021916

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Cache Magazine LETTING

LOOSE AT ELITE HALL

USU Department of Music hosts a trio of Jazz Nights

The Herald Journal

FEBRUARY 19-25, 2016


contents

February 19-25, 2016

COVER 6 USU’s Jazz Night takes over at Elite Hall in Hyrum

THE ARTS 3 ‘Chitty Chitty Bang Bang’ flies on at Eccles Theatre 4 Cache Valley Cowboy Rendezvous to feature country artist Billy Dean 4 Cecilia String Quartet to

play at Performance Hall

4 Logan High hosts annual Concerto Night on Feb. 27

5 Richard Goode to play at Wasserman Festival

5 Sky High Players wrap

up production of ‘Music Man’ at Sky View High

MOVIES 8 Angelina Jolie Pitt back in Cambodia as a director

9 ‘Deadpool’ dominates at

box office over the weekend

COLUMN 8 Cache humor columnist really contemplates reality

CALENDAR 15 See what’s happening this week in Cache Valley

This photo provided by Focus Features shows Stephan James as Jesse Owens in Stephen Hopkins’ “Race.” The movie opens in theaters on Friday, Feb. 19. (Focus Features via AP) On the cover: Branson Bell plays the tenor saxophone during the Jazz Nights event at Elite Hall last week in Hyrum.

FROM THE EDITOR A couple of decades ago, the grandfather of a girl I was dating later told his granddaughter that he was impressed with my voice as I sang while sitting next to him in church. That’s it. That’s all I have to go on as far as my singing ability. No one has ever said anything before or since, and rather than find out that this gentleman was simply being polite — and probably disavowed his statement after his granddaughter I broke up — I would prefer to just think that I can sing decently, at least as long as there’s 300 or so other people around me doing the same thing. That still doesn’t mean I’ll be singing

with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir anytime soon. But, perhaps, you will be. I received a press release this week stating the following: The choir is asking for singers, choirs, and fans alike all over the world to upload a YouTube recording singing one of four parts (soprano, alto, tenor or bass) of the well-known “Hallelujah” chorus from George Frideric Handel’s Messiah. The best performances and choral voices will be featured in a “virtual choir” performance with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square. “Handel’s Messiah is an extremely powerful oratorio, especially the ‘Hallelujah’ chorus,” said Ryan Murphy, associate music director for the choir. “It is well-known and well loved. It’s an honor for us to perform it, and we are delighted to extend the invitation to join us to sing-

ers all over the world.” To help singers record and upload their videos, participants can access the sheet music, a sing-along video for each part, and conducting by music director Mack Wilberg. Once their video is recorded, singers can upload it to YouTube and copy the URL into a simple submission form. For the sheet music, sing-along videos, and complete information on how to participate, visit virtualchoir.mormon.org. Entries will be accepted through Tuesday, March 1 and the final virtual choir performance video will be released on Sunday, March 13. So, go ahead and give the choir a shot. And if you do, let me know how the virtual experience goes. But for practical reasons, I’m not going to risk it. — Jeff Hunter


‘Chitty Chitty’ takes flight Whitesides stars in Music Theatre West production

PET OF THE WEEK Available for adoption

Photo courtesy of Music Theatre West

Music Theatre West’s production of “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” continues at the Ellen Eccles Theatre with three more shows on Friday and Saturday.

tion and add an even higher level of expertise to Stephanie White’s show-stopping choreography. The show is directed by Marissa Olsen, with MTW executive director Debbie Ditton serving as music director. With a large and talented cast of both children and

adults, costume designs by Maren Lyman, a full orchestra in the pit, and Chitty herself on stage, audiences will find it “the most fantasmagorical musical in the history of everything” “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” will take the stage at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 19 and 20,

and at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20. Children 5 years and older will be admitted; no babes in arms. Ticket prices are $20 to $23 and are available at cachearts.org, by calling 752-0026 or at the Ellen Eccles Theatre Box Office at 43 S. Main St.

USU bands deliver winter concert Saturday The Utah State University Wind Orchestra and Symphonic Band combine for a winter concert at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, in the Taggart Student Center Ballroom. The concert is free and open to the public. In tribute to the 25 years on faculty for Caine College of the Arts by professor of trombone Todd Fallis, the

– Cache humor columnist Dennis Hinkamp (Page 8)

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Music Theatre West’s production of “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” continues at the Ellen Eccles Theatre. Everyone’s favorite flying car comes to life in the musical adaptation of the beloved family film. Take a fantastic musical adventure with an out-of-this-world car that flies through the air and sails the seas. This local production features Cache Valley’s own Tyler Whitesides, author of the award-winning “Janitors” book series, who fills the dancing shoes of Dick Van Dyke with ease and makes everyone feel like part of the family. Truly Scrumptious is played by Eccles stage veteran Jamie Younker, who adds a new flair to the traditional role. Featured dancers from Cache Valley Civic Ballet join MTW for this produc-

“Greenland is really roughly the size of Box Elder County. ”

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

ALL MIXED UP

Quotable

concert includes more than 30 alumni from his low brass studio from the past 25 years. The concert is capped by a massed band finale of the combined ensembles. The concert annually showcases the best of the USU bands with Wind Orchestra and Symphonic band, both conducted by director of bands, Thomas P. Rohrer, performing sepa-

rately and together. “The program will appear in collage format with pieces alternating seamlessly between the ensembles,” Rohrer says. “In honor of the low brass emphasis, the concert begins with a transcription of Wagner’s ‘Prelude to Act 3, Lohengrin,’ a low brass staple for 150 years. Other low brass features include a movement

of Eric Ewazen’s ‘Concerto for Bass Trombone and Wind Ensemble’ with Fallis as soloist, two pieces by the USU/Alumni Low Brass Ensemble arranged by USU alumnus Lane Weaver (1998) and a massed finale and encore, including Claude Smith’s ‘Eternal Father, Strong to Save’ and Henry Fillmore’s ‘Shoutin’ Liza Trombone.’”

Pet: Fiona From: Four Paws Rescue Why he’s so lovable: Fiona introduced herself to a family by meowing at their front door. Unfortunately, they couldn’t keep her, so Four Paws Rescue Rescue took her in. This beautiful face goes with a gentle, laid-back personality and she seems to get along with everyone. She appears to be young (about 1 year old). Indoors only. If you are interested in adopting this cat, please call Sheri at 787-1751, or send an email to scfourpaws@hotmail. com. The adoption fee is $75, which includes the spay/neuter surgery and vaccinations. Please be patient with us getting back to you as we are all volunteers with full-time jobs and/or families.


The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

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all mixed up Dean to headline Rendezvous The Cache Valley Cowboy Rendezvous is pleased to welcome award-winning country singer Billy Dean in concert at the sixth annual event slated to be held March 4-6 at Mountain Crest High School in Hyrum. Appearing with Dean at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 5, will be Canadian performers Eli Barsi and Doris Daley,

and hosting the Cowboy Family Dance at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 5, will be Michael Martin Murphey and his band. Tickets are on sale now at cachevalleycowboyrendezvous.com. Billy Dean concert ticket prices range from $10 to $50, while Michael Martin Murphey dance tickets are $15 adults and $10 students/children.

In addition, a Cowboy Opry featuring Gary Allegretto, Ernie Sites and Thatch Elmer & Tumbleweeds will begin at 7 p.m. Friday, March 4. Tickets are $10 for adults, children $1. Dean has sold more than 5 million albums worldwide, with 11 Top 10 singles and five No. 1 hits. He has been nominated and received awards in every major music

award entity, including a Grammy nomination for Song of the Year for “Somewhere in My Broken Heart.” In 1992, Dean won ACM’s New Male Vocalist of the Year award and was a CMA Horizon Award nominee. For more information on the 2016 Cache Valley Cowboy Rendezvous, visit cachevalleycowboyrendezvous. com.

Quartet to play at USU

Cecilia String foursome set to perform on Thursday night

The Cecilia String Quartet will perform at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25, at the Caine Performance Hall on the Utah State University campus. Tickets are $24, $10 for students. They will be available at the door the night of the performance, or are available at arts.usu. edu, by calling 797-8022 or in person at the Caine College of the Arts Box Office in the Chase Fine Arts Center. For more information, visit cmslogan.org The Cecilia String Quartet takes its name from St. Cecilia, the patron saint of music. Proudly celebrating its 11th anniversary, the quartet came together in Toronto in 2004, and after a decade of fruitful musical discovery, its members once again reside in Toronto where they are Ensemble-in-Residence

Photo courtesy of Cecilia String Quartet

The Cecilia String Quartet will perform at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25.

at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Music. Hailed for their “powerful” (Chicago Sun-Times) and “dauntingly perfect” (Berliner Zeitung) performances, the quartet performs at leading venues in North America and Europe. The quartet is made up of Min-Jeong Koh,

violin; Sarah Nematallah, violin; Caitlin Boyle, viola; and Rachel Desoer, cello. In addition to performing, the quartet is deeply committed to outreach. The CSQ began developing educational presentations on classical music and the string quartet while they were String-Quartet-in-Residence at San

Diego State University from 2007-2009. Since that time they have performed hundreds of educational presentations across Canada, the United States, Italy, and France. The Cecilia String Quartet’s formal concert at the Caine Performance Hall is See USU on Page 10

Billy Dean

Concerto Night moves to the Eccles Theatre The Logan High School Philharmonic Orchestra, under the direction of Amanda Kippen, will present Concerto Night 2016 at 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 27, at the Ellen Eccles Theatre. A longstanding LHS tradition, Concerto Night will feature six outstanding student soloists: Jennifer Ban, Emma Cardon, James Conger, David Kim, Hubert Kim and Raymond Li. Tickets are $8 for adults and $5 for students. For ticket information, visit the CVCA box office, call 7520026 or visit cachearts. org. Junior and senior students participating in the LHS orchestra, band and choral programs, as well as those studying piano outside of school, are eligible to audition for the honor of being soloists. In December students auditioned for a panel of judges, and the final six

were chosen. Their varied repertoire features: Jennifer Ban, MacDowell Piano Concerto No. 2, Second Movement; Emma Cardon, Haydn Cello Concerto in C major, First Movement; James Conger, Ravel Piano Concerto in G major; David Kim, violin, Sarasate Zigeunerweisen; Hubert Kim (piano), Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue”; and Raymond Li, Bruch Romanze for viola. Concerto Night 2016 will be an extra special event, as the concert will be held in the historic Ellen Eccles Theatre for the first time. The extensive construction at Logan High School gutted the auditorium, forcing Kippen to find an alternative venue. “I was so happy to be able to arrange for Concerto Night to be held at the Ellen Eccles Theatre this year,” Kippen said. “The wonderful LHS soloists will sound fantastic on the stage there.”


Richard Goode

was before Hirst learned the realities of assembling a series and the associated costs. But this year, everything fell

into place and Hirst is able to bring Goode — a person he refers to as a “showstopper” — to Logan. Goode is featured in a solo piano recital at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 3, in USU’s Caine Performance Hall. Tickets are available through the Caine College of the Arts Box Office, Room L101 in the Chase Fine Arts Center or online via a link on the Wassermann website (usu.edu/wassermann). Reserved seat tickets are $24 for adults, $20 for USU faculty and staff and students ages 8 and

Penrose at Why Sound

Penrose will perform at 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Fronted by Madison Penrose, an “American Idol” Top 30 finalist in 2010 and winner of Utah Idol in 2014, Penrose is modern rock band based in Salt Lake City. Started by Penrose and drummer Dan Froerer in early 2015, Penrose also includes guitarist Brad Green and bassist CJ Killian. Admission to the performance is $6.

Summerfest applications

Only one week remains for visual artists, performers, and food vendors to submit their applications to Logan’s Summerfest Arts Faire for 2016. The festival will take place June 16 to 18, and the See GOODE on Page 10 deadline for applications is Feb. 20. Each year on Father’s Day weekend, Summerfest Arts Faire brings together 150 artists and performers on Tabernacle Square in its free-to-the-public event. In addition, food vendors from around the region provide a variety of cuisines for hungry visitors. Performers and food vendors wishing to participate can apply at Summerfest’s website at logansummerfest.com. Visual artists and craftspeople may apply through Zapplication, an online arts application service at zapplication.org. Interested artists and vendors can contact Summerfest director Elaine Thatcher at (435) 213-3858 or elaine@logansummerfest.com.

‘Music Man’ at Sky View Sky High Players will continue to deliver musical through Saturday The Sky High Players will present Meredith Willson’s “The Music Man” at 7 p.m. Feb. 12, 13, 15 and 18-20, at the Sky View High School Auditorium in Smithfield. There will also be a 2 p.m. matinee on Saturday, Feb. 20. Online tickets are $5 for students, faculty and groups over 10; kids under 12 are $6; adults are $8; and a family of up to six is $28. Adult tickets at the door are $10. Visit skyhighplayers.org for more information. “The Music Man” first opened on Broadway in 1957 and became an instant hit, winning five Tony Awards, including Best Musical and running for 1,375 performances. This was followed by a film in 1962, several popular longrunning revivals and a 2003 television remake. The cast album was the first chosen to win the Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album and occupied a rank on the Billboard charts for

Stöhr concert at Utah St.

Stefan Koch, cellist, and Robert Conway, pianist, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19, in the Caine Performance Hall as part of the Caine College of the Arts’ Visiting Artists and Scholars Series at Utah State University. Koch and Conway will perform works of Richard Stöhr, an Austrian who composed in every classical genre and was a renowned composer, teacher and author. In 1938 Stöhr was forced by Nazis to emigrate to the United States where he taught at the Curtis Institute, the Vermont Conservatory and St. Michael’s College. Among his students were The Sky High Players will present three more performances of “The Music Man” this musicians Samuel Barber, Leonard Bernstein and weekend at the Sky View High School Auditorium in Smithfield. Marlene Dietrich. Koch received musical training at Temple 245 weeks. without giving any awkwardness, Paroo University in Philadelphia. Currently residing in The plot revolves music lessons. Marian begins to fall in love. Ann Arbor, Michigan, Koch is a member of the around con man Harold Paroo, the town’s only When she reveals her Hill, who poses as a piano teacher and maid- admiration for him, Hill Lansing and Birmingham-Bloomfield symphonies and is a frequent performer with the Kalamazoo, boys’ band organizer en librarian, isn’t buying risks being caught to West Michigan, Toledo and Grand Rapids symand leader and sells anything he’s selling, win her. phonies. band instruments and and instead intends to The part of Har He spends summers at the Utah Festival Opera uniforms to the naive expose his fraud despite old Hill is portrayed and Musical Theatre in Logan. Iowa townsfolk, promis- his attempts to woo her by Maxx Teuscher. Tickets for the performance are $10 adults, $8 ing to train the members into silence. However, Teuscher was last seen seniors/youth, $5 USU faculty/staff and free for of the new band. But when Hill helps her in Sky High Players’ USU students with ID. For more information, call Hill isn’t a musician younger brother overand plans to leave town come his lisp and social See MAN on Page 10 797-8022 or visit cca.usu.edu.

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

There is an axiom that the total is more than the sum of its parts. That phrase isn’t often used in the arts, but it might sum up the next solo piano recital performer at Utah State University’s Wassermann Festival. Richard Goode is the consummate teacher, musician, recording artist and concert performer. He is known internationally, and he has been on Wassermann Director Dennis Hirst’s wish list for years. In fact, in 1997 when Hirst first joined the Wassermann and was just finding his legs as a festival director, one of the first names that came to mind was Goode’s. Of course, that

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Goode to perform at Utah State COMING UP


A SP

Elite Hall and

S

For three nights last weekend, an hall in the valley came to life with ing and dancing. Jazz Night at Elite Hall in Hyrum success. Those who performed and who came to enjoy a night of musi ing left with big smiles. “It was incredible,” Hyrum City Director Jami Van Huss said. “The absolutely beautiful, the music was the dancers were making the floor hasn’t for years, and the atmospher scribable. “You had to be there to really un what an amazing event it was. I rec pliments on the hall and its spring decor, the food, the music, the ligh dancers and everyone seemed very overall.” Van Huss is working to raise mo and keep Elite Hall open. The 12th Night was put on by the Departme in the Caine College of the Arts at University. The event was a fundra


PRING IN THEIR STEPS

d the USU Department of Music host a trio of Jazz Nights in Hyrum

STORY BY SHAWN HARRISON — PHOTOGRAPHS BY ELI LUCERO

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oney to restore h annual Jazz ent of Music Utah State aiser for the

building. There was a dinner and dancing option on two of the nights. Thursday was student night and refreshments were available. This is the first time Jazz Night has been held at the Elite Hall. But if USU music professors Jon Gudmundson and Greg Wheeler have their way, the Jazz Night will return to the southern town in Cache Valley. Each directed separate bands at the event. “It certainly was a fun atmosphere,” Gudmundson said. “... The Elite Hall really is a gem. There is only one dance hall left in the state of Utah that has a spring-loaded floor and it’s right here in Cache Valley. ... What are the odds that 100 years ago a dance hall like Elite Hall would be built in Hyrum? The people living in Hyrum must have been pretty hip.” “It was wonderful,” Wheeler said. “It was a great experience. ... It’s such a historical dance hall and made it a lot of fun for the kids. It really fit well with what we were doing. We would love to go back and do it again.” In the past, the Jazz Night has been held

on the USU campus and at the Logan Golf & Country Club. While there was good participation, moving the event to Elite Hall was good for many reasons. “The only complaint we got in the past, and there was only one, was there was not enough room on the dance floor,” Gudmundson said. “... The nice thing about the Elite Hall is it has an enormous dance floor. More people came and it was pretty neat. There was plenty of room to dance, even with a larger crowd.” The two bands played five-song sets. Each band played three sets during the evening. Gudmundson directs the USU Jazz Orchestra, while Wheeler directs the Jazz Ensemble. “Those are just names,” Gudmundson said. “They both are really just big bands. The only difference is generally, the kids in my band are more experienced. Both bands are good, swinging bands.” The three-night event gave the USU students in the bands some real-life experience. “It kept the music fresh and the kids chops were up for it,” Wheeler said. “It worked out

quite well. ... It gave the kids a taste of what it is like to go out on the road.” “One of the main reasons I like this event is that it’s more of an accurate mirror of how real life is for a musician,” Gudmundson said. “... In college, you rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse and have one gig. This helps the band jell, and playing for dancers really helps. You have to swing or the dancers don’t like it.” Wheeler has 22 members in the band he conducts; Gudmundson has 21. There are also seven singers. “Big band as we know it has evolved over the years, but has finally, sort of standardized itself into a group that has five saxophones, five trombones, five trumpets, piano, guitar, bass and drum and auxiliary percussion,” Gudmundson explained.” “We like to stay traditional from the Big Band Era,” Wheeler said. “People come to dance all different styles, so you’ve got to make sure you See STEPS on Page 10

Facing page, attendees of the Jazz Nights event dance at Elite Hall last week in Hyrum. Left, Nick Lilly and Tyler Curtis perform music from the Big Band Era. Top, sheet music for “Busy Woman Blues” sits on a musician’s stands. Above left, Carolee Beck sings as Greg Wheeler leads the USU Jazz Ensemble. Above right, musicians and dancers take over at historic Elite Hall in Hyrum.


The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

I’m not going to go all “Matrix” on you, but contemplating reality can really make your head reel. It’s more than just the reality of the lowlight reel of the real choices of presidential candidates; if you stop and contemplate the things that might not be real, you’ll wish you hadn’t. Pandas: Now that the Internet allows us to be inundated by hundreds of pandas doing unspeakably adorable things, I’m starting to doubt their reality. I believe that soon it will be

Slightly Off Center DENNIS HINKAMP

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Be sure to bumblebee all you can be

revealed that they are just various sizes of Chinese men and boys dressed in mass-produced Panda suits. Since people get paid based on video views and web hits, this makes

total sense to me. Scoff, but the Chinese have done stranger things. Bumblebees: Their wing-to-body-size ratio makes it physically impossible to fly. It would be like trying to fly an airliner by asking everyone to stick their hands out the windows and flap. I secretly believe that bumblebees are either tiny robots from the future, or they have developed an antigravity gland. The bottom of the ocean: More people have walked on the moon than have walked on some areas at the bottom of the ocean. I may be leaning

heavily on Wikipedia and PBS, but it makes sense. There is no light at the bottom of the ocean, so how could we ever broadcast it? Bonus: We have been looking for aliens in the wrong place all these years. The size of Africa: I’ve been looking at globes of the world since I was in kindergarten. There is just no way that Africa is as big as they say it is, nor is Greenland as small as they say. Who are you going to trust?; your eyes or Wikipedia? Supposedly Africa is bigger than China, the United States, India, Mexico, France and Kiri-

Return to Cambodia Jolie Pitt back in SE Asia as a film director

BATTAMBANG, Cambodia (AP) — Between bites of spicy Cambodian curry and fried fish with rice, Angelina Jolie Pitt explains how this tiny country with a tumultuous past changed the course of her life. She first visited Cambodia 16 years ago to portray “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” — the gun-toting, bungee-jumping, supremely toned action hero that made her a star. Soon after, she adopted her first child from a Cambodian orphanage and returned again and again on humanitarian missions. Now, she’s back for another movie but this time as a director, and the subject matter is a far cry from Lara Croft. “First They Killed My Father,” is based on a Khmer Rouge memoir written by survivor Loung Ung that recounts the 1970s Cambo-

AP Photo

Angelina Jolie talks to her son Maddox, her adopted child from Cambodia, in 2007. She adopted Maddox in 2002, and a year later opened a foundation in his name in rural Cambodia.

dian genocide from a child’s perspective. The film, which she is directing and co-wrote with Ung for Netflix, is in Khmer, with an all-Cambodi-

an cast and according to Jolie Pitt “the most important” movie of her career. During a See RETURN on Page 11

bati combined. Greenland is really roughly the size of Box Elder County. This would have never happened on a flat Earth. Me: How can I be older than Bartolo Colon yet considerably younger that all three of the leading presidential candidates? Summary for non-baseball fans: Colon is a 42-year-old sausage casing with a few good pitches, but if forced to run he couldn’t make it from first to third during the seventh inning stretch. He is my height with an extra 120 stuffed into unflattering Mets pinstripes. He also

signed for $11 million at this age and degree of decay, so I guess he gets the last laugh. Since I just turned 60, I don’t think anyone can call me ageist. I can understand why nobody would want me be in a political leadership position at any age but why put yourself through all that stress when you could be enjoying 15 percent off all the Denny’s breakfast items. Orin Hatch? He is so old his family photos are petraglyphs. ———

Dennis Hinkamp would like to remind you that 60 is the new 50; but only on the highways.

CBS cruises to easy win in Nielsen ratings EW YORK (AP) — CBS dominated in the ratings last week with a winning slate of dramas and comedies as well as a Republican presidential debate, which ranked fourth. “The Walking Dead,” airing on cable’s AMC, claimed third place. But when only broadcast networks are included, CBS swept the top 10 positions. It’s a feat no network has accomplished in at least a decade, according to CBS. Season-to-date, CBS is first in viewers in prime time with an average 11.74 million viewers, according to the Nielsen co. During this relatively stable week with no series premieres and few specials, CBS averaged 9.41 million viewers. ABC and NBC were tied for a lukewarm second place with 5.07 million while Fox had 4.77 million, Univision had 1.81 million, the CW had 1.72 million, ION Television had 1.26 million and Telemundo had 1.09 million.

TNT was the week’s most popular cable network, averaging 2.37 million viewers in prime time. Fox News Channel had 2.33 million, and AMC — bolstered by “The Walking Dead” — had 1.96 million. NBC’s “Nightly News” topped the evening newscasts with an average of 9.4 million viewers. ABC’s “World News Tonight” had 9.2 million and the “CBS Evening News” had 7.8 million viewers. For the week of Feb. 8-12, the top 10 shows, their networks and viewerships: “NCIS,” CBS, 16.94 million; “The Big Bang Theory,” CBS, 16.25 million; “The Walking Dead,” AMC, 13.74 million; “Campaign ‘16 Republican Debate,” CBS, 13.44 million; “NCIS: New Orleans,” CBS, 12.59 million; “Scorpion,” CBS, 11.36 million; “Blue Bloods,” CBS, 10.92 million; “60 Minutes,” CBS, 10.42 million; “Madam Secretary,” CBS, 10.61 million; “NCIS: Los Angeles,” CBS, 9.76 million.


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“Deadpool” also had a massive showing internationally, bringing in an estimated $125 million from 62 territories for a $260 million global total. The debut is also a bit of a superhero redemption story for Reynolds whose costly “Green Lantern” adaptation disappointed audiences and at the box office in 2011. Coming in a distant second was last weekend’s No. 1 film “Kung Fu Panda 3” with $19.7 million, which fell only 7 percent. The DreamWorks Animation film has earned $93.9 million in just three weeks in theaters. In third place, the R-rated Dakota Johnson and Rebel Wilson rom-com “How to Be Single” didn’t make any big waves with its $18.8 million out of the gates. The Warner Bros. film cost $38 million to produce and provided some counter programming to the hyper violent “Deadpool.” The dismally reviewed Ben Stiller comedy “Zoolander 2,” meanwhile, debuted in fourth place to only $15.7 mil-

The 5th Wave (PG-13) Fri-Sat 2:50

Star Wars: The Force Awakens 2D (PG-13) Fri-Sun 12:35 3:30 6:30 9:30*

(PG-13) 12:00 2:25 4:50

7:15 9:50

Deadpool** 2D (R) 12:30

2:20 4:40

7:05 9:30

Deadpool 2D DBOX** (R) 12:30 How To Be Single** (R) 3:00 5:20

7:40

10:00

Kung Fu Panda 3 2D (PG) 12:00

2:50

5:00 7:15

Kung Fu Panda 3 2D DBOX (PG)

2:50

5:00 7:15

Pride & Prejudice & Zombies 2D (PG-13) 12:45 9:25

Pride & Prejudice & Zombies 2D DBOX (PG-13) 9:25 Race** (PG-13) 12:20 3:10 6:05 9:00 Zoolander 2** (PG-13) 11:55 2:15 4:35

Sun 12:35 3:30 6:30 Mon-Thurs 4:00 7:10 7:00 9:35 **NO DISCOUNT TICKETS OR PASSES ACCEPTED Showtime Updates:

www.MegaplexTheatres.com

*NOT ShOWINg ON SUNDAy AT MOvIES 5

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The R-rated “Deadpool” has taken the box office by storm, annihilating records with an eye-popping $135 million from its first three days in U.S. theaters, according to comScore estimates Sunday. The Fox film, which stars Ryan Reynolds as the foul-mouthed superhero, easily trounced last year’s recordsetting $85.2 million February debut of the erotic drama “Fifty Shades of Grey.” It also became the biggest R-rated opening ever, surpassing “The Matrix AP Photo Reloaded,” which Ryan Reyonlds, left, and Morena Baccarin share a scene in “Deadpool.” opened to $91.8 million in May of 2003. this coming,” said Paul the end of the holiday Analysts are predict- cost a mere $58 million ing that the Tim Miller- to produce, could go on weekend. As recently as Dergarabedian, comto make $150 million by Thursday, “Deadpool” directed film, which Score’s senior media analyst. “It doesn’t feel like was expected to pull in a cookie-cutter superhero only $80 million across movie. It feels like somethe three days, but the thing unique. You’ve got Marvel comic, often a to sometimes take risks best-seller, proved its popular appeal and then and go against conventional wisdom to come some — and it didn’t out a winner.” have to compromise IMAX screens accountwith a PG-13 rating ed for an estimated $16.8 either. “This movie is the very million of “Deadpool’s” $ $ definition of an expecta- total. The film, notably, tion-buster. Nobody saw was not released in 3D.

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‘Deadpool’ dominates the box office


The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

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Man Continued from Page 5 production of Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” as Demetrius, another young lover. He has been in many musical productions in Cache Valley, including a recent production of the popular “Aida,” produced by Cache Theatre Company, where he played the lead role of the Egyptian general, Radames. Marian Paroo is played

by Morgan England. This is her sixth performance with the Sky High Players. “I’m so honored to play this exciting role,” England says, “I get to sing some of the most memorable songs of Broadway.” The production is directed by David Sidwell, familiar to many in Cache Valley, having directed shows here for over 20 years. “We have a fabulous cast, and it’s been fabulously fun working with such talented actors,” Sidwell says.

Goode Continued from Page 5 older can purchase a $12 ticket. “When putting this year’s series together, Richard Goode was the central choice for the season — the other concerts were built around his decision to come to the Wassermann,” Hirst said. “The stars aligned and we were able to work it out. He’s been on my ‘most wanted list’ since I began directing the festival.” Goode’s concert program includes many of the finest works by the classical world’s most renowned composers, including Bach, Beethoven and Schubert. Hirst is especially excited to hear a personal favorite, Beethoven’s “Sonata No. 31 in A-flat major, Op. 110.”

Steps Continued from Page 7 have a cha-cha, a waltz and all of that. We like to relate to the famous bands from back then. We also have singers, so we pick music that really reflects the vocals that were so strong back in the old days.” Some artists’ work that is played includes Bobby Darin, Peggy Lee, Frank Sinatra, and Louis Armstrong. Gudmundson said variety is needed because dancers want to different steps. “It’s all about the dancers,” Gudmundson said. For those not knowing some

USU Continued from Page 4 the apex of a four-day residency in Cache Valley. Earlier in the week, they will present at all three Cache high schools and Mount Logan Middle School, perform a community concert, participate in a mega-concert of young music students and teach a string master class.

According to his biography, Goode has been hailed for music-making of tremendous emotional power, depth and expressiveness, “and has been acknowledged worldwide as one of today’s leading interpreters of Classical and Romantic music.” His reviews back that up. The “Washington Post” writes “Richard Goode is one of the finest pianists in the world. Few can match his unfailingly beautiful tone, effortless technical command, interpretive insight and total emotional commitment to the music he plays.” And this from the “Los Angeles Times”: “A total performance that was a joy in the ear, a nourishment for the mind and an uplift for the spirit. For this listener, it was a high point of the musical year.” Or, as Hirst said, “he’s the whole package.”

of the dances from the era, there was instruction each night an hour prior to the event starting. Instruction was given by the USU Swing Club “It’s sort of becoming a forgotten skill,” Wheeler said of dancing the style from the Big Band Era. “It was fun watching them.” “I think the turnout was great,” Van Huss said. “We filled the hall all three nights, and I recognized several couple who were enjoying dancing at the Elite Hall again for the first time in decades.” The Jazz Night has in a way replaced the annual Glen Miller Nights. There was still a desire to have a dinner-dance around Valentine’s Day.

The winery and brewery owned by John Newman Barker in Willard.

Brigham City Museum exhibit highlights the Prohibition Era During Prohibition from 1920 to 1933, Americans could not produce, sell, transport or import intoxicating beverages. Bootleggers and temperance lobbyists, suffragists and flappers, and legends such as Al Capone and Carry Nation took sides in the battle against the bottle. These tumultuous times are examined in the national touring exhibit “Spirited: Prohibition in America” that opened at the Brigham City Museum on Jan. 28 and continues through March 16. Admission is free. The museum is located at 24 N. 300 West in Brigham City. The exhibit features Prohibitionera photos, artifacts, interactive

“Jazz nights at Elite Hall is a perfect marriage of an event and a venue, and I’m already looking forward to doing it again,” Van Huss said. “I brought my girls over to dance, and we had a blast. During one very upbeat song, everyone started dancing so fervently that we almost felt like we were bouncing on a trampoline.” Those in attendance certainly looked like they were having fun. “Once a big band kicks into gear and starts swinging like mad, it’s hard not to want to dance,” Gudmundson said. “It makes your body want to move. It just does. It’s a very powerful feeling. It’s better live always. When you are

kiosks, videos and music. Some of the photos that emphasize the split between the “wets” and the “drys” are “Why the Twenties Roared,” “Billy Sunday Preaching,” “Prohibition Sparks a Fashion Revolution,” “Detailed Illustration of a Still,” “Gangsters and their Rap Sheets” and “Eliot Ness and the Untouchables.” Local photographs about liquor and tobacco in Northern Utah from 1850 on will also be on view, specifically Rudolph Keyser’s Saloon; the Willard Winery and Brewery; the Combination Saloon, Corinne; the Pearl Saloon, Garland; and the Billiard Hall, Brigham City.

there in front a real live big band that is going full blast, you just feel it in your bones and it moves you.” While the spring-loaded floor was certainly the main attraction for the dancers, there was more atmosphere thanks to Kerry Ann Taylor from Tying the Knot Wedding Decor and her daughters Tiffany and Hailey and son Zach. Taylor provided linens, florals and all the decor for free — minus the wholesale cost of the flowers and laundering the linens. They strung globe lights, set up all the tables and chairs and set up the club room. They even took tickets, helped patrons and cleaned up

each night. “They were wonderful event planners and true professionals,” Van Huss said of the Taylors. “I would highly recommend them to anyone who wants to plan a beautiful and well-run event. I look forward to working with them in the future.” Van Huss was excited and is looking forward to more events at Elite Hall. “I want to thank Jon Gudmundson, Greg Wheeler, Kerry Ann Taylor and all the folks at USU who breathed life back into this historic gem,” Van Huss said. “I look forward to maintaining this momentum and achieving our restoration goals.”


Penrose will perform at 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $6. The Sky High Players will present Meredith Willson’s “The Music Man” at 7 p.m. Feb. 12, 13, 15 and 18-20, at the Sky View High School Auditorium. There will also be a 2 p.m. matinee on Saturday, Feb. 20. Tickets are $5 for students, faculty and groups over 10; kids under 12 are $6; adults are $8; and a family of up to six is $28. Visit skyhighplayers. org for more information. The Western singing duo Tumbleweeds will perform from 6 p.m. to closing Friday, Feb. 19, at Jim’s Grill in Smithfield. Come enjoy good Western music and great food in a fun and historic setting. Stefan Koch, cellist, and Robert Conway, pianist, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19, in the Caine Performance Hall as part of the Caine College of the Arts’ Visiting Artists and Scholars Series at Utah State University. Tickets for the performance are

$10 adults, $8 seniors/youth, $5 USU faculty/staff and free for USU students with ID. For more information, call 797-8022 or visit cca.usu.edu.

SATURDAY The Center for Pregnancy Choices is sponsoring a visit by the Mobile Red Cross Unit from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, at the Maverik Stadium parking lot on the USU campus. You must be pre-registered and can save 15 minutes by doing your health assessment ahead of time at redcrossblood.org/ rapidpass or by calling 1-800733-2767. We Were Giants will perform at 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $6. The Daughters of the American Revolution will meet at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, in the Bonneville Room at the Logan Library. Kari Rich will be speaking on women’s issues. Tim Pearce will perform from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, at

Return Continued from Page 8 break from filming, she talked to The Associated Press about how, more than ever, she feels a satisfying symbiosis between her life and work. In person, Jolie Pitt is engaging and down-to-earth, dressed in a T-shirt and long black skirt, her hair pulled into a casual bun. She goes out of her way to play down her celebrity, hopping into the back of an SUV and squeezing into the middle seat beside a reporter for a short drive from the set to the crew’s outdoor lunch tents. She is relaxed and articulate as the conversation veers from acting and directing, to history, humanitarian work, motherhood and her special relationship to Cambodia. “When I first came to Cambodia, it changed me. It changed my perspective. I realized there was so much about history that I had not been

Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave. The Utah State University Wind Orchestra and Symphonic Band combine for a winter concert at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, in the Taggart Student Center Ballroom on the USU campus. The concert is free and open to the public. The Cache Valley Eagles are sponsoring a charity dinner with bingo beginning at 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 20, at 170 W. 900 North. Dinner is $10; 21 and over welcome. From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. there will also be a charity garage sale at the same location. The Family Place will host Superhero Training Camp from 10 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Feb. 20, at CVI Sports, 1540 N. 1000 West. Tickets are $20 online or $30 at the door. Price includes activities, cape, water bottle and a snack. To register, visit thefamilyplaceutah.org or call 752-8880.

SUNDAY The Post-Mormon Community is a non-sectarian organization of individuals and families who

taught in school, and so much about life that I needed to understand, and I was very humbled by it,” said the 40-year-old Jolie Pitt, who grew up in Los Angeles where she felt “a real emptiness.” She was struck by the graciousness and warmth of Cambodian people, despite the tragedy that left an estimated 2 million people dead. While shooting Lara Croft in 2000, some scenes required sidestepping land mines, she said, which made her aware of the dangers refugees face in countries ravaged by war. “That trip triggered my realization of how little I knew and the beginning of my search for that knowledge.” It prompted her to contact the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to learn about the agency’s work before joining as a goodwill ambassador in 2001. She was then given an expanded role as Special Envoy in 2012. It was during an early trip back to Cambodia with the U.N. that Jolie had

have left Mormonism. The Cache Valley chapter meets for dinner and socializing at 6:30 p.m. every Sunday evening at a local restaurant. Newcomers welcome. For more information, call Jeff at 770-4263 or visit postmormon. org/logan.

Teen Tuesday from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 23, in the Jim Bridger Room. This week’s theme is “Lights, Camera, Anime!” Visit library.loganutah. org for more information.

Newolf Revival will perform from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 20, at Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave.

2X4 will perform at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $6.

MONDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

The North Logan Library Monday Movie will begin at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 22, at 475 E. 2500 North. This week’s movie is “Tomorrowland” which is rated PG. Popcorn and admission is free. The Logan Library Monday Movie will begin at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 22, in the Jim Bridger Room. This week’s movie is the 1940 version of “Pride and Prejudice,” starring Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier. Popcorn and admission is free.

TUESDAY

Mothersound will perform with Strength in the Struggle at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $6. The Cecilia String Quartet will perform at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25, at the Caine Performance Hall on the campus of Utah State University. Tickets are $24, $10 for students, and are available online at arts.usu. edu, by phone at 797-8022 and at the door the night of the performance. For more information, visit cmslogan.org.

The Logan Library will host

another epiphany — this time about motherhood. “It’s strange, I never wanted to have a baby. I never wanted to be pregnant. I never babysat. I never thought of myself as a mother,” Jolie, now famously a mother of six, says with a laugh. But while playing with children at a Cambodian school, “it was suddenly very clear to me that my son was in the country, somewhere.” She adopted Maddox in 2002, and a year later opened a foundation in his name in northwestern Battambang province, which helps fund health care, education and conservation projects in rural Cambodia. Maddox is now 14 and sporting what his mom calls “a blonde stripe” — a shaggy mohawk with the top dyed blonde. He joined her in Cambodia to help behind the scenes for the project that she sees as a unique merger of her film work and family with humanitarian interests. “For me, this is the moment, where

finally my life is kind of in line, and I feel I’m finally where I should be,” Jolie Pitt said. Her fondness for Cambodia is mutual, says the country’s most celebrated filmmaker Rithy Panh, who says “First They Killed My Father” will be the first Hollywood epic filmed in Cambodia about the country’s genocide — a sign that the government trusts her to respectfully revisit the horrors of the past. “I don’t think they authorized Hollywood to come here. They authorized Angelina Jolie. It’s not the same. She is special. She has a special relationship with the Cambodian people. There is a mutual respect,” said Panh, her co-producer. “I wonder if she’s not a reincarnated Cambodian,” he laughed, then thought about it. “Maybe. Maybe in a previous life she was Cambodian.” She expects to return to hold the film’s premiere in Cambodia at the end of the year, before its release on Netflix.

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

FRIDAY

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calendar


The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, February 19, 2016

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CrossworD By Myles Mellor and Sally York Across 1. Boundary marker 6. Kind of boom 11. ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ network 14. Orion has one 18. Twilled cotton 19. Folded part 20. Word repeated in a Doris Day song 22. Brigham Young settled here 23. Top flight QB 26. Top flight QB 28. Maid of the ___, at Niagara Falls 29. Money or puppies? 30. Blues great, ___ Charles 32. To the exclusion of all else 33. Greetings 34. Antler point 35. Gull-like bird 36. Father figures 39. Genetic factor 40. Media 41. Dance 45. Everyone 46. Sun in Spanish 47. Musician’s asset 48. Wanted poster acronym 51. Mantel piece, perhaps 52. Greensward 53. Dawn’s moisture 54. Duck down 56. Couch 57. Top flight RB 62. Top flight tight end 64. Oak-tree bounty 65. Compete (for) 66. Stir, with “up” 67. Damage beyond use or repair 69. Equaled 70. Face to face with 73. Large lake 74. Receive 75. Capitol Hill body 76. Top flight safety 80. Top flight safety 84. Civil War side, with “the” 85. Take on

Deadlines

86. Refined or crude 87. Squeeze out 88. Giant Giant 89. One who’s coming out 90. Seafarer 91. School org. 94. Make, in arithmetic 95. Great White 98. Pirate’s treasure box 100. Free electron, for one 101. Bud 102. Yokel 105. Give up, slangily 106. Onetime singing partner of Paul 107. Grow incisors and molars 109. Chef’s recipe words 110. Takes in 112. Attention-getter 116. Top flight wide receiver 118. Top flight tight end 121. Beige 122. Kind of bargain 124. Uses as a reference 125. Oenophile’s concern 126. Throw away 127. Eventually 128. Bakery supply 129. Way up or down Down 1. Card counting to a casino boss 2. Peanut sauce cuisine type 3. Broadcasts 4. Windsor or slip 5. Long period of time 6. Type of support 7. Cutlass, for one 8. Close by 9. Frozen water 10. Trucking company 11. High marks in exams 12. “You __ your bippy!” 13. Liable to snap 14. Clothes holder 15. And elsewhere 16. Madame 17. Your, in the Bible 21. Crazily

24. Zoo heavyweight 25. Bordeaux’s “without” 27. Lose focus 31. “By all means!’’ 33. Billing units: Abbr. 34. Fishing net 36. Gloomy atmosphere 37. Protected from the wind 38. Croat, e.g. 40. Takes off the outside 42. Granola cereal 43. Slows down 44. Foe’s position 48. Stink 49. Half a logic puzzle 50. Flood escape vessel 53. Refuse 54. Auspices, var. 55. Steaming state 56. Type or chair 58. With no trouble 59. Santa’s original reindeer, e.g. 60. Easter lead-in 61. Buddy (sl.) 63. Declaim 65. Tank 67. Scarcity 68. Publisher’s addenda 69. Bridge position 70. Saltimbocca meat 71. Hotel 72. Pouch 74. Generation separation 75. In sports it can have a number 76. Ids’ relatives 77. Taken in 78. Jonson work 79. Rabble 80. Take it easy 81. ___ frog 82. Creole vegetable 83. It holds the line 90. Act of occupying an apartment, for example 91. Tickler of the ivories 92. Upper body 93. Colony member 96. Monkey with a silky coat 97. Your friends 98. Apr. aid 99. Maui dance

103. React to exposure, perhaps 104. Gene or Grace 107. Mexican dish 108. Misses the mark 110. Austin racetrack that hosts the US Grand Prix, abbr. 111. Billfold items 112. Fraction 113. Greek portico 114. Teamster’s rig 115. Moscow ruler 116. Big Apple attraction, with “the” 117. Common Korean name 119. Link 120. Krypton, e.g. 123. Location indicator

Cache Magazine calendar items are due Tuesday by 5 p.m. They will also run for free in The Herald Journal one to two days prior to the event. Calendar items can be submitted by email at hjhappen@hjnews.com. Any press releases or photos for events listed in the first half of Cache Magazine can be sent to jhunter@hjnews.com. Poems and photos can also be sent to jhunter@hjnews.com and run on a space-available basis if selected.

answers from last week

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