort Worth’s history is housed in the nearly 100-year-old Fire Station No. 1 building located in the City Center Complex. This Fort Worth Museum of Science & History exhibit traces Fort Worth’s development from its beginning as a frontier outpost, through its rowdy youth as a cattle town to the present. The exhibit features graphics, historical artifacts, photographs and documents, reproduced paintings and original posters. Hrs. 9 a.m.-8 p.m. daily. Free. Corner of 2nd & Commerce Sts., 817-255-9300. Through June 2 Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents FOCUS: Barry McGee who developed as an artist during the graffiti boom in San Francisco. Both self-taught and formally trained his
background includes influences from the Mexican Muralists, tramp art, the surfer culture, and graffiti from the 1970s and ‘80s, as well as the Beat Poets. One of his most popular motifs is a sad-sack man with a furrowed brow. McGee has also worked under the names Twist (Twister, Twisty and Twisto), Ray Fong, and some other names. The artist’s drawings, paintings, sculptures, and installations have been exhibited in numerous art museums across the USA. For more info, call 817-738-9215 or visit www.themodern.org. 3200 Darnell St. Through June 16 Jubilee Theatre presents Knock Me a Kiss by Charles Smith; directed by Tre Garrett. This romanticized account is the real story about the 1928 marriage of W.E.B. Du Bois’s daughter Yolande to Countee Cullen, one of Harlem’s celebrated poets. The union was said to have marked the height of the Harlem Renaissance. Not recommended for children. Thurs.-Sat. 8 p.m., Sat & Sun. 3 p.m. For tickets call 817-338-4411 or visit www.jubileetheatre.org. Free garage parking two blocks east of the theater. 506 Main St. Through June 16 Runway Theatre presents Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, with the troubled characters Blanche DuBois, her sister Stella and her brother-in-law Stanley. Rated R. Fri. & Sat. at 8 p.m. & Sun. at 3. For reservations, call 817-4884842 or visit www.runwaytheatre.com. Grapevine, TX, 215 N. Dooley St., 76051. Through June 23 Stage West presents the much-requested Stones in His Pockets by Marie Jones about two Irish extras on a film shoot. Two
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actors portray an ensemble of characters in this witty and engrossing play about how it is the little things can make a big impact. Enjoy dinner before the show at Ol’ Vic Café & Gallery. For times and tickets call 817-784-9378 or visit www.stagewest.org. 821 W. Vickery Blvd.
of American Art and the Sid Richardson Museum. Rick Stewart is the guest curator of this exhibition. Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m.-8 p.m. & Sun. noon-5. Admission is free to the Sid Richardson Museum, 309 Main St. For more information call 817332-6554 or visit www.sidrichardsonmuseum.org.
Through July 21 Amon Carter Museum of American Art’s “Ed Ruscha: Made in California” features lithographs created while Ruscha was working at the Tamarind Lithography Workshop in 1969. Known for his images of single words suspended in space, the Los Angeles based artist has experimented with a diverse range of media and styles throughout his career. Admission is free. For more information, call 817-738-1933 or visit www.cartermuseum.org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd.
Through Aug. 11 Amon Carter Museum of American Art’s new exhibition is “Romare Bearden: A Black Odyssey” which displays about 50 works of art from one of the most powerful and original artists of the 20th century. Collages, watercolors, and prints based on Homer’s epic poem The Odyssey make up the exhibit. Bearden was born in Charlotte, N.C. but his family moved to Harlem when he was a child. His family’s home became a meeting place for major figures of the Harlem Renaissance, introducing him to the world of art. He earned a degree from New York University where he was also editor of the monthly journal The Medley. Amon Carter director Andrew J. Walker says, “Bearden’s reinterpretation of The Odyssey has a universal appeal. ...The artworks are beautiful and filled with vivid, saturated colors and geometric images that captivate the imagination. [Since] Bearden’s work is not in our collection, the exhibition offers an introduction of this important American artist to our visitors.” Robert G. O’Meally, curator of the exhibit, authored an illustrated companion book that can be purchased in Amon Carter’s Museum Store+Café for $45. For more info, call 817-738-1933 or visit www.cartermuseum.org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd.
Through August 11 Sid Richardson Museum’s 30th anniversary exhibition “Violent Motion: Frederic Remington’s Artistry in Bronze,” part 2 is on view. Some of the works in this pairings of bronzes and paintings are—The Outlaw (cast #2), ca. 1906-07, bronze is paired with The Cowboy, 1902, oil on canvas, The Mountain Man (unnumbered cast), 1903, bronze, with The Unknown Explorers, 1908, oil on canvas. The Rattlesnake (cast #5) 1906 paired with A Taint on the Wind, 1906, oil on canvas. Coming Through the Rye (cast #1) bronze, 1902, and The Wounded Bunkie (cast letter B) bronze 1896. The Bronco Buster (cast #36) ca. 1905-06, bronze, and The Cow Puncher, 1901, oil on canvas and The Puncher, 1895, oil on canvas. The Cheyenne (cast #7) ca. 1904, bronze, and Buffalo Runners-Big Horn Basin, 1908, oil on canvas. These works and others are from private collections, the Amon Carter Museum
Through Sept. 2 The Fort Worth Museum of Science and History presents “Elvis at 21: Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer.” Had Elvis lived he would
MAY 25 - SEPTEMBER 2 For more information visit fortworthmuseum.org
1600 Gendy Street • Fort Worth, Texas 76107 • 817-255-9300 Sponsored locally by:
Exhibit Title Sponsor 2012-2013
20 K E YKEY M A G A ZMag INE J u n e 2 0 1 3 FW
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Official Airline
have been 78 on Jan. 8, of this year and this is FWMS&H’s birthday celebration for him. Wertheimer shot the photos of the almost unknown Elvis in 1956 before he became a superstar. The exhibition contains about 40 large-format photographs of Elvis on the road, in concert, and recording, and at his home. Hrs. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 & Sun. noon-5. For tickets call 817-255-9300 or visit www.fortworthmuseum.org. 1600 Gendy St.
these musicians. June 6-9 each finalist will perform two pieces— a concerto from a prepared list and another work of their choosing. Leonard Slatkin will conduct the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra during these sessions. Performance time June 6-8 is 7:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. June 9. Winning pianists will be announced along with the presentation of awards beginning at 7 p.m. June 9. Ticket prices, $10 to $135, depend on the session. Children attending the competition must be at least 10 years-of-age. For tickets call 817-212-4280 or visit www.basshall. com. Free parking is available at Carter-Burgess, City Center II, and at meter spaces after 6 p.m. weekdays and all day on Saturday and Sunday. Bass Performance Hall, 4th & Calhoun Sts.
Through Sept. 9 The National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame presents “Tough By Nature: Portraits of Cowgirls and Ranch Women of the American West,” by portrait artist Lynda Lanker. Lanker spent 15 years traveling through 13 states in the American West to sketch, draw and paint the 49 women featured in the exhibition. In executing the portraits, Lanker used a mixed media of oil pastel over watercolor. And in at least one instance she used egg tempera to get the results she wanted. Among the women whose portraits make up the display, eight are honorees in the National Cowgirl Museum’s Hall of Fame. Indeed, one of the honorees, Sandra Day O’Conner, wrote the introduction to the 132-page book accompanying the exhibit, which will be available in the Cowgirl Gift Shop. For more information, call 817336-4475 or visit www.cowgirl.net. 1720 Gendy St.
1,2,8,9,15,16,22,23,29,30 Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District-Cowtown Coliseum hosts Pawnee Bill’s Wild West Show. Family friendly entertainment. 2:30 & 4:30 p.m. Box seats $18, Gen. Ad. $15, Seniors 60+ $11 & children 3-12, $8. 121 E. Exchange Ave., 817-625-1025, www.StockyardsRodeo.com.
Through Nov. 9 Texas Star Dinner Theater presents Write Between the Eyes, an Old West Murder Mystery. You are invited to take a lighthearted trip back to the Wild West of the 1880s “where historical meets hysterical.” Every Friday and Saturday doors open at 7 p.m., dinner is served at 7:30 p.m. and the show begins at 8. For ticket prices and reservations call 817-310-5588 or visit www.texasstardinnertheater.com. 816 S. Main St., Grapevine, TX. 76051.
2 Peter Ligon will lead the free basic drawing class for adults of all skill levels at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth’s “Drawing from the Collection,” session from 2 until 3:30 p.m. Bring a sketchbook
Fridays & Saturdays Four Day Weekend is a six-member comedy troupe in Fort Worth who specializes in interactive performance, building each show around audience suggestions and participation. Through the use of interactive video, music and the improvisational skills of the talented cast, Four Day Weekend has created the longest-running live show in Fort Worth’s history. In addition to weekly live public performances in their 212-seat theater, Four Day Weekend also offers a wide variety of corporate event services, from team building seminars to keynote addresses. Come see the talent people are talking about! Show Tickets $20. Fridays and Saturdays, 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. 312 Houston St., 817-226-4329. www.fourdayweekend.com.
1,7,8,14,15,21,22,28,29 Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District Cowtown Coliseum hosts the Stockyards Championship Rodeo. 8 p.m. Reserved box seats & VIP $22.50, Gen. Ad. $17.50, seniors 60+, $12.50 & children 3-12, $10. 121 E. Exchange Ave., 817-625-1025, www.StockyardsRodeo.com.
Violent Motion: Frederic Remington’s Artistry in Bronze
Saturdays Fort Worth Nature Center & Refuge offers naturalist-led nature hikes that feature blooming wildflowers, commonly seen insects, birds, and animals and current projects going on at the Refuge. Water and appropriate clothing are suggested. Cost is $5. From 10 a.m.-noon. 9601 Fossil Ridge Rd., 817-392-7410, www.fwnaturecenter.org.
Rarely seen sculptures through August 11 Free docent-guided tours on Tuesdays at 2 p.m.
1 Billy Bob’s Texas-Sammy Kershaw. Tickets $12 & $18. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com.
Free admission | Open daily | Museum store www.sidrichardsonmuseum.org/129
1-9—June 1-4, the 14th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition moves into the Semifinal round with each of the remaining 12 competitors performing a 60 minute solo recital piece of their choice. Times for the two daily performances begin at 1:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Six finalists will be chosen from
309 Main St. in Sundance Square Fort Worth, TX 76102 | 817.332.6554
June 2013
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and pencils. Registration is not required but a sign-in sheet is available at the information desk. For more information, call 817-738-9215 or visit www.themodern.org. 3200 Darnell St.
panions, can create their own colorful collage. From 10:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. For more information, call 817-738-1933 or visit www.cartermuseum.org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd.
4 & 5 Kimbell Art Museum’s Pictures and Pages, for ages 4-6, features popular children’s books to inspire conversation and simple art projects. Tuesday and Wednesday’s book is Sophie’s Masterpiece: A Spider’s Tale, by Eileen Spinelli with illustrations by Jane Dyer. These programs are free, but since space is limited, advance reservations are required. No more than two children for each adult partner are requested. Call 817-332-8451, ext. 351, or e-mail edassist@kimbellmuseum.org to put your child’s name on the list. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd.
8 Billy Bob’s Texas-Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band. Tickets $15 & $35. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com.
6 The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth features “Movies that Matter,” at 7 p.m. Presented by the City of Fort Worth Human Relations Commission in partnership with the Modern and the Public Library, these quarterly films examine various human rights issues. Moderated discussion follows each screening. Tonight’s movies are A Class Apart, 2009, and The Barber of Birmingham, 2011. Seating is limited for this free series: for reservations call 817-3927525. 3200 Darnell St. 7 Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth’s First Fridays at the Modern features cocktails, music and dining. Tonight Nick Kithas and Friends are in charge of the music and the signature cocktail is The Hotty, in the Grand Lobby from 5 p.m. until 8. Café Modern is open for dinner from 5 until 8:30 p.m., and the film series Magnolia at the Modern, offers critically acclaimed movies at 6 and 8 p.m. For a film schedule, see the entry above under the date June 1-3. For menu selections and dinner reservations call 817840-2157. 3200 Darnell St. 7 Billy Bob’s Texas-Will Hoge. Tickets $10 & $15. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com. 7-30 Hip Pocket Theatre presents Archy & Mehitabel (Shinbone Alley) by Joe Darion and Mel Brooks. Darion’s lyrics were based on the stories of Don Marquis. Hip Pocket’s production is directed by Sharon Benge, music by Joe Rogers with artistic design by Michael H. Price. The play is presented through special arrangements with Music Theatre International. Fri., Sat., and Sun. at 9 p.m. For tickets call 817-246-9775 or visit www.hippocket.org. 1950 Silver Creek Road. Fort Worth 76108. 7, 28 & July 5,6 Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie is presenting the 2013 Lone Star Music Series featuring the Josh Abbott Band June 7, Wade Bowen & Kyle Park on the 28. Closing weekend, hear Pat Green on July 5 and on the 6 Billy Currington. Each concert will be staged outdoors, just outside the racing surface in front of the shaded Courtyard of Champions. Concerts are free with the regular $5 admission fee before 9 p.m. Fridays and 5 p.m. Saturdays. After 9 p.m. on Friday nights and 5 p.m. on Saturday’s admission is $20. Gates open at 5 p.m. with the first race scheduled for 6:35 p.m. On Saturday gates open at 11:30 a.m. with the first race at 1:35 p.m. Persons attending the concerts must be 18 years of age: an adult must accompany those under 18. For more information, call 972-263-7223 or visit www.lonestarpark.com. 1000 Lone Star Pkwy., 75050. 8 Amon Carter Museum of American Art presents “Art Discovery: Romare Bearden” where children 7 to 12 years old, accompanied by their adult com-
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June 2013
9 Kimbell Art Museum’s film series “The Private Life of a Masterpiece” looks beyond an art works conception to explore its evolving reputation in the modern world. Today’s film is The Kiss, directed by Bob Bentley, 2004, 50 min., at 2 p.m. in the Museum auditorium. For more information call 817-332-8451 or visit www.kimbellart.org. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. 13-July 13 Circle Theatre presents Miracle on South Division Street by Tom Dudzick. The Nowaks were staunch Roman Catholic Church members. After Clara’s father had a vision in 1943 about the Virgin Mary preaching world peace, he built a twenty-foot shrine of the Blessed Mother and set it up in front of his barbershop, and all these years Clara has tended the statue, despite the deterioration of their neighborhood. Now, her daughter has stopped going to Mass, her son is dating a Jewish girl and a deathbed confession is unraveling the family legend with hilarious results. For times and tickets call 817-877-3040 or visit www.circletheatre.com. 230 W. 4th St. 14 Billy Bob’s Texas-Reckless Kelly. Tickets $15 & $18. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com. 14-16, 21-23, & 28-30 Magnolia at the Modern, an ongoing film series at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, screens critically acclaimed films. Before Midnight can be seen June 14-16. “Honoring all that was memorable about its forebears [Before Sunrise and Before Sunset] while taking the story to new depths of catharsis, Before Midnight stands as… a uniquely satisfying entry in what has shaped up to be an outstanding screen trilogy,” Justin Chang, Variety. Starring Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy as Jesse and Celine. (108 min.). June 21-23, The Reluctant Fundamentalist is the story of a young Pakistani man who chases corporate success on Wall Street and finds himself caught up in a conflict between his American dream, and the call of his family’s homeland. (R, 130 min.). Renoir screens June 28-30. Set in the summer of 1915 on the French Riviera, Jean Renoir, the wounded son of Impressionist painter Pierre-Auguste, returns home after World War I. Accompanying him is a young woman who rejuvenates and enchants both father and son. (R, French with English subtitles, 111 min.). Show times for the 14-16 & 21-23 are Fri. 6 & 8 p.m., Sat. 5 p.m. & Sun. noon, 2 & 4 p.m. The 21-23 they are Fri. 6 p.m. & 8:15 p.m., Sat. 5 p.m. & Sun. 11:45 a.m., 2 p.m., & 4:15 p.m. Tickets are $8.50 and $6.50 for Modern members. Café Modern is open for dinner on Fri. and for brunch on Sun. For more information, call 817-738-9215 or visit www.themodern.org. 3200 Darnell St. 15 Kimbell Art Museum presents a Wari: Lords of the Ancient Andes Symposium in conjunction with its latest exhibition opening tomorrow. Prominent scholars will inaugurate the exhibition offering insights into the Wari civilization and its expansion. No reservations are required for this free event. Eric M. Lee, di-
rector, Kimbell Art Museum will perform the welcome and introduction. Next the Distinguished professor of anthropology, Binghamton University, State University of New York, William H. Isbell, presents “Before the Incas Ruled: Wari, Peru’s First Great Empire.” Then Andrea Fabiola Vazquez, PhD candidate and teaching fellow, Precolumbian art, architecture, and archaeology, Columbia University, New York will address “Pottery and Prestige in the Wari Empire.” Susan E. Bergh, curator of Pre-Columbian and Native North American art, The Cleveland Museum of Art presents “The Material Sublime: Wari Tapestry, Woven and Tie-Dyed Tunics.” For more information call 817-332-8451 or visit www.kimbellart.org. In the Darnell St. auditorium, across Van Cliburn Way from the Museum. 15 Billy Bob’s Texas-Mark Chesnutt. Tickets $12 & $20. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com. 15-Sept. 8 The Amon Carter Museum of American Art features “We the People: Picturing American Identity,” which examines the questions Who is American?, Who represents this country’s identity?, and Who makes it what it is?. The objects depicted in paintings, photographs, sculpture, and works on paper, tries to answer these questions. The exhibition pieces range from the late eighteenth century through the late twentieth century and are built around key moments in history when the meaning of the American identity was challenged and eventually reshaped. For more information, call 817-738-1933 or visit www.cartermuseum.org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd. 16-Sept. 8 Kimbell Art Museum presents Wari: Lords of the Ancient Andes. In the late-sixth-century a drought ravaged the central Andean region of what is Peru today, as well as parts of other nearby countries. The Wari civilization formed a new culture in the wake of the disaster producing a society of such complexity that many today regard it as South America’s first empire. The Kimbell exhibition of about 145 artworks explores the Wari’s accomplishments through polychrome ceramics, ornaments made of precious metals or colorful mosaics, sculptured wood and stone objects, and textiles of amazing complexity. Since the Wari never developed a written language modern opinion about their achievements are based on their artwork and other material remains. It is believed that the artworks were circulated throughout the Wari society acting as
a method of communication about their beliefs: how they saw themselves, nature, and the divine realm. For more information call 817-332-8451 or visit www.kimbellart.org. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. 19 Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth hosts Amphibian Productions National Theatre Live performances of This House at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. For more information and tickets call 817-923-3012 or visit www.amphibianproductions.org. 3200 Darnell St. 21 Billy Bob’s Texas-Bleu Edmondson. Tickets $12. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com. 22 Arlington Music Hall hosts Joe Diffie, country superstar, who will perform many of his hits including Home, If The Devil Danced, Third Rock from the Sun, and Bigger Than the Beatles. Show begins at 7:30 p.m. Tickets range from $30 to $60. For more info, call 817-226-4400 or visit www.arlingtonmusichall.com. 224 N. Center St., Door A. 22 Billy Bob’s Texas-Merle Haggard. Tickets $12 & $40. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com. 27 The Amon Carter Museum of Art hosts its outdoor Sunset Cinema screening Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986, PG-13). Plan a picnic with friends and family and join the group on the museum lawn to watch the movie. Museum tours are from 6:30 p.m.-7:45: the film begins at 8. For more information, call 817-738-1933 or visit www.cartermuseum.org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd. 28 Billy Bob’s Texas-Cody Johnson. Tickets $12. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www. billybobstexas.com. 29 Billy Bob’s Texas-Bob Schneider. Tickets $12 & $25. 10:30 p.m. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com. 30 Kimbell Art Museum’s “Summer Adventure Series: From Amazon to Andes” screens The Motorcycle Diaries, directed by Walter Salles, 2004, 126 min., at 2 p.m. in the Museum auditorium. For more information call 817-332-8451 or visit www.kimbellart.org. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. Coming July 4 Willie Nelson’s 4th of July Picnic. Advance tickets $35. Starts at noon. 2520 Rodeo Plaza, 817-624-7117, www.billybobstexas.com.
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Leave Your Medication at Home? Need a Prescription Filled? Call the Community Independent Pharmacy Nearest You and Prescriptions Can Be Delivered To Your Hotel. MOST PRESCRIPTION PLANS ARE HONORED CENTRAL FORT WORTH DANIEL DRUG 3409 WEST 7TH STREET FORT WORTH, TX 76107 817-332-6386 SOUTHWEST FORT WORTH PERRONE PHARMACY 3921 BENBROOK HIGHWAY FORT WORTH, TX 76116 817-738-2135 ARLINGTON ARLINGTON PHARMACY 801 ROAD TO SIX FLAGS W. ARLINGTON, TX 76012 817-277-7231
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KEY MAGAZINE
June 2013
From the
Glen Rose CVB National Day of the Cowboy Celebrated in Glen Rose
By Billy Huckaby, Director, Glen Rose Convention & Visitors Bureau
National Day of the Cowboy will be celebrated in Glen Rose on July 27, with two outstanding events. Cowboy Mounted Shooters take center-stage at the Somervell County Expo Center on July 26 and 27, while National Day of the Cowboy, Texas Style will be held July 27 at Oakdale Park. Cowboy Mounted Shooting is one of the fastest growing equine sports in the country. Contestants in period dress, ride horseback through a pattern of balloons, shooting them as they go. Winners are determined by time and seconds added for missed targets. There are both men’s and women’s classifications, as well as rifle and pistol. National Day of the Cowboy, Texas Style is a new event to Oakdale Park. Kicking off at 10 a.m., it will be a full day of cowboy music, poetry, storytelling, reenactments, and inductions into the Cowboy Wall of Fame. All of the activities are free to the public. Oakdale Park also has cabins, RV spaces, and tent camping for those who might want to spend the night or weekend. Also, be sure and bring a swimsuit for the Oakdale Park swimming pool, or the Paluxy River, which is just across the street. Glen Rose also offers a number of overnight opportunities ranging from upscale lodges to a variety of bed and breakfasts, cabins, cottages, campgrounds, hotels, and RV parks. For more on Glen Rose attractions, contact the Glen Rose Visitor Information Center at 1-888-346-6282 or visit their website at www.glenrosetexas.net.
GLEN ROSE, TEXAS
June 2013
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Sundance Square Area
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COPYRIGHT 2013, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MAP MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM, NOR ANY PORTION THEREOF.
A. TARRANT COUNTY COURT HOUSE B. RENAISSANCE WORTHINGTON HOTEL C. WELLS FARGO TOWER D. SHOPS, DINING, MUSEUM, ART GALLERIES, LIVE THEATERS, E. RESTAURANTS F. SHOPS, DINING, MUSEUMS, GALLERIES, FT WORTH CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU
G. FLYING SAUCER H. AMC THEATRES, DINING I. PUBLIC PARKING — FREE PARKING AFTER 5 PM & WEEKENDS J. THE TOWER CONDOMINIUMS K. NANCY LEE & PERRY R. BASS PERFORMANCE HALL L. FIRE STATION #1 M. DR HORTON TOWER
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THE DISTANCE BETWEEN SOME LOCATIONS ON THIS MAP ARE NOT ACCURATE. IT HAS BEEN ALTERED TO EMPHASIZE CERTAIN AREAS MORE PROMINENTLY.
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TRADER'S VILLAGE
Joe Pool Lake
COO PER ST
496
1382
303
•
360
FT. WORTH SUBURBAN MAP
MANSFIELD TO WAXAHACHIE
•
TO DALLAS
20
157
157 SPUR
•
MATLOCK
0
BLVD
HIGHLANDS • ARLINGTON
THE PARKS
• MALL
20
161
KWY R P PIONE E ARKANSAS LN
ARBROOK
•
GRAND PRAIRIE
GREAT SO UTHWEST PKWY
Lake Arlington
30
ARLINGTON CONVENTION MILL RD CENTER
ST
820
303 CO OP ER
T
•
COLLINS ST
GREEN OAKS BLVD
PARK ROW
FIELDER
RANDOL
80
LOUIS TUSSAUD'S PALACE OF WAX & RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT!
HURRICANE HARBOR
30
N ST DIVISIO
CAR RI VERIZON THEATRE E
BALLPA RK WAY
N EE GR
VD BL KS OA
R
820
LONE STAR PARK AT GRAND PRAIRIE
CARRIER
EAST MALL
183
IRVING 183
•NORTH
26
EULESS
161
BELT LINE RD
MID-CITIES BLVD
360 INTERNATIONAL PKWY
H W Y G R AP EV IN E
1938
▼
PRECINT LINE RD
COLLEYVILLE
7
7
121
COPYRIGHT 2013, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MAP MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM, NOR ANY PORTION THEREOF.
start at $10 for children and $18 for adults. 705 S. Main Street. And either before or after your railroad excursion, discover Western lore right in the heart of Grapevine! While you’re here, come see Grapevine’s Glockenspiel Clock Tower featuring two, larger-than-life, 9-foot tall Glockenspiel characters, known as the would-be Train Robbers, Nat Barrett and Willy Majors. Set approximately 75 feet above ground, these figures emerge from the Tower several times each day to attempt a train heist. Visitors gather daily to see this exciting look into what might have happened on the Grape Vine Prairie in earlier days. 636 S. Main Street. Free. Make healthy choices this summer with produce and locally grown products from the Grapevine Farmers Market, held every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m., behind the Town Square Gazebo. And if you’re looking for some exciting upgrades to your home décor, check out the Grapevine Market, Thursdays and Saturday, 9 a.m.2 p.m., located in Liberty Park, across from City Hall: through October 19. For more information about Grapevine, call the Grapevine Convention & Visitors Bureau at 800-457-6338 or 817-410-3185 or visit www. GrapevineTexasUSA.com.
Grapevine CVB Summer Fun is Just a Shop and a Train Stop Away in Grapevine
By Leigh Lyons, Grapevine Convention & Visitors Bureau Looking for family-friendly activities this summer? Check out some of Grapevine’s exciting seasonal attractions and summer markets for fun this month. Step back in time on the Grapevine Vintage Railroad. On Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, these 1920s Victorian-style coaches transport riders of all ages back to times gone by on this celebrated railroad. On the Grapevine to the Fort Worth Stockyards train, don’t miss the Great Train Robberies on Saturdays and Sundays. Your little deputies can help capture the notorious outlaws! The train departs Grapevine at 1 p.m. with an expected return of 5:45 p.m. Round-trip tickets
Gaylord Texan
Northwest Highway, W.
26
LOOP
382
BUS
Grapevine Mills
Trail lord Gay
Ruth Wall St.
®
Dooley Street, N.
AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE
Main Street, N.
FORT WORTH
Wall Street, W.
Worth St., E. Franklin St., E. College St., E. Hudgins St., E. Main St. S.
Ave.
Fort Worth
30
KEY MAGAZINE
HWY 360
I-635
HW Y1 14
HWY 183
J u n e 2 0 1 3
121
Airfield Drive, W.
•
HWY 121
121
Main St.
HWY 114
I-35 E
157
• Grapevine Convention Center 114
Grapevine 360
Grapevine Dallas Road
Municipal Way
HWY 121
Tanglewood
D. m e. llia v Wi ate A T
BUS
114
City of
Dallas
Texan Trail
W.
Dooley Street, S.
Ball Street
Texas St., E.
Mustang Dr.
FM
26
Wall Street, E. W.
College Street, W.
Ira E. Woods
Bass Pro
Great Wolf Lodge
114
121
121
International Parkway
From the
Airfield Drive,
N.
DFW International Airport Grand Hyatt DFW
Hyatt Regency DFW
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS
Experience the
THRILL OF SUMMER in Grapevine!
Grapevine NASA Blast MagiQuest LEGOLAND速 Discovery Center
SEA LIFE
Grapevine Aquarium
Plus Much More! Memorial Day Weekend to Labor Day Weekend S U M M E R
F U N
F O R
E V E R Y O N E !
For the full summer calendar of events, tickets and more information, visit
www.GrapevineTexasUSA.com or call us at 800-457-6338. GRAPEVINE, TEXAS
18467_GCVB_FWKey_June_SB13_v1.indd 1
June 2013
KEY MAGAZINE
31
5/2/13 12:35 PM
EXPLORE THE WONDERS OF THE UNBEATEN PATH. You’ll be whisked away on an amazing family adventure when you take Trinity Railway Express to connect the Fort Worth Zoo via The T or the Dallas Zoo via DART light rail.
Scan QR Code for schedule information.
Transport Yourself.
>>> TrinityRailwayExpress.org Fort Worth – Dallas
Free Wi-Fi