D & H CANVAS August 2011

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FREE Monthly Arts, Entertainment & Buy Local Guide

August 2011 Covering Orange, Pike and Sullivan Counties and the neighboring towns of Beacon, Marlboro, Walker Valley, and Ellenville Music in Livingston Manor

Music in Warwick

Music in Newburgh

Music in Loch Sheldrake

Shandelee Music Festival - page 3

Warwick Jazz Festival - page 16

Newburgh Doo-Wop Festival - page 4

Street Beats Group - page 6

Dog Days of August Art in Sugar Loaf see page 10

art • cinema • dance • festivals • holistic living • music • opera • poetry • theatre


Publisher’s Column by Barry Plaxen Since the CANVAS mission is to entice you to attend events and exhibits, we do not print reviews. But our friends at the Sullivan online newspaper, The Catskill Chronicle offer reviews for various venues in Sullivan

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and Ulster Counties. I am happy to be among the roster of reviewers. For easy access to the reviews, visit thecatskillchronicle.com. or google Catskill Chronicle. You’re invited!!

FORE! Businesses & Art Collaborate to Fundraise The golf package is $100 per player and includes golfing and the cart, local foods lunch, goodie bags, and the live auction. Event begins at 8:00am with a continental breakfast, painting and golf start at 9:00am, contests start at noon followed by lunch and the live auction capping the day at 2:30pm. Non-golfers & non-painters can add to the fundraising by partaking in the auction and lunch for $30. Paintings by Greg Evans Sponsorship opportunities are still available, and foursomes are forming now. ORANGE COUNTY Call 845-457-ARTS (2787) to make your Dust off your golf clubs for the most reservation now. unusual golf outing of the summer! The Wallkill River School (WRS) is SULLIVAN COUNTY joining with the Orange County Arts The Lazy Beagle Pub & Grill in Council and the Winding Hills Golf Club Livingston Manor will host its Third Annual in Montgomery for the Tri-State Area’s first Golf Tournament on Sunday, August 21 at Golf Outing & Plein Air Paint Out. the Tennanah Lake Golf Club in Roscoe. Proceeds go to continue WRS’ free arts The 4-ball scramble tournament will benefit programming for seniors and its mission of the Catskill Art Society (CAS) and will preserving our agricultural heritage while begin with a 1:00pm shotgun start. creating economic opportunity for local Registration and lunch begin at 11:30am. artists. This year’s event will once again include This unique event will feature artists live music and a silent auction featuring painting at each hole, alongside a local items from local artists to benefit CAS. The farmer with a bushel-full of produce in proceeds CAS receives will fund additional season. Golfers will be treated to empty multi-arts programming. “goodie bags” that they fill with fresh The cost to participate is $70 per player, produce as they play. which includes a golf cart, green fee, lunch, A delicious local foods lunch will be on-course refreshments, and hors d'oeuvres served by the culinary team at Winding catered by The Lazy Beagle, beginning at Hills Restaurant, followed by a live auction approximately 5:30pm. Hors d'oeuvres for of the paintings created during the event. All guests and spouses can be purchased for proceeds benefit the arts in Orange County. $15. A cash bar will also be available, and The golf event is a four person team, an awards ceremony with gifts and prizes eighteen hole scramble and is rain or shine. will immediately follow dinner.

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DINING Hudson Street Cafe Dine Here Before the Concerts 237 Hudson Street, Cornwall-on-Hudson 845-534-2450 www.hudsonstreetcafe.com

HORSEBACK RIDING Juckas Stables - Pine Bush Beautiful Trails, Lessons, Quality Horses Gift Certificates Available Call for Reservations: 845-361-1429 www.juckasstables com

Community Arts: News Views And Schedules DELAWARE & HUDSON CANVAS is published monthly by Delaware & Hudson Canvas, Inc. Copyright 2011, Delaware & Hudson Canvas, Inc.

Designed by PGA Champion Sam Snead, the course at Tennanah Lake offers golfers a challenging game along with a 60 mile, 180 degree panoramic view of the Catskill Mountains. Space is limited to the first 36 players on a first come, first served basis. For sponsorship information and reservations, please call 845-439-3405.

Managing Editor, Barry Plaxen barry@dhcanvas.com

Artist Opportunity

845.926.4646 phone 845.926.4002 fax

Go Paint in Pike For the month of August, the Come Paint With Me Plein Air group will be meeting at Lukans Farm Resort, Settlers Inn, Grey Towers in Pike County, and the Dorflinger Sanctuary in Wayne County on Thursdays from 10:00am to 3:00pm. This is a FREE non-instructional program for adults and serious art students. For complete details go to www.joanpolishookart.com and click on Come Paint With Me.

Teens On The Wharf

Co-Publisher, Marc E. Gerson Art Editor, Susan Winters Delaware & Hudson CANVAS 297 Stone Schoolhouse Road Bloomingburg, NY 12721

Please email calendar submissions by the 15th of the prior month to calendar@dhcanvas.com Please email submissions for classifieds, opportunities & auditions to classified@dhcanvas.com Nothing in this publication may be reproduced without written permission of the publisher.

COVER PHOTOS

The Hobbit is the first of the Middle Earth stories penned by J.R.R. Tolkien and follows the quest of home-loving hobbit Bilbo Baggins to win a share of the treasure guarded by the dragon, Smaug. The Kings Youth Theater Summer Production Workshop has been working in movement, vocals technique, rhythm and text to develop their version of The Hobbit. This production is the culmination of a yearlong project produced during several workshops. It will be performed on August 5 & 6 at 8:00pm in the "On the Wharf" Theatre by the Lake at the Lycian Centre in Sugar Loaf. For tickets: 845-469-2287. Info available on the web at www.LycianCentre.com.

International Artists of Shandelee solo pianists. story page 3. Gabriele Tranchina, Warwick Jazz Festival. story page 16. (Tranchino and her quintet will also appear in the Newburgh Jazz Series - August 10.) Newburgh Doo Wop (plus) Series. Gordon Michaels (“Unforgettable” ...Nat Cole Tribute” - August 23) and Fat City (New Orleans Classic Rock and Soul - August 9) story page 4. Street Beats group. Stomping at Sullivan County Community College. story page 6.


World Class Musicians in Orange and Sullivan Warwick The August 14 concert at Pacem in Terris in Warwick features oboist Karen Hosmer and harpsichordist Gregory Hayes in works by Bach, Handel, Telemann, Ligeti, Robert Fleming and others. It is a tribute to oboist, musicologist, and publisher Josef Marx, who was an important presence in the early years of concerts at Pacem in Terris prior to his death in 1978. Marx was also an important presence in the New York City new music community, as a publisher, recitalist, and member of the Group for Contemporary Music. On August 28 guitarist Scott Jackson Wiley performs music by Villa-Lobos (photo) from The Compete Published Works for Solo Guitar. Both concerts are at 5:00pm at 96 Covered Bridge Road in Warwick. Tickets go on sale at 4:00pm and you can visit the meditative Frederick Franck Sculpture Garden & Museum.

Livingston Manor

......and All That Jazz

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Forestburgh

ARTISTS Mary Mugele Sealfon Portraits, Landscapes, Still Life Commissions 845-774-7658 mary.sealfon@gmail.com David Requiro, cello

Cullen Bryant, piano

Alexander Sharkman, piano

The annual Shandelee Music Festival will take place August 6-20 in the beautiful Sunset Pavilion on Shandelee Mountain, up the road a piece from Livingston Manor. Shandelee’s World Class musicians are offering solo guitar, chamber music and solo piano concerts (cover photo). Founded in 1993, the Festival’s philosophies and goals provide for the further development and nurturing of an individual’s creativity and passion for music while enriching the cultural community of Sullivan County. Outstanding young pianists will also participate in the concerts. Check the music-classical calendar for more information or call 845-439-3277.

Poetry & Theatre Converge in Highland Lake “I still think the revolution is to make the world safe for poetry, meandering, for the frail and vulnerable, the rare and obscure, the impractical and local and small,” said author Rebecca Solnit. On the eve of the Revolution….What revolution? Can you feel it my friends? Enter The Stray Dog Cabaret and welcome to an Evensong of the Revolution. Stray Dog is an ephemeral cabaret where a once beautiful and famous Russian poetess (or her ghost) floats and recites through the mess. Her compatriots are

Linda Richichi Mind, Body & Spirit Art Workshops Landscapes and Wellness Paintings 38 Colden Hill Road, Newburgh 845-527-1146

John Kander & Fred Ebb’s “Chicago” comes to Forestburgh, August 8-21

Come on babe! We’re gonna see it here And all that jazz!

Mary Evelyn Whitehill Watercolors “Paintings to Enhance Your Life” www.mewhitehill.com

We're gonna save on gas Dressed in our summer wear And all that jazz!

BUSINESS SERVICES Dependable Maintenance Co. Lawnmowers, Tractors, Snowblowers Serving Orange County 845-374-2425

Start the car I know a whoopee spot Where the air is cool and the cast is hot It's in a summer barn But I don’t give a darn And all .... that ... jazz.

Drake, Loeb, Heller, Kennedy, Gogerty, Gaba & Rodd General Practice Law 555 Hudson Valley Ave., New Windsor 845-561-0550

All That Jazz, Rags & Blues

here—fellow poets, musicians, dissidents, Loch Sheldrake dancers, spies, drunks, political cranks, singers, exiles, and storytellers. They will be witnessed and they will be remembered. The NACL Theatre, located at 110 Highland Lake Road, in Highland Lake, a few miles from Eldred, will feature Laura Moran, guest poets, and other Peter Muir is an internationally poetic visitations on recognized pianist, composer, scholar, and August 28 at 4:00pm. conductor. As a pianist he specializes in Ted Waddell photo Phone:845-557-0694. ragtime, blues and early jazz, which he Poetry & Jazz Converge in Warwick performs in a totally original and The Northeast Poetry Center’s excellent composers in their own right, they compelling style, playing at festivals and Distinguished Visiting Poet for the summer will perform some of their original tunes set concerts in the US, Britain, Europe, of 2011, Kirpal to what interviewer Norman Ball called Australia, and Hong Kong. Gordon, is a widely “Gordon’s unique synthesis of lyric poetry, As a scholar, Dr. Muir has a Ph.D. in acclaimed exponent of spoken word prose, word-music and musicology and is an acknowledged the fusion of jazz and magical incantation which succeeds authority on ragtime, blues and early jazz. literature. His Speak- precisely as it defies category.” His core belief–that the true purpose of Spake-Spoke Band They will perform on August 13, at music is to be therapeutic–is at the basis of features the multiple 4:00pm, 7 West Street, Warwick, in the all his musical activities. He is co-director award winning Baritone room behind Utopian Direction Books and of the Institute for Music & Health in Saxophonist of the Year (Annual Downbeat Art. Dutchess County. Poll and the Jazz Journalists Association) Admission is free. A reception will As part of its summer series, he will Claire Daly, Arthur Kel and the much follow. entertain at Sullivan County Community This event is funded in part by Poets & Writers, Inc. with acclaimed Carlton Holmes on piano. College on August 25 at 7:00pm. public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a Since all three band members are also state agency. 845-434-5750, ext.4470.

Hudson Valley Planning and Preservation Municipal & Private 845-893-0134 www.HudsonValleyPlanning.com Peggi's Place Over 30 years experience in Hair Care 238 Main Street, Cornwall 845-534-3351

BUY LOCAL Consignium A Consignium Emporium Sharon McKane, prop. 108 Sullivan Street, Wurtsboro 845-888-2121 Happy Herbs Soap “herbal alchemy of soap & incense” @ Two Crow Cottage Burlingham, NY 12722-0210 happyherbssoap.etsy.com Steve’s Music Center Musical Equipment & Lessons 248 Rock Hill Drive, Rock Hill 845-796-3618 www.stevesmusiccenter.com

PERFORMANCE VENUES Air Pirates Radio Theater Exclusive Live Radio Theater 845-469-7563 www.airpiratesradiotheater.com

Artist Opportunities

Downing Film Center Independent, Classic & Foreign Films 19 Front Street, Newburgh 845-561-3686 Greater Newburgh Symphony Orchestra Dr. Woomyung Choe, conductor P.O. Box 7215, Newburgh, NY 12550 www.newburghsymphony.org Lycian Centre for the Performing Arts Music-Theatre-Dance-Cinema-Art King’s Highway, Sugar Loaf 845-469-2287 www.lyciancentre.com Opera Company of the Highlands Now accepting donations for the upcoming season. OperaCompanyoftheHighlands.com 845-562-5381

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Destination.............................................................................. Gallery to Re-O Open with New Name

“Sunday in the Park with Jazz” by Mary Sealfon

After the Yellow Bird Gallery building was sold to the architectural firm CS Arch, the exhibit area was not used except for special community events and for the Downing Film Center which is located a few steps down from the gallery space. On September 2 the gallery will re-open with the 48th Annual Exhibit of the Orange County Art Federation (OCAF).

Established in 1963, the OCAF is a notfor-profit volunteer based organization whose mission is to promote the active association of practicing artists, art students, supporters of art and to heighten the awareness of the role that art plays to enrich the local communities of Orange County. OCAF president Sarah McHugh has announced that the exhibit will be juried by Timothy John-Luke Smith. The new CS Arch Gallery is located at 10 Front Street and will be open to the public Monday thru Friday from 9:00am to 5:00pm weekdays and on weekends when the Downing Film Center is open. The reception will be on September 10, from 6pm-9pm. For information, call 845-987-8748.

Ferry Godmother Waves Wand. VOILA: Doo-W Wop!

“Days Gone By” opens Doo Wop series

Nothing stops producer extraordinare “Ferry Godmother” Aquanetta Wright. Thanks to Smileworks of the Hudson Valley and other sponsors, the twice-weekly Newburgh Jazz Series is in its fifth year.

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This year she added Tuesday Gospel performances in July and is adding a Tuesday series of ‘mostly’ Doo Wop during August. All the concerts take place rain or shine and are in the cool waterfront park on Front Street. Bring chairs, blankets, food, drink. “The concert lawn is a smoke-free environment,” she reminds us. Admission is free. Concerts begin at 6:30pm. Come a few minutes early and check out the vendors and their wares. The series closes on August 31 with a Pop, Rock & Doo Wop Dance Party with DJ Earl.

August 2011

newburgh calendar Sponsored by Kiki Hayden & Roseann Cozzupoli

Art Exhibits Donise English “Encaustic Works” SUNY Orange, Kaplan Hall, thru Aug 12 Orange County Art Federation CSArch Gallery, Sep 2-Oct 16

Newburgh Doo Wop (plus) Series Days Gone By Doo Wop, Aug 2 Fat City New Orleans rock & soul, Aug 9 Corner Shot Band rock, funk, Aug 16 Waterfront Park, 6:30pm Newburgh Jazz Series 2011 Waterfront Park, Weds & Thurs, 6:30pm

Cinema Family Fun Films Aug 5, 2pm Monday Night Movie Aug 22, 6:30pm Newburgh Free Library “Making the Boys” Aug 7 & 8, 7:30pm “Sholom Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness” Aug 28-30 Downing Film Center

Festival Family Fun Day Ann Street Market, Aug 6, 11am-7pm

Lecture “UFOs: Travelers From Beyond” Newburgh Free Library, Aug 15, 6:30pm

Museum Exhibit Charles Darwin manuscripts Karpeles Manuscript Museum, thru Aug 29

Music Talking Machine Aug 4, 8pm Jamie Kay Aug 7, 3pm Problems Aug 8, 8pm The Wherehouse

Photo by Ramona Torres to be raffled off at last Jazz concert August 31.

Poetry Readings Hudson River Poets Aug 4, 7pm Newburgh Free Library

Puppets The Crabgrass Puppet Theatre “Smart and Small Conquers All” Newburgh Free Library, Aug 4, 6:30pm

Recreation Jeopardy Game “Novel Destinations” Newburgh Free Library, Aug 11, 7pm Theatre - Play Reading “Mr. Bengt’s Wife” by Strindberg Railroad Playhouse, Aug 26, 7pm “Is This The Beginning” Air Pirates Live Radio Theatre Railroad Playhouse, Aug 27, 8pm


...........................................................................NEWburgH Save the Park!

SUNY Orange Sponsors Int’l Plein Air Paint-Out

Hudson River Light by Linda Richichi

River Rose

To benefit the ongoing restoration of Downing Park, “a treasure in the heart of our city”, states Kiki Hayden, charter member of Board of Directors of Downing Park Planning Committee, there will be a fundraising cruise on the River Rose, August 28th, from 6:00pm-9:00pm at the Newburgh Landing on the Hudson.

Shelter House, Downing Park

Tickets are $40 per person and include music and appetizers. There will also be a cash bar on board. Proceeds will fund the Downing Park Planning Committee’s restoration work, operating expenses, and programming. For reservations: 845.565.5559.

Synchronicity? The Downing Film Center and I

Some of the area's most talented outdoor painters will bring their paint boxes and easels to the Newburgh Campus of SUNY Orange on September 10, to participate in the 10th Annual worldwide "paint-out" sponsored by the International Plein Air Painters (IPAP) and SUNY Orange. From 9:00am to 1:00pm, the public will be able to join in the fun by watching individual artists work, moving from painter to painter. This year's "Paint in Newburgh" plein air painting event is coordinated by adjunct art instructor and regional ambassador for IPAP, Linda Richichi, as well as Dr. Nicole Shea, Cultural Affairs Coordinator at the SUNY Newburgh Campus.

Event organizer Richichi says, "There is a joy about paintings outdoors, and this is a chance for people to see professional artists at work, developing their paintings in response to the beauty in nature." A drumming circle will take place from noon to 1:00pm where the participating artists are invited to show their day's work while they picnic on the green lawn behind the new Kaplan Hall on Grand Street. In case of rain, the event will be moved to September 11. IPAP, who has members residing throughout the world, is the blanket organization for individual plein air groups and was created for the sole purpose of advancing the execution and enjoyment of plein air painting without limitations of borders or regions. This event is happening simultaneously at international locations around the globe. You can learn more about the group and see some of the many events happening posted on the website at www.i-p-a-p.com.

Marist Artist At SUNY Orange thru August 11

Playwright , Mart Crowley

Bel Kaufman and Sholom Aleichem

by Barry Plaxen In addition to its regular features, Downing Film Center always has “special” showings. This month, two of the special films have relevance to my earlier life in high school and working in the theatre in NYC. From 1963 to 1970 I worked for a very prolific producer, Richard Barr, a coproducer of the off-Broadway smash hit play The Boys in the Band. I was the company manager, a front of the house job. Downing will be showing Making the Boys, a film about the making of the movie version - which by the way is one of those rare film adaptations of a play in which the entire original NY cast repeated their roles. - on August 7 & 8 at 7:30pm. The film recounts the rise, fall and redemption of the groundbreaking and controversial play. I will be participating in the Aug. 8 post-show discussion. (No autographs, please :-) One of my high school English teachers,

Bel (Up The Down Staircase) Kaufman, was the granddaughter of Sholom Aleichem. In reference to the fact that in the story of Tevye and his Daughters (Fiddler n the Roof), whenever marriage tradition was broken, everyone was happy. When Tevye and his wife followed tradition and would not let their daughter marry a Gentile Cossack, they were all miserable. At a celebration of her recent 100th birthday I asked Kaufman if her grandfather meant to say, that, if we follow traditions created by others, we will not be happy. With her lifted hand, she waved my question away and said, “my grandfather only wanted to make people laugh.” (Kaufman is still tangoing once a week.) Downing is showing the film Sholom Aleichem: “Laughter in the Darkness” from August 20 thru August 30. It is a riveting portrait of the great writer, telling the tale of this rebellious genius who created an entirely new literature. Reservations for both films are suggested. Phone: 845-561-3686.

diagrams present information that describe how something is made or the way it is. I am interested in painting multiple layers of information that may refer abstractly to maps, architectural drawings and blueprints, overhead power lines or the structure of roller coasters and fences." For more information 845-341-9386.

SUNY Orange in Newburgh is presenting Encaustic Works, a solo exhibition by artist Donise English, associate professor and chairperson of the art department at Marist College. The exhibition is in Kaplan Hall, on Grand and First Streets through August 11. According to Ms. English, "These encaustic paintings are about the way visual

August 6 on Ann Street Family Fun Day, sponsored by Safe Harbors of the Hudson, will tale place at the Ann Street Market, just off Broadway & Liberty Streets on August 6 from 11:00am to 7:00pm. There will be crafts, music, a flea market, vendors and fresh produce. And lots of activities for kids.

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Website Puts Artists ‘On the Map’

Zoom in on Orange County

Jonathan Talbot

by Tod Westlake If you're an artist living in the Hudson valley, or anywhere else for that matter, you should take a look at theartsmap.com. This website - which is the collaborative brainchild of Warwick artist Jonathan Talbot; and Rockport, MA, artist Robin Colodzin - provides detailed listings about artists, and arts-related activities, in approximately 90 different countries, including a high concentration here in the northeast. Talbot says that the site began as a simple way for the general public to locate artists' studios. But has since evolved into a database that includes approximately 7500 different "artists, galleries, museums, public art, arts organizations, art schools, art

services & supplies, and more," according to the website. "I realized that if someone were coming to Warwick, the odds of [him or her] finding my studio were minimal," Talbot says. "Now, I have a shingle outside my house that says 'Talbot Studios,' but that doesn't mean that [a person] is actually going to get here, right?" Talbot says that he knows from experience how hard it is for individuals interested in the arts to find good information on the arts community. The website, therefore, is filling a need that had apparently existed for many years. The advent of the internet now means that such information is much easier to compile and disseminate - with perhaps the strongest testimony coming from the fact that more than 7000 artists have signed up in the short time it has existed (the site was rolled-out just last year). What is perhaps most interesting about the website is its 'open source' nature. Put simply, each database entry is actually maintained by the artist, her or himself. While the website lacks the social networking aspects of popular internet

NEWSFLASH: 3 Pirates Abuse Man in Sugar Loaf

This is an overview of world-wide locations. When planning a vacation, you can zoom in on any location and then add art excursions to your itinerary.

destinations such as Facebook or LinkedIn, there are definite similarities, in that it is the users, themselves, who ultimately create the community. Talbot says the site’s original concept has expanded since it was first brainstormed, and that it is quite eclectic when it comes to the variety of different types of artists listed. The map includes musicians, media artists, and even those in the literary arts. "At first we thought we would make a map that was just (visual) artists' studios," Talbot says. "But then we realized that if someone were coming to Warwick [for example] and they were interested in the arts, would they come to a map of just of studios, or would they like a map that dealt with all of the arts?"

World Premiere in Liberty

Rilla Askew & Paul Austin The Abusers

The Abused

WHO: Air Pirates Radio Theatre actors Brian Nieves (top) Alan Andrews, and Ian Murphy, (one and all, members of the Air Pirates Radio Theater repertory company) fully intend to “celebrate and abuse a dead playwright”, courtesy of King’s Theatre Company. Observing them do it is “not recommended for people with heart ailments, bladder problems, inner-ear disorders and/or people inclined to motion sickness”. HOW: By performing all of Shakespeare's plays in one hysterical, irreverent, fast-paced romp, by out Pythoning Monty, out-Simpsoning Homer, and out-Stooge-ing Curly, Larry & Moe, with Titus Andronicus as a cooking show, Othello as a rap song, all sixteen comedies rolled into one, the history played as a football game, and Hamlet-fast, faster and backwards. That's 37 plays in 97 minutes! A brazen blend of the best of the brilliant Bard with the bottom of the absurdity barrel, is this farcical feast of inspired lunacy directed by Paul Ellis.

Knowledge of Shakespeare's works is helpful, but not at all necessary. Get lucky and they may even do it backwards! WHERE: At Lycian’s fully enclosed venue On The Wharf Theatre in Sugar Loaf on King’s Highway. WHEN: The show is scheduled for August 12 through 21. Call the Lycian Centre Box Office at 845-469-2287.

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Stomp at SCCC, Aug. 4

The Street Beats Group is a NYC-based dance and percussion troupe that delivers the excitement and energy of hits like Stomp.,with their original, high-energy music and choreography. At Sullivan County Comm. Coll., Aug. 4 at 8:00pm.

August 2011

The Liberty Free Theatre is presenting the world premiere of Strange Business, a new play by award-winning novelist and playwright, Rilla Askew, through Sunday, August 7. The play was adapted for the stage by the author from the title story in her short story collection. Author Rilla Askew and Artistic Director and founder of The Liberty Free Theatre, Paul Austin, are featured in the cast. Alexis Siroc designed the set, Jon Jon Thomas designed the lights, Daniel Ramos is the stage manager. Mr. Austin directed. The play examines the difficulties of facing old age and mortality in the hardscrabble life of small, rural towns with humor, sorrow and compassion. Performances are Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30pm with Sunday matinees at 3:00pm. Admission is free. Seating is limited and reservations are recommended. The audience is invited to gather after the performance for food, drink, and music. The theatre is located at 109 South Main Street, Liberty. Call 845 292-3788 for reservations and information.

It should be noted, however, that the map is in no way comprehensive when it comes to the artists' listings, as individual artists must themselves sign up. Talbot says that he receives occasional emails from people who asked to be added, not realizing that they themselves have control over placing the listing. Needless to say, Talbot is encouraging artists who happen to read this article to please sign up if they're interested in experiencing this powerful networking tool. There is no cost to join. Please visit www.theartsmap.com to sign up. The site can also be followed on Facebook and Twitter.


Destination.............................Walden..................................... ..............................Meet David C. Lustig, Author.......................... Two months shy of the calamitous events that turned the world inside out and upside down, the Walden High School, Walden, NY graduated an exceptional class, the class of 1939. As was expected, hot humid days accompanied by refreshing summer thunder storms hugged the Shawangunk Ridge before bringing relief to the Wallkill Valley below. Walden, a river town in the Valley was similar to others of like composition and size but also very different. It was a place where children walked to the schoolhouse in the mornings and frequently would engage in such misadventures as placing a Lincoln penny on a railroad track. Retrieving a misshapen, distorted Abe after school was part of the game. This village, the largest in the Town of Montgomery, is where memoirist, David C. Lustig, Jr., once an annoying and persistent wise-ass child, became a man. Fortunately, for us mortals, David is gifted with an acute memory and the learned skills of a seasoned writer. Communication skills he appropriately attributes to his high school English teacher, Miss Theda Gillespie, a much feared "ogre" and "... probably the best darned high school English teacher a diffident young high school student could ever have

David C. Lustig, Jr.

had," relates David fondly. Currently the library at the Valley Central High School is named in the memory of the notorious Miss Theda S. Gillespie. If this writer were in charge of anything other than a keyboard, the four paragraph chapter memorializing Miss Gillespie would be required reading for all who entered. His personal memories and anecdotes of the days preceding World War II are priceless

and are preserved for posterity in his just published Capers and Cameos. The words printed here are not intended to be a review or critique of the book, but instead the intention is to offer a glimpse of the man, David C. Lustig, Jr. It is so remarkable and so fortunate that he is one who possesses the skills necessary to transport a reader into the world of his youth. Although the time is removed, the qualities of human nature remain. The human qualities of love, passion and humor, tempered with a sprinkling and sometimes a torrent of reality existed in all towns and villages that had a railroad, a school house, and children who went to war. Characters of Dave's book could easily have lived in Middletown, Port Jervis, Altoona or all the way to Homer's Ithaca in California. To spend any amount of quality time with author David C. Lustig, Jr. is a treat to be savored. He is a man who justifiably recognizes his abilities as a communicator. As an aside, worthy authors, such as David, must exhibit those skills with a justifiable sense of one's worth. They are the truth tellers and the truth is needed. Fortunately, feedback has let it be known that his written recollections are not only humorous and poignant but a serious part of antidotal history.

His instinct is to share crisp recollections of events and individuals that for others may have faded or totally vanished. What he has come to realize is a personal history of an American town told with honesty and dignity. David is a free-thinking historian with an appropriate disregard for the "political correctness" that has infected and distorted the integrity of contemporary exposition and narrative. David Lustig's Caper and Cameos is a first person narrative, in the genre creative non-fiction. It's a celebration of the human spirit and when the dust is swept clean, reflection and innuendo will reveal what was identified by a different author at an earlier time: The characteristics that allow mere mortals to assume historical significance remain The Human Comedy. The Historical Society of Walden and the Wallkill Valley will sponsor a booksigning and sale on Wednesday evening August 17 at the Jacob T. Walden House, 34 North Montgomery St., in Walden. The event will begin at 7:30pm and David C. Lustig will be available to discuss and sign his awaited Capers and Cameos. A generous portion of the proceeds from the sale (one-third) will be donated to the Historical Society. Refreshments will be served.

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Destination........................................................................................ ..............................Father, Tailor and Soldier, Too.............................. by J. A. Di Bello Arriving in America at age twenty-two in 1930 from just about anywhere, had to be a serious culture shock. But Ellis Island had a special meaning for immigrant Goannis Spauoulos. It was here, through the efforts of the Immigration Naturalization Services (INS) he became John Spanos, American (1908-2001). His origin: Karavas, Cyprus, at the time, one of the Greek Isles. His destination: Walden, NY. The new American brought with him a demanding work ethic, an enviable entrepreneurial spirit and an overwhelming respect for the value of an American education. John Spanos was already a trained and skilled tailor and an accomplished cook. While working in New York City and living in New Jersey, a new phase of John's American experience began in the spring of 1942 when he received an invitation from his newly acquired uncle, Uncle Sam. As the war raged through Europe and across the Pacific, John Spanos was drafted into the U.S. Army. Before he knew it, he was headed back to Europe with the Third Army to join a one time Orange County, NY college student in the race across central France and to be a participant in one of the war's most notorious battles. The battle: The Battle of the Bulge, December 1944. The Orange County college student: George S. Patton, USMA

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Savos & Spanos 1948

at West Point, class of '09. With the war behind him, John Spanos was destined for Walden, NY with his wife Katina. As fate would dictate, John had a classmate, John Savas who was from his village in Cyprus, Karavas, and owned two clothing/tailoring businesses, one in Newburgh and one in Walden. Although the Walden enterprise was not as profitable, John was quick to recognize its potential and immediately bought the business. John's LTD, Quality & Clothiers & Tailors quickly became an integral part of Walden's multiethnic business community.

August 2011

Clothing, styles and work ethics have changed since John Spanos first greeted the public on Walden's Main Street. Fortunately, John's Clothiers & Tailors remains a vibrant part of the community, as it is now in the diligent hands of Christos, John and Katina's son. Christos, a graduate of the State University of New York at Albany, is one who keeps abreast of trends and the techniques of successful marketing. Initially targeting the local business man and a dress-for-business clientele, the sales approached has been modified to accommodate a more casual business attitude and style. Current trends represent a casual acceptance of semi-work clothes, once reserved for those who literally labor, and has gained acceptance as a dominant portion of the market. It is not unusual, today to observe a working business person attired in freshly pressed Levis and a seventy dollar Carhartt shirt! As mentioned earlier John Spanos was a great believer in the American system of education. He and wife, Katina, helped to support the local scholarship organization (Valley Central Scholarship Council) with a specific night called John's Night or Valley Central Scholarship Night. Key to that special offering, 10% of the gross sales was donated to the scholarship council. In those days the Vally Cecntral community, through the efforts of council members, was proud to offer in excess of $20,000 in scholarship

funds to the graduates of the Valley Central High School. Civic minded residents flocked to "John's Night," not only for the fine quality of clothing and the opportunity to contribute to the scholarship fund, but to get a taste of fine Greek delicacies e.g., grape leaves stuffed with ground meats and Mediterranean spices and a special pastry made with filo, nuts and honey meticulously prepared by Mrs. Spanos. The unstated, implied watchword of Goannis Spauoulos: What a wonderful country. What a wonderful Walden.

Rock Camp Needs Singers

Photo courtesy of Jim Rice

The New York School of Music’s Rock Camp Sessions 3 and 4 are yet to come, and vocalists are needed. Call 845-778-7594 In preparation for the upcoming school year “we have stocked instruments for our rent-to-own program and have brought in all the books and materials needed for school band and orchestra programs,” said Rosie Rion, Operations Manager, Events & Programs Coordinator for the school.


................................................................................walden Geek the Library : For Kids & Adults summer readings on Tuesday, August 30, 6:30pm. How many countries have you visited this summer through your books? Raffle baskets, prizes and refreshments included for the evening.

Walden calendar Sponsored by Walden Business Association

Book Signing Recreation

David C. Lustig, Jr. Capers and Cameos Jacob T. Walden House, Aug 17, 7:30pm

Chess Club Mondays, 6pm-8pm Chess Club Saturdays 10am-2pm Scrabble Club Thursdays 6pm-8pm Josephine-Louise Library

Farmers Market

Green is Walden’s Color, Too

Lou Del Bianco Family Event

The Josephine-Louise Public Library will wrap up its Summer Reading Program for the children with a family event featuring Lou Del Bianco in Around the World. The presentation is a multi-cultural program scheduled for Tuesday, August 2nd, at 2:00pm in the library. Mr. Del Bianco promotes reading through storytelling, theatre and music and has performed all over the country creating educational one-man shows for elementary schools. Children will discover that when you read folktales, fairytales and fables, you learn about the world and you learn about yourself. Children of all ages are invited! Adult Event The Adult Summer Reading program, Novel Destinations, will wrap up its

Community Challenge “We have signed on to the 10% Challenge currently being promoted within the Town of Montgomery,” says Library Director Ginny Neidermier.. “The purpose is to reduce energy use by 10% (or more) in the next year and to get 10% of the community to take the pledge as well. “If you happen to visit us during the weeks in August, ask us about the new w i n d o w replacements and door upgrades, made possible from a matching grant from the Public Library Construction Project and the Department of Library Development,” she concludes.

Thursdays Noon-6pm Village Square, Walden

Annual 6K Race James Olley Park, Aug 6, 8:30am-11am ************************

Music Music in the Grove The Jazz Pioneers Aug 6 The Aztecs, The Paper Planets and No Dice Chicago Aug 20 Six Stories Told Aug 27 Wooster Grove, 6:30pm

Family Calendar “Around the World” Lou Del Bianco Josephine-Louise Library, Aug 2, 2pm

Music - Open Mic Den Series: Rock Band TBA w/open mic NY School of Music Aug 26, 7pm

Free Concerts Continue in Wooster Grove Walden’s free summer concerts, Music in the Grove, take place in Wooster Grove on Route 52 east of the village, rain or shine. Bring lawn chairs, blankets, family and friends. Enjoy food from Rocco's Burgers & Dawgs! Concerts are sponsored by The Village of Walden and the Walden Community Council.

“Six Stories Told” Rilee O'Neill-Lead Singer, Tyler McDermott-Drummer, Ben Langer-Keyboards, Jesse Sheppard-Lead Guitar, Nikki Conero-Bass, Travis de Jong-Rhythm Guitar

The Jazz Pioneers will perform on Saturday, August 6, 6:30pm as part of the Music in the Grove series. Also, Six Stories Told (photo left) will perform on August 27 at 6:30pm. The Aztecs, The Paper Planets and No Dice Chicago perform on August 20.

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Art & photogRaphy Exhibit newsgallery photo section Sponsored by Linda Richichi, Mary Mugele Sealfon, Mary Evelyn Whitehill, Unitarian Universalist Gallery, Wallkill River School

“Narcoonah”

Water to Flow Through ARTery’s Veins

watercolor by Linda Barboni “Shohola Falls” by Marie Liu

Milford’s ARTery Gallery’s a new exhibit in August is titled Fluid By Nature. The natural fluidity of water creates everchanging motion, still one moment, turbulent the next; quiet on the surface, yet with activity below. Marie Liu and Linda Barboni have attempted to express in oil, watercolor and pastel, the dynamic properties of water, both as a medium and as a subject. Marie will be exhibiting a new series of

paintings inspired by the numerous creeks and waterfalls in Pike County. “This landscape has a magical and powerful quality which I find very inspiring. That and the vast state and federal lands that are accessible to the public, make this a great place for me and I’m creating my best work here.” Linda will be showing watercolor and pastel paintings that feature scenes of the Hudson River valley, from the Bashakill Preserve to the Hudson River and

Homestead “Home” to River Valley Artists Guild Cover:Photo: “Sergeant” by Dani Cooley

Manhattan skyline. Someone once asked her, "When you paint, what are you thinking?" "I realized it's what I'm feeling that propels and transports me." Barboni's loose painting style lends itself easily to all things natural, especially bodies of water. Whether tranquil or dramatic, her characteristically loose, fresh style of ‘wet in wet ’ watercolor paintings are a result of her sensitivity to the loose-flowing pigment moving within the water. Her latest work incorporates pastel onto the watercolor painting. The exhibit runs from August 11 thru September 13. The reception is during Milford's Art After Dark event, August 13, 6:00pm to 9:00pm. Gallery hours are Thursdays thru Saturdays from 11:00am to 6:00pm and Mondays from 11:00am to 3:00pm. 570 409-1234. arteryonline.com.

“Taxi!” "Body.Built" Photography by Brian Moss will be shown at Alliance Gallery in Narrowsburg, thru August 20.

"Respite" by Dani Cooney

“Footprints in the Sand” by Joan Kehlenbeck “Cloudscape 1” by Susan Miiller

For the month of August, the Orange County Citizens Foundation’s Seligmann Homestead will house the 2011 River Valley Artists Guild (RVAG) summer show, August 8-31. The Guild’s artisanmembers come from all over the Tri-State area.

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To kick off the event, RVAG will hold a reception: Friday August 5, 5:30pm7:30pm. The public is invited to attend. The Orange County Citizens Foundation is located at, 23 White Oak Dr, Sugar Loaf. Many events will be held in the gallery as well. For more info contact Joan Kehlenbeck at 845-754-8232.

August 2011

by Joni Wehrli

by Dana Duke

"Narcoonah" means seeing or to see differently in an Australian Aboriginal language. Narcoonah is a two person show featuring the work of Joni Wehrli and Dana Duke. Joni Wehrli's drawings, from the Different Anatomy series, were executed over three consecutive summers in Livingston Manor. They are composed of cut sections of gouache and watercolors, and take off from illustrations in medical textbooks as a way of capturing the vitality of the body's organs and their liberation from their normal context. Dana Duke's paintings were created, then the reflections in the water of those paintings were photographed to heighten the abstract possibilities and color juxtapositions. The exhibit runs though August 28 at the Catskill Art Society in Livingston Manor. Phone: 845- 436-4227.


Nine Photographers at Old Stone House

Wakefield Exhibit ends August 5

“Figuration” by Steve Dansky “Potted Cat” by Garrett-Waldmeyer

An extraordinary array of images “to Amaze and Delight” from some of the country’s top photographers will be on display starting August 7 at the Old Stone House in Hasbrouck. The photo exhibit, titled Our Worlds in Focus, includes the work of nine professionals in photography, film-making, animation and related fields. Their images span the gamut of what a camera can produce. Some demonstrate acute realism. Others result from digitized enhancement, or unusual camera techniques that blur and blend the main subject. Some photos confound the sense of color, or subtly alter common shapes to hide their origins. An opening reception is set for 1:00pm-

4:00pm on August 7. After that, the Old Stone House, will maintain regular Sunday hours, 2:00pm to 4:00pm, through August 28th. Photographers are Michael Arisohn, LaVerne Black, Steven F. Dansky, Michal Heron, Louis Jawitz, Miriam Rayevsky, Jesse James Wall, and GarrettWaldmeyer (Ursula Waldmeyer and Robert Garrett). The Old Stone House is located by the Neversink River, 282 Hasbrouck Road in Hasbrouck, a short distance from the Route 55 Neversink reservoir, with a Woodbourne zip code, NY 12788. For more information, contact Alana Sherman. 845-434-8182 oldstonehouse.catskill-life.com.

Harriet Finck “Returns” to Orange County

“Train with Hotel ”

“Coal Boats to Tidewater”

The Artwork of artist-educator-historian Manville B. Wakefield, is currently on view at The Time and the Valleys Museum in Grahamsville. "Wake" came to Sullivan County in 1953 when he took the position of art instructor at the Tri-Valley School. Before his arrival he was well known for his black and white illustrations of trains, which appeared on covers of several train magazines and in books by Lucius Beebe. His love of trains took him one step further into model railroading, where his art became three dimensional. In 1953, Wakefield started painting in oil and continued until his death in 1974 at the

age of 50. In twenty short years he produced a legacy of art through outstanding murals at Sullivan County Community College and the M&T Bank in Liberty, books on the O&W Railroad and the Delaware and Hudson Canal, several slide shows on local history and over 200 paintings. During that time, he continued to inspire students in Grahamsville and moved on to head the Commercial Art Program at Sullivan County Community College as well as becoming Sullivan County Historian. Wakefield had proven skill at watercolors, scratchboards, ink wash, etching, woodcuts and oil painting. A large sample of those skills are in the exhibition which runs through August 5th. The museum is located at 332 Main Street in Grahamsville. Phone:845 985-7700.

Harriet Finck explains, “I lived in Orange County for many years until I moved to New Jersey eleven years ago. We still have a cabin on Round Lake outside of Monroe. I had also shown at the UUC back then and the new curator Peggy Landrum contacted me to see what I was up to.” Based on Hebrew letters and Jewish themes (mostly biblical), her new work on paper is large, bold and colorful. “My work is often a quote from Hebrew text. My motifs are usually from deep nature - from either micro or macro nature. I am interested in the way shells work and the way the stars work.” Her exhibit at the Universalist Unitarian Meeting House, 9 Vance Road off of Route 207, a few miles from Route 747 (Drury Lane) in Rock Tavern, runs through August 30. Open on Sundays, from 1:00pm to 4:00pm or by appointment. 917-613-3489.

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Holistic Living About Crystals by Cephora Crystal Skulls About Crystals is written by Cephora from Crystal Connection in Wurtsboro

The crystal skulls are a mystery as profound as the Pyramids of Egypt, the Nazca Lines of Peru, or Stonehenge. Many indigenous people speak of their remarkable magical and healing properties, but nobody really knows where they came from or what they were used for. According to a Mayan legend, once one of the most advanced cultures of the ancient world, when mankind is at the brink of destroying itself and the planet, thirteen Crystal Skulls will come together with the purpose of giving humanity an ancient message to prevent humanity from annihilating itself and the world. It is no coincidence then that another Ancient Crystal Skull has recently surfaced. This Skull is from Mexico and is considered to be at least 2,500 years old.

Challenge and Change by Chief Joseph

We have said this so many times, but it always bears repeating. You create your own realities. It is particularly important for you to acknowledge and accept that fact. Especially during these challenging, changing times on your planet. Challenge and change are not "bad" things, even though many of you consider them undesirable, to say the least. When you're faced with challenges and changes, it's a positive sign you are growing and evolving as you intended when you incarnated. In fact, you cannot NOT grow Come and make your own decision. Meet and evolve. But you do have the choice to Pancho. (photo above) accept it with grace and love or to get Pancho’s ancient message is about dragged kicking and screaming into it. connection; about connection with the Either way works. Which do you prefer? Cosmos, with the Mother Earth, with the The "era of the victim" is over, friends. So Human Tribe, with our Ancestors, with the many of your old ways and ideas are being Quantum Field and with our Higher Selves. "flushed out," if you will. They serve you Come meet the oldest crystal skulls ever no longer. discovered on September 9th & 10th at As the new energies of the new Crystal Connection, 116 Sullivan St, Wurtsboro, NY. 845.888.2547. Wurtsboro Symposium www.CrystalConnectionCenter.com.

CSA FARM DIRECTORY Abundant Life Farm Biodynamically grown organic vegetables Walker Valley. 1-866-993-8932 x13 Willow Wisp Organic Farm Callicoon Farmers Market 25 Stone House Road, Damascus PA 570-224-8013

Farmers Markets Directory Thursdays Walden Noon-6pm Walden Village Square Sundays Ellenville 10am-2pm Market & Center Streets

Robert Simmons & friend

Robert and Kathy Simmons are holding a one day “New Consciousness Connection Day” symposium at Crystal Connection in Wurtsboro on August 20, 9:30am-9:00pm. Robert is the author of Stones of the New Consciousness. He and Kathy will be speaking on the healing and awakening power of crystals, minerals and gems. Call for reservations and information: 845888-2547.

consciousness move into your daily lives, you're feeling the intensity. Your hearts, minds, and bodies feel the intensity. This is good! You are in the final stages of the old paradigm, the old ways that served you well for a time, but no longer do. This is the time to reclaim your power. You are God. You are divine. Each of you possesses all the power that goes along with being God. It's that simple. It's time to take full responsibility for your lives. It's time to be your own creators and to own all of your creations, "good" and "bad". Of course there are no good or bad creations. There is only experience. Your higher selves see nothing in you or your lives as good or bad. All your higher selves care about is your experiences as conscious creators. Your higher selves do not care about anything else. However, they are not uncaring, for they love you totally and unconditionally. They applaud your courage in facing all the changes you are all experiencing right now. They want you to see yourselves as powerful as they see you. It's time to quit blaming -- blaming your past, your mistakes, your parents, your teachers, your governments, the economy, swine flu, etc. etc. ad nauseam. You are in control! As God, you create every part of your earthly experiences. You are not victims. You are God. http://www.greatwesternpublishing.org/ar ticles/2009/050509.html.

Indigenous Grandmothers Sept. Wisdom Weekend in Dingmans Ferry

CANVAS FRIENDS DIRECTORY HEALTH & HOLISTIC SERVICES Helena Moore, Ph.D. Holistic Talk Therapy Wildwood Way, Forestburgh 845-796-1810 Patricia Quinn, MS, LCAT, NBCCH Art Therapy, Hypnosis & Healing 10 Colonial Avenue Warwick, NY 10990 845-649-0953

HOLISTIC & SPIRITUAL The Crystals Center Retail, Workshops, Events, Healing 116 Sullivan Street, Wurtsboro

845-888-2547 ORGANIZATIONS Orange County Arts Council “Art Leaves its Mark” www.OCArtsCouncil.org 845-469-3145 Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Rock Tavern Art Exhibits, Music Events, Discussions 9 Vance Road, Rock Tavern rnww.UUCRT.org

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August 2011

Grandmother Star-Johnsen Moser

A Bridge to Oneness is a group that seeks to bring together different circles, individuals, and councils bringing sacred ceremonies and wisdom teachings to our community. This is a weekend of indigenous teachings with Grandmother Arla & Grandmother Star with the intention of healing through the preservation and sharing of traditions. Grandmother Arla Collett Williams’ vision work has grown through her association with The International Council of the Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers and their vision. Grandmother Star-Johnsen Moser is an internationally-known spiritual healer and teacher and has been a channel for the light for over 40 years. Join them at the Pocono Environmental Education Center in Dingmans Ferry, September 16 thru 18. For information and to register: 845-9783861. abtoneness@yahoo.com.


Destination....MOntgomery....................................... .........................August at Wallkill River School.........................

“Mystic Whaler by the Palisades” Oil painting by Mike Jaroszko

Fresh paintings by Orange County artists Mike Jaroszko and photos by Cornwall photographer Tom Doyle, with emerging artist Marguerite Violente, are on display at the Wallkill River School and Art Gallery (WRS) for the month of August. Mike Jaroszko is a Montgomery-based oil painter and illustrator. His paintings grace the pages of many magazines like Cricket and publications by Scholastic, as well as other national and international venues. His artwork is reminiscent of the Hudson River School, with high realism, luminist light and lush landscapes. He also teaches luminist oil painting classes at the Wallkill River School in Montgomery. Tom Doyle learned to love photography while spending thirty- odd years ago while assigned to the NYPD Intelligence Division. Doyle was assigned to do surveillance photography, during which he learned the technical aspect of the craft. Landscape photography became a full time pursuit after retirement. It was soon

Attached: “Fog and Shadow” photo by Tom Doyle,

apparent that while technical competence was essential, there was much more to landscape photography. Simply put, this new craft required some understanding of ambient light and graphic composition. He has since been pursuing the aesthetic side of landscape photography for ten years. Doyle says; “Most of the time, scenic photography involves waiting - waiting for the light - the sun - the clouds - the moon - the tide That said, it is an incredibly rewarding way to spend time.” Marguerite Violante grew up in Ohio with nine brothers and sisters. She received a B. S. in Education from Youngstown State

University, Ohio, and earned a Masters Degree in Elementary Education from SUNY New Paltz, Summa Cum Laude. After a 34-year profession of teaching, Marguerite pursued her love of painting. Besides studying under Louise McCutcheon, George Hayes, and Marge Morales at the Wallkill River School, Marguerite has also painted under the direction of Carol Galietta in New Windsor. As a member of the Ulster County Vicariate Choir, and the St. Patrick’s Cathedral Choir in New York City, Marguerite has sung for Blessed John Paul VI, and Pope Benedict XVI on the occasion of their visits to New York. Marguerite has also traveled to Rome to sing several times at St. Peter’s Basilica in the presence of Pope Benedict XVI. A reception will be held on August 6, 5:00pm-7:00pm, which is free and open to the public. Gallery hours are 9am-6pm, Tues.-Sun, at the Wallkill River School located at 232 Ward St. (same as 17K) in Montgomery. The Wallkill River School is a nonprofit artist’s cooperative that runs an art gallery and a full-service art school in Montgomery, NY. The WRS promotes local artists and integrates art into the people’s daily lives. Part of the organization’s mission is to preserve dwindling open spaces and promote small scale farms and our

agricultural heritage. The WRS published a local foods cookbook based on what our farms grow, in season, and where to find them. The WRS offers plein air workshops on location throughout Orange County from May-Oct, and year-round art classes in the Montgomery gallery. The WRS is committed to buying local, and all our events strive to be zero waste, handicappedaccessible, and carbon neutral.

Walden Secrets Unveiled in Montgomery! Lisa Melville has revealed secrets of Walden in her book The Grace Murder Case. Set in the Hudson Valley of 1912, this unique look at a salacious historical murder offers a fascinating snapshot of a village's past and chronicles one of the most infamous crimes. Murder was a rare occurrence in the small village of Walden, and the Grace case was scandalous, involving sex, bigamy, robbery, lies and a violent murder which rocked the small riverside community. Melville grew up in the village and is also a local historian who completed her Master’s degree in Public History. She will sign books at the Wallkill River School on Sunday August 14, from 3:00pm until 5:00pm.

DINING OUT and IN

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Destination................................................................................... Green is the Color of My True Love’s Village The three villages of the Town of Montgomery: Montgomery, Maybrook and Walden, have united in support of a Save Energy Movement. It is a growing grass roots campaign that includes 12 local governments representing nearly 90 thousand individuals. It is called the 10% challenge and is represented by a green colored foot print. Efforts will include a pledge by individual households to reduce energy use by 10% or more in the next year and to recruit 10 % of friends and acquaintances from the community to join together and answer the challenge. Kick off days will coincide with the major late summer early fall events in the villages: Montgomery Day, Maybrook Day and Walden's Harvestfest. Information will be made available at these events to explain in greater detail the advantages of group actions and a community plan. Households will be asked to sign a pledge card indicating their commitment to the reduction of energy consumption. Strategies include submitting to a home energy audit, abandoning incandescent lighting, the promotion of water efficiency

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Tractors, Then & Now

and encouraging bike friendly communities and drafting a home energy plan. Additional information is available at the Village offices or Google: The 10% Challenge - Sustainable Hudson Valley.

Here Come the Tractors! Here Come the Tractors! Tractor Show & Farm Day September 3 (rain date September 5)

NOON: Tractor Parade Downtown RR Avenue - Boud St. - Goodwill Road - Beaver Dam Road Chandler Lane - Union St. - Ward St. - to Chambers Barn 2pm - 6pm Tractor Show Chambers Tractors/MFD Pony Rides, Games, Food & More 3pm WRWD Live 7pm Square Dance “Miedma” Montgomery Fire Dept. Pavilion

August 2011

drawing by Robert Harry Score

The first engine-powered farm tractors used steam and were introduced in 1868. These engines were built as small road locomotives and were operated by one man if the engine weighed less than 5 tons. There are now tractor museums all over the US and Canada. Today you can drive a tractor without any gas. Go to tractorgames.online.com. You can load your tractor with cargo and deliver the goods, drive the bulldozer, control the blades, and choose from one of the 5 tractors and go racing on 20 different tracks.


.....................................................................montgomery montgomery & Campbell Hall calendar Sponsored by Di Bello Gallery

DINING OUT

Café, Tea or Moi

Joe Frazita Aug 13 Music for Humanity Aug 20 Sojourn Aug 27 Noble Coffee Roasters, 7:30pm

Art & Photo Exhibits Mike Jaroszko luminist James Hiller photography James Douglas Gallery, ongoing

“Robanic” Reggae Concert Aug 6 Downtown Montgomery, 6pm-10pm

Mike Jaroszko & Tom Doyle Marguerite Violante emerging artist Members Show: ”Harvest” Wallkill River School, Aug 1-31 Reception: Aug 6, 5pm-7pm

With the "economic downturn," "slow down," "quasi depression" or a variety of miscellaneous and other unprintable descriptors, it is refreshing to see two new businesses opening in the Village of Montgomery. "Buy Local" is a concept worthy of residents in all areas served by this publication. It affects the quality of life and the environment that surrounds local businesses. The Café Internet, a creation of Krista Wild of Montgomery, is brand new, located on Union Street in the Village. It features free wire-less internet connection, freshly blended coffees from the Noble Coffee Roasters in Campbell Hall and locally created art work. Krista's pastries, of course, are always tempting. They're freshly baked and attractively presented for anticipated consumption.

Tea for Two is a new tea shop on Clinton Street directly facing the Montgomery Luncheonette. Although the proprietors were not available on premises for comment, it’s opening is anticipated with interest. Blended coffees, tempting pastries and various assortments of interesting teas, combined with local art, will increase what is advantageous to all small businesses in the Village of Montgomery: street traffic in the form of pedestrians. Individuals free to roam from store to bank, from restaurant to bakery or from shop to shop will only increase the benefits of downtown Montgomery's business environment.

“Half Jester” soft rock Senior Center, Sep 2, 6pm-10pm

Open Mic Noble Coffee Roasters, Jul 21, 7:30pm

John D. Wolf & John A. Wolf “Sympathy for the Devil” WolfGang Gallery, thru Aug 10

Poetry Reading Sharon Butler & Harvey Havel Noble Coffee Roasters, Aug 4, 7pm

Book Signing Lisa Melville “The Grace Murder Case” Wallkill River School, Aug 14, 3pm-5pm

Recreation Senior Dance Classic Oldies Concert w/Carl Heller Senior Center, Aug 20, 6pm-10pm

Lecture & Demo Butterfly Tent Montgomery Free Library, Aug 6, 10am

Farm Day Sep 3 (rain date Sep 5) Tractor Parade Downtown, Noon Tractor Show Chamber’s, 2pm-6pm Square Dance “Miedma” MFD Pavilion, 7pm

Music Steven Wells Aug 6

........................Music For Humanity in Campbell Hall........................ Once a month, Music for Humanity producer and musician Barry Adelman offers concerts at Noble Coffee Roasters with a different guest performer(s) each month. The vision of Music For Humanity is that “we can contribute to a better world through

music. By bringing together musicians and music lovers who are concerned about the welfare of humanity and our planet we can use music to improve the world!” Currently the money they collect goes to offering and managing scholarships for financially disadvantaged students of music

who are serious about continuing their musical education. Music For Humanity is approved by the IRS as a charity (501-c-3 Corporation). All donations are tax deductible to the full extent of the law.

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Music - blues / country/ folk / pop / rock sponsored by Steve’s Music Center, Rock Hill NVAM PV & PVT

Warwick Jazz Festival - August 18-2 21

= Neversink Valley Area Museum, Cuddebackville = Palaia Vineyards & Palaia Vineyards Outdoor Tent, Highland Mills

Newburgh Doo Wop Series ....................Waterfront Park, Newburgh, Aug 2, 6:30pm FREE Mark Gamsjager & The Lustre Kings rockabilly ........................LC Aug 4, 6:30pm FREE Hope Debates ..................................................................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 4, 7pm Talking Machine ....................................................The Wherehouse, Newburgh, Aug 4, 8pm Janet Jackson ................................................................................Bethel Woods, Aug 4, 9pm Jonah Smith Band blues, soul, The Knox Sisters ..........The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 5, 7pm Groovy Tuesday 60s ..................................Festival Square, Middletown, Aug 5, 7pm FREE Bob Martinson Band..............................................Pine Bush Bandstand, Aug 5, 7pm FREE Steve Wells ............................................................................................PV Aug 5, 7pm-10pm Selena Gomez & The Scene..........................................................Bethel Woods, Aug 5, 7pm The Rooset ..................................................................................PVT Aug 6, 6:30pm-9:30pm Cuboricua Salsa Band ....................................................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 6, 7pm Joey Frazita ..................................................................................PV Aug 7, 2:30pm-5:30pm Jamie Kay folk-blues ............................................The Wherehouse, Newburgh, Aug 7, 3pm Problems..................................................................The Wherehouse, newburgh, Aug 8, 8pm Newburgh Doo Wop Series ....................Waterfront Park, Newburgh, Aug 9, 6:30pm FREE The Greyhounds rock n roll, r&b, country ..................................LC Aug 11, 6:30pm FREE Mojo Myles Mancuso Band, Zumbi Zumbi ................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 11, 7pm Woodstock Weekend Henderson & Osinski ..........................PVT Aug 12, 6:30pm-9:30pm Sonanado Latin ........................................Festival Square, Middletown, Aug 12, 7pm FREE Winard Harper, Sam Reider’s Tres Amigos ................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 12, 7pm Bob Dylan & Leon Russell ........................................................Bethel Woods, Aug 12, 8pm Woodstock Weekend Robert Schiff ..................................................PVT Aug 13, 3pm-6pm Woodstock Weekend The Redden Brothers ..........................PVT Aug 14, 2:30pm-5:30pm Tommy Jones, Blood Sweat & Tears, The Family Stone ....Bethel Woods Aug 14, 6:30pm Newburgh Doo Wop Series ..................Waterfront Park, Newburgh, Aug 16, 6:30pm FREE Kid Rock, Jamey Johnson, Leroy Powel,The Messengers. Bethel Woods, Aug 17, 7:30pm Annie & the Hedonists blues, jazz, swing, bluegrass ..................LC Aug 18, 6:30pm FREE River’s Edge country ................................Festival Square, Middletown, Aug 19, 7pm FREE Gregg Van Gelder ........................................................................................PV Aug 19, 7pm Tom Freund & Friends, Tanager ..................................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 19, 7pm Leonard Skynryd & The Doobie Brothers ..........................Bethel Woods, Aug 19, 7:30pm Slam Allen ......................................................................Dancing Cat Saloon, Bethel, Aug 20 Patrick Parone as Elvis! ..................................................................PVT Aug 20, 7pm FREE Blues Fest ................................................................................................................PV Aug 21 Newburgh Doo Wop Series ..................Waterfront Park, Newburgh, Aug 23, 6:30pm FREE Lucky Peterson blues, Doug Yoel..................................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 24, 7pm Nailed Shutt classic rock, reggae, jam & Free Shrimp Band rock, country blues, soul ...... LC Aug 25, 6:30pm FREE Mike Miz & Billy Rogan soul, rock ..............................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 25, 7pm White Light classic rock ..........................Festival Square, Middletown, Aug 26, 7pm FREE Bernard Purdie & The Hudson River Rats R&B, funk, soul ......The Falcon, Aug 26, 7pm Bruce Perone ................................................................................................PV Aug 26, 7pm Folk Concert ......................................................................................NVAM Aug 27, 7:30pm Rick Larrimore Rod Stewart Tribute ......................................................PV Aug 27, 7:30pm Stevie Nicks..................................................................................Bethel Woods, Aug 27, 8pm Murali Coreyell ..............................................................Dancing Cat Saloon, Bethel, Aug 27 Victor Fiore ................................................................................PV Aug 28, 2:30pm-5:30pm Slam Allen ......................................................................Dancing Cat Saloon, Bethel, Aug 30 Newburgh Doo Wop Series ..................Waterfront Park, Newburgh, Aug 30, 6:30pm FREE Spectrum classic rock ................................Festival Square, Middletown, Sep 2, 7pm FREE

Richard Kimball

Ray Baretto (1929-2006)

Todd Williams

Mike Jackson

Steve Rubin

The second year of the Warwick Valley Jazz Festival, will be August 18-21. The event, conceived and produced by Warwick musician Steve Rubin, pulls together a growing jazz community and an astonishing, expanding local music scene. The jazz festival is a collective umbrella where already existing venues in Warwick that present jazz come together with new participants to create a four day jazz festival.

Marc Egan

Most shows are free and the variety of music runs from big band to funk, from outdoors on Railroad Avenue on the Green to an intimate indoor book store setting. For additional information contact warwickjazz@yahoo.com or phone Steve Rubin at 917-903-4380, and see warwickvalleyjazzfest.com for the complete schedule. The Warwick Valley Jazz Festival is grateful to Arts in Orange and local sponsors for making this event possible.

Open Mic & Coffee House NCR UUC

= Noble Coffee Roasters, Campbell Hall 845-294-8090 = Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Rock Tavern 917-613-3489.

Open Mic w/ Eric Callari ......................................Logan’s Well, Florida, Wednesdays, 9pm Stacey & Friends Musicians Gathering........The Dancing Cat, Bethel, Thursdays, from 8pm Open Mic Brunch to Lunch Jazz....................The Dancing Cat, Bethel, Sundays, from 11am Open Mic ..........................................Palaia Vineyards, Highland Mills, Aug 4, 11, 18, 25, 7pm Open Mic ..........................................................................................................NCR Jul 21, 7:30pm Open Mic The Den Series ............................................NY School of Music, Walden, Jul 29, 7pm

Opera news Sponsored by New Windsor law office of Drake, Loeb, Heller, Kennedy, Gogerty, Gaba & Rodd

Opera Company Celebrates 25th Anniversary The Delaware Valley Opera (DVO), a non-profit regional professional opera company, celebrates its Silver Anniversary in 2011, bringing opera to the Upper Delaware River Valley of New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey for twentyfive years. Located in scenic Narrowsburg, the DVO has a leading role in the cultural and economic life of the Sullivan County region, drawing audiences from across the area, as well as New York City, Philadelphia, Scranton, Binghamton, and northwestern New Jersey. The Delaware Valley Opera is a Professional Company member of Opera America.

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From August 5 through August 14, the DVO is presenting Donizetti’s L'Elisir d’Amore in Lake Huntington, Narrowsburg and Hawley. The opera favorite is a charming story of class differences, rumor, tricks, and true love. Full of fun, humor, and romance, with vocal flourishes to match, it is a delight for all.L'Elisir d’Amore will be performed with orchestra and sung in Italian with English subtitles. Tickets can be purchased online at delawarevalleyopera.org where you can also read about the August 27 fundraising event in Narrowsburg with Singers of the Valley. Phone: 845-252-3136.

August 2010

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August Strindberg Play Playing in August (at Playhouse) in First English Translation

Malin Tybahl

Laurence Carr

Malin Tybahl’s resume reads impressive! Actress, Theater Pedagogue, Drama Teacher, Energy Healer, Interfaith Minister, Swedish Instructor & Translator. Tybahl has joined forces with SUNY New Paltz English Instructor, Playwright and Author Laurence Carr for a most important world premiere play adaptation of August Strindberg’s Mr. Bengt’s Wife.

character is a young strong, spirited woman called Margit. She escapes the convent life and marries her hero Mr. Bengt, a knight and nobleman. “However, married life is not at all what Margit had expected and all her illusions come to an abrupt awakening when she finds out they are bankrupt. Her old childhood friend, the bailiff, comes to her comfort but everything is not what it seems. Margit is very much a modern woman of today, who even asks for a divorce from the King of Sweden.” In this play comparisons and answers to Ibsen’s A Doll's House can be seen, as well as certain elements of the absurdity that later comes to full bloom in Strindberg’s A Dream Play.” The world premiere will be at the Railroad Playhouse, directed by Artistic Director Seth Soloway, on August 26 with a pre-play discussion at 7:00pm and a staged reading at 8:00pm. The playhouse is located at 27 South Water Street in Newburgh. Phone: 845.565.3791 or rrplayhouse.org.

August Strindberg (1849-1912)

Written in 1882, this is the first time this romantic comedy in five acts has been translated into English. As Tybahl describes, “the play takes place during the Swedish reformation, when all convents were closing and the Church became Lutheran. The lead

Dada Ghosts to Appear in Book Store According to author/poet/educator William Seaton, the Dadaists originated much of the repertory of modernist technique. “They pioneered the artistic use of abstraction, fragmentation, collage, performance art, conceptual art, aleatory work, simultaneity, sound poems, objets trouvés, ethnological and popular culture, and even pranks, anticipating the most contemporary practice.” Seaton is presenting a program evoking the “ghost voices” of Dada poets of almost a hundred years, introducing the Dada scene

in Zurich through the words of participants and reading his translations of poets of this ultra-avant-garde movement. Seaton’s Dada Poems from the German, translations of four poets with essays and commentary, is forthcoming from Nirala, and his translations of Dada and German Expressionist poets have appeared earlier in Chelsea, Maintenant, Mad Blood, Read and Destroy, and the Adirondack Review. The readings will be at 7:00 p.m. on August 19 in Utopian Direction Books and Art, 7 West Street, in Warwick.

Broadway Musical Comes to New Windsor The Biblical saga of Joseph and his coat of many colors, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, comes to life in a musical parable of a boy blessed with prophetic dreams. Set to an engaging cornucopia of musical styles by Broadway composer Andrew Lloyd Webber (Phantom of the Opera, Evita, Jesus Christ Superstar), from country-western and calypso, to bubblegum pop and rock 'n' roll, this Old Testament tale emerges both timely and timeless. Joseph was first presented as a 15-minute pop cantata in London in 1968 and was recorded as a concept album in 1969. After the success of the next Lloyd Webber and Rice piece, Jesus Christ Superstar, Joseph received stage productions beginning in 1970 and expanded recordings in 1971 and 1972. While still undergoing various

transformations and expansions, the musical was produced in the West End in 1973, and in its full format was recorded in 1974, but did not open on Broadway until 1982. This production stars local favorites Mary Ellen Nelligar as the Narrator, Nick Butler as the Pharaoh, Rich Hotaling, Jim Pillmeier, and introducing James Kastenblatt in the title role. A youth choir and performers from the Orange County area will complete the cast of 30. The show is directed and choreographed by Joyce A. Presutti, Executive Artistic Director of Just Off Broadway, Inc, . music director and conductor is Paul O. Davis with Hannah Blair Butler music directing the Youth Choir. Joseph is at Saint Joseph’s School Auditorium, August 4 thru 14, 148 Windsor Highway (Route 32 and Union Avenue), New Windsor. Tickets will be available at the door.

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Towns of Cornwall & Woodbury News Sponsored by Hudson Street Cafe, Cornwall-on-Hudson

Bach’s English Suites come to Cornwall-o on-H Hudson

The English Suites (BWV 806–811) refer to a set of six suites written by Bach for harpsichord and generally thought to be the earliest of Bach's 18 suites for keyboard, the others being the French Suites (BWV 812–817) and the six Partitas (BWV 825–830). Originally, their date of composition was thought to have been between 1718 and 1720, but more recent research suggests that they are likely to have been composed earlier, around 1715, while the composer was living in Weimar. Bach was obliged to write a new cantata every week during his time at the Weimar court, and the English Suites he composed at this time express Bach's longing for new, instrumental music and therefore held a very special place in his life and work. Later in Köthen and Leipzig he worked on a full-time basis with professional orchestras, providing him an ideal context in which to create orchestral and purely instrumental compositions. Like the French Suites, the use of the

Beavers & Muskrats in Cornwall, Oh My!

of these two wetland mammals in an term “English” to describe the Suites was a illustrated presentation; then explore the later addition. The name is thought to date world of these valley residents while back to a claim made by the nineteenthviewing interesting objects and artifacts. century Bach biographer Johann Nikolaus After the program take a walk to the Forkel that they were composed for an wetlands with Pam to search for signs of English nobleman, although no evidence muskrat activity. has emerged to substantiate this claim. Come to the Hudson Highlands Nature There are several striking characteristics Museum’s Outdoor Discovery Center, on about the English Suites. Bach includes a Muser Drive across from 174 Angola Road highly virtuostic prelude for each, in a in Cornwall on Saturday, August 13 at departure from the prevailing tradition 10:00am. dictating a strict progression of the dance Beavers and muskrats are “The For information and registration call 845movements (Allemande, Courante, Engineers of the Wetlands”. 534-5506, ext. 204. Sarabande and Gigue). Join Environmental Educator Pam Visit the museum’s website at By comparison, the later French Suites Golben to learn about the industrious habits www.hhnaturemuseum.org. and Partitas are less strict in form. The Sarabande and Gigue movements in each of “Jammable” Photography in Highland Mills the English Suites is never separated by Photography by “Jammable” (Judith Ann more than a single Minuet or Minuet-like Michael Mable) is on view in the Sweet movement. Finally, the English Suites are Clover Room at Palaia Vineyards in predominantly in minor keys. Highland Mils through August. Every year at the BachFest at the Judy retired after 33 years teaching Cornwall Presbyterian Church, home of the special education students and has Potluck Concerts offered in the fall, waiter rediscovered her love of photographic and spring, there is a “keyboard marathon”, details. The reflection of light, especially in and at this year’s festival the English Suites nature is one of Judy's favorite subjects. will be featured. Judy comes from an artistic family - her The church is located at 222 Hudson mother is a watercolorist and her father was Street in the village of Cornwall-ona black and white photographer. She has, Hudson, two blocks form the Hudson over the years, enjoyed creating stamped Street Cafe which offers outdoor and cards, scaled miniatures, room design and indoor dining. now photography. For more information, google Hudson Go and enjoy her view of the world. Valley Society for Music.

Once Again, The Farce is With Us in Ellenville

Charles Morey is the author of nine plays including adaptations of the 19th century classic novels, The Count of Monte Cristo, A Tale of Two Cities, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Dracula and The Three Musketeers. His original plays include Laughing Stock, Dumas’ Camille and The Yellow Leaf. His adaptations and original plays have gone on from their Pioneer Theatre Company premieres, in Utah, to successful productions at professional theatres across the country. His play The Ladies Man is freely translated and adapted from Tailleur Pour Dames by Georges Feydeau. For some theatre enthusiasts, farce begins with Feydeau. For the uninitiated, in theatre, a farce is a comedy which aims to entertain the audience by means of unlikely, extravagant, and improbable situations, disguise and mistaken identity, verbal humour of varying degrees of sophistication, which may include word play, and a fast-paced plot whose speed usually increases, culminating in an ending which often involves an elaborate chase scene. Farce is also characterized by physical 18

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humor, the use of deliberate absurdity or nonsense, and broadly stylized performances. Some say Farce began with Chaucer and his 14th century Canterbury Tales. Others say farce began in Feydeau's country in the 13th century. Farce, in general, is highly tolerant of transgressive behavior and tends to depict human beings as vain, irrational, venal, infantile, neurotic and prone to automatic behavior. In that respect, farce is a natural companion of satire. Farce is, in fact, not merely a genre but a highly flexible dramatic mode that often occurs in combination with other forms, including romantic comedy. Following in the ‘door-slams’ and ‘blackouts’ of its recent side-splitting farcical productions of Noises Off, Black Comedy and Lend Me A Tenor, Shadowland Theatre in Ellenville is presenting The Ladies Man from August 19 thru September 11. It will be directed by Artistic Director, Brendan Burke. What’s more, unlike many farces, French or otherwise, this one is rated PG. For tickets: 845-647-5511.


..................................................Meet Larry Smiglewski, Director / Manager / Teacher All of my love All of my kissin' You don't know what you've been amissin'. Director Larry Smiglewski is an artist with communication on his mind. A native of New Jersey, graduate of Mary Mount Manhattan College in New York City and the University of Texas at Houston, Larry is intelligent, well-spoken and acutely aware of the communication barriers that exist in theatre. After all Larry is a professor of theatre at the West Chester University of Pennsylvania. And quite positively, he is able to perform with quality that which he teaches: Good Theatre. Larry's road to the theatre is highlighted by many factors, but dominant in his recollections is the influence of an "amazing" high school drama teacher, Miss Gray. Larry fondly recalls that it was she who "nurtured us." It was in a public high school populated with exceptional adolescents. One individual became a Miss America contestant and another played the lead in the road show Evita and of course, there's Larry Smiglewski. The opportunity to direct presented itself when Larry's off-campus acting commitment prevented his participation in

Todd Meredith (right) as Buddy Holly

the high school's play. Not wanting to miss anything theatrical, he asked Miss Gray for the opportunity to direct a one-act, written by the well-known dramatist Jerome McDonough and known to many as the Father of Young Adult Drama. The play was the frequently performed Alki. That was it! "It was years before I acted again," Larry exclaimed, as he modesty points out that he received an encore at his directing début. A major barrier in all theatre is the creation on stage of a controlled state of credibility. There's a sound tech, the lighting designer, the set designer, make-up artists, props and costumes, but the development and preparation of fictional

“Double Visions” in Executive Suite

characters lies in the hands of the director. The audience will know only what the director has gathered from the script and implemented through orchestration and subsequent presentation on stage. When the characters are vividly real and legendary, complications begin to multiply. Credibility is Larry Smigleswki's current assignment as director of the musical The Buddy Holly Story, a production of the Forestburgh Playhouse. This show is a musical that presents characters, settings, music and story familiar to a significant number of theatre-goers. They know what the characters looked like and what they sounded like. The legendary music of the late fifties has risen to near mythical status and remains a product of reality spiced gingerly with glorious fantasies. So many lived it, breathed it and slept with it. There are others who wished only that they had

paid attention. The audience will consist of adventurous souls whose vital quest includes a time machine designed to lift them gently into the glorious days of Richie Valens' folksy, spiced-up La Bamba, coupled with its flip side's soul searching lament Donna. And for those with flirty inclinations there remains the Big Bopper's "Chantilly lace and a pretty face; And a pony tail a-hangin' down." Larry's approach may appear simplistic at first glance as he employs the time-tested concept of "honesty." American legends Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and the Big Bopper can be faithfully represented but never duplicated. Fortunately, through the process of casting and auditions Larry will be working with Todd Meredith an accomplished musician and actor, who has played the role of Buddy Holly in nine different productions. As a musician and central character Todd is a true leader and fully cognizant of the realities of theatrical presentation. To step aboard that time machine and relive or discover "what you've been a missin...," clap your hands and stomp your feet with Buddy Holly. The adventure, The Buddy Holly Story, is a credible and truthful theatrical presentation by Director Larry Smiglewski. Consider too Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and the big Bopper? Real rock and roll?

“Every Day Monet” by Pat Mohr

The Executive Suite Gallery in the Orange County Government Center is hosting an exhibit showcasing the talent of Pat Mohr from Central Valley and Tom Spisany from New Windsor. The two artists are dedicated and inspiring local artists whose diverse works include still life, landscapes and portraits in an array of media including oil, pastel, watercolor and pen and ink. An inherent and shared passion for creativity and expression unites Mohr and Spisany, which is evident when viewing their artwork side by side. Both artists had an early love and appreciation for the unlimited beauty, obvious and obscure, in our midst. Another common thread between the two is that they were both teachers with a desire to impart their knowledge of various subjects. They currently work at Brotherhood Winery in Washingtonville. "The reservoir of artistic talent in Orange County is astounding. I'm honored and pleased to be able to showcase our local visual artists and provide an opportunity for the public to be inspired as they experience the work of these two fine artists," said County Executive Edward A. Diana. The show is located on the third floor at 255 Main Street in Goshen, and is open to the public during business hours. All are

“Still Life With Grapes” by Tom Spisany

welcome. The show runs from through September 9. Call 845-615-3860 for info.

Classifieds For Rent BLOOMINGBURG : Small 4 room basement apt. on commercial property w/view of Shawangunk Ridge and pond. Close to 17K. $950 per month incl. heat. First & last month & 1 month security required. 845-926-4646. BLOOMINGBURG : Second floor commercial 4rm apt/office near Route 17K. $850 per month incl. electric, heat & hot water. First & last month & 1 mo. security required. 845-926-4646. For Sale MONTGOMERY - FREE: Historic, Ramshackle, 1893 Farm House w/ barn on 2 acres with purchase of 8 + acres (subdivided 6 & 2) adjoining commercial property. 600 + ft. NYS highway frontage, 600 + ft Wallkill River Frontage. As is: $219,900. Info @ 845-457-2773. August 2011

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“Artography” in Milford

“Dance of the Shawls” by Linda Bock-Hinger

To understand more about their current life and customs, Linda Bock-Hinger, a Bedminster, NJ photographer, attended the Gathering of Nations in Albuquerque and photographed Native Americans in tribal dress performing traditional dances and rituals. The "Great Chief" led several thousand Native Americans from all over North America in the Grand Entrance of the PowWow. Their attire, in bold colors, elaborate feathers and exquisite beadwork, was designed to tell their story. The architecture of our American Southwest owes its heritage to Native Americans, Mexicans, Spaniards, and influences from the early settlers who used whatever materials were at hand. The use of natural building materials and environmental orientation reflected the unique method of the Pueblo Indians. These qualities of Native American tribes

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Times to Remember & Reflect in Middletown

inspired the Spanish settlers who entered the Southwest in the 16th century. Bock-Hinger went from photography as an avocation to a profession after her retirement in 2000 from a career in education. She has studied photography and art and now combines them into “artography”, which uses photographs as the cornerstone of her mixed media work. Currently both of her art forms may be seen and purchased in various solo and group art shows such as at the Highlands Photographic Guild, 224 Broad Street in Milford, from August 8-September 4. Phone: 570-296-2440

August 2011

“Life on the Erie” by Walter Bill Haskin’s Shop” by Robert H. Score

Watercolors of Times to Remember, paintings by Walter Bill and A Nostalgic, Pen & Ink Reflection, drawings by Robert Harry Score, two solo shows that complement each other, are on view in Orange Hall Gallery & Loft at SUNY Orange in Middletown thru September 15. The exhibits are free & open to the public.

UpFront Exhibit in Port Jervis Born in the United States, in 1958, Paul Thomas currently resides in NYC and Dingmans Ferry. His love of art started when he was a young man living in Paris and continues to this day. “My goal is to paint emotion, eternity, imagination while remaining close to the principles of abstract expressionism. The lack of identifiable objects and defined boundaries combined with multiple vales of color provide the paintings with a sense of depth and space that allows the viewer to establish what emotion each painting has to offer.” Thomas’ work (photo left) is part of an exhibit of over 25 artists at UpFront Exhibition Space, 31 Jersey Avenue in Port Jervis. Reception is August 20, 6:00pm9:00pm. Phone: 845-856-2727.

Walter Bill’s paintings hearken back to a bygone era. Several of the works depict Orange County buildings while many others are remembrances of his native New Jersey where he lived most of his life. The 64 works include street scenes, Victorian homes, churches, old farms, railroad stations and a boxcar-turned-house, plus a variety of other subjects. His works make the viewer feel like he/she is accompanying the artist through nostalgic America of New England and Pennsylvania as well as New York and New Jersey. For thirty-four years, Robert Score states that he has been drawing images “of barns, machinery, fields, and people now forgotten and buried under the pavement of progress.” Many of the barns he has drawn in ink are gone as well as the fields around them. Much of the machinery is scrapped or hidden away. The men and women who worked all of it, he continues “lived all of it -- all are gone, too and nearly all forgotten.” With this exhibit comes not only the artist’s renditions but his feelings towards an important era in Orange County heritage and history–what he terms the “Golden Age of the Family Farm”. Questions may be directed to Cultural Affairs at 845-341-4891.


CANvas category calendar sponsored by Hudson Valley Planning ART TOURS / walks Second Saturday in Beacon Beacon Galleries ..............Downtown, Beacon, Aug 13, all day Art After Dark Milford Galleries................................Downtown Milford, Aug 13, 6pm-9pm

Cabaret After-Main Stage Show Nightly Cabarets............Forestburgh Playhouse, Tuesdays thru Sundays

CINEMA Reel Eclectic Film Series ............................Thrall Library, Middletown, Aug 4, Sep 1, 7pm FREE “Making the Boys”......................................Downing Film Center, Newburgh, Aug 7 & 8, 7:30pm “Godzilla” (1954) ..............................................Paramount Theater, Middletown, Aug 20, 7:30pm Monday Night Movie ............................................Newburgh Free Library, Aug 22, 6:30pm FREE “Sholom Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness” ....Downing Film Center, Newburgh, Aug 28-30

CIrcus The Acrobats of Cirquetacular..Sullivan County Comm. Coll., Loch Sheldrake, Aug 11, 7pm

dance & Drumming The Street Beats Group ........Sullivan County Comm. College, Loch Sheldrake, Aug 4, 8pm

festivalS & recreation adults & children National Night Out ................................Brian Ingeber Park, South Fallsburg, Aug 2, 5:30pm 3rd Annual Black Dirt Feast ......................Scheuermann Farms, Warwick, Aug 2, 6pm-9pm Family Fun Day......................................................Ann Street Market, Newburgh, 11am-7pm Old Fashioned Fun................................................................Museum Village, Monroe, Aug 7 Festival of Wood ..........................................................................Grey Towers, Milford, Aug 7 “A Revolutionary Camp at Night” ................New Windsor Cantonment, Aug 13, 7pm-9pm

holistic living UUC ........................................................................ Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Rock Tavern, 917-613-3489.

Brian Lynch & Herve Sellin, Sasha Klasen & The Vocal Soul ..........The Falcon, Aug 13, 7pm Big Joe Fitz & Mark Dzuiba jazz, blues ..........The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 14, 10:30am-1:30pm Jazz Knights “Jazz Night at the Movies” ......Trophy Point Amphiteatre, Aug 14, 7:30pm FREE Peter Muir, piano jazz, rags, blues ..............Sullivan County Community College, Aug, 25, 7pm Beverly Keys Quartet Newburgh Jazz Series ................Waterfront Park, Aug 17, 6:30pm FREE TBA Newburgh Jazz Series..............................................Waterfront Park, Aug 18, 6:30pm FREE David Crone Trio Warwick Jazz Festival................The Courtyeard, Warwick, Aug 18, 5pm The NY Swing Exchange Warwick Jazz Festival ......Village Green, Warwick,Aug 18, 7pm E.J. Strickland Quintet, O’Farrill Brothers’ Band ....The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 18, 7pm Skye Jazz Quartet & Gabriele Tranchina ................The Courtyard, Warwick, Aug 18, 9:30pm Chris Persad Group Warwick Jazz Festival ........................The Dautaj, Warwick, Aug 19, 8pm Richard Kimball piano, Warwick Jazz Festival ......Utopian Direction, Warwick, Aug 20, 4pm Jeff Ciampa, Mark Egan, Joel Rosenblatt, Billy Drewes Warwick Jazz Festival .................... Railroad Avenue Green, Warwick, Aug 20, 6:30pm Greg Osby, The Chad McLoughlin Jazz Trio ....................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 20, 7pm Ray Beretto Legacy Band Warwick Jazz Festival Coquito, Warwick, Aug 20, 9pm & 10:30pm The Saints of Swing ..........................................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 21, 10:30am-1:30pm Warwick Jazz All Stars Warwick Jazz Festival ......................Coquito, Warwick, Aug 21, 11am Michael Purcell Quartet Warwick Jazz Festival............The Courtyard, Warwick, Aug 21, 1pm Rick Savage 4tet Warwick Jazz Festival ........................................Warwick Grove, Aug 21, 2pm John Ehlis Warwick Jazz Festival ..................................The Courtyeard, Warwick, Aug 21, 4pm 3D Ritmo De Vida Warwick Jazz Festival ..............................The Dautaj, Warwick, Aug 21 7pm Jazz Knights “Dancing Uner the Stars”......Trophy Point. Amphitheatre, Aug 21, 7:30pm FREE Eric Person & Meta-Four Newburgh Jazz Series ..........Waterfront Park, Aug 24, 6:30pm FREE Andrea and James & The Andjam Band Newburgh Jazz Series ................................................ Waterfront Park, Aug 25, 6:30pm FREE Eric Harland, Julian Lago & Taylor Eigsti ........................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 27, 7pm Derek James Sax................................................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 28, 10:30am-1:30pm Brad Mehldau & Mark Guilana Duo ..................................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 28, 7pm New York Pops, John Pizzarelli, Jessica Molaskey ........................Bethel Woods, Aug 28, 7pm SAGE Newburgh Jazz Series ..........................................Waterfront Park, Aug 31, 6:30pm FREE Liberty Jazz Festival ......................Liberty Museum & Arts Center, Aug 28, 4pm & Sep 2, 7pm

Psychic Experience Group w/Athen Drewes ............................................UUC 1st Tuesdays, 7pm “New Consciousness Connection Day” symposium w/Robert & Kathy Simmons ........................ Opera - concert Crystal Connection, Wurtsboro, Aug 20, 9:30am-9pm Hudson Opera Theatre ..................Black Dirt Feast, Scheuermann Farms, Warwick, Aug 2, 6pm

lectureS, DEmos & SymposiumS / Forums NFL ..............................................................................................................................Newburgh Free Library NVAM ..............................................................................Neversink Valley Area Museum, Cuddebackville PEEC ............................................................Pocono Environmental Education Center, Dingmans Ferry SUNYO ..........................................................................................Orange Hall Gallery, OCCC, Middletown TL ..........................................................................................................................Thrall Library, Middletown

“Feed the Butterflies” ......................Butterfly Tent, Montgomery Free Library, Aug 6, 10am Emily Schiffer “Children of the Cheyenne Nation” ......Fovea Exhibitions, Beacon, Aug 13, 5pm Full Moon Drumming Circle for beginners w/Kofi ................................PEEC Aug 13, 7pm “UFOs: Travelers Fomr Beyond” Hudson Valley Sitings ....................NFL Aug 15, 6:30pm William Seaton “Ghost Voice of Dada Poets” ......Utopian Direction, Warwick, Aug 19, 7pm Frog Frenzy II ............................................................................................PEEC Aug 20, 1pm “Delaware Water Gap Resorts: 1850s-1930s” Martin Wilson................................................ NPS HQ Visitor’s Center, Bushkill, Aug 20, 7pm Nick Zungoli “Mekong Journey” Slide Show ..........Exposures Gallery, Sugar Loaf, Aug 20, 8pm “I Remember Woodstock” Symposium ....Liberty Musem & Arts Center, Aug 28, 2pm-4pm

Music - blues - country - pop - rock - etc. see page 16 Music - Broadway - Film - classic pop - Opera - Operetta

Opera - theatre “The Elixir of Love” Donizetti, Delaware Valley Opera.................................................................. Sullivan West High School, Lake Huntington, Aug 5 & 6, 8pm Tusten Theatre Narrowsburg, Aug 12-14

POETRY & PROSE READINGs

(Open mic session usually included)

Sharon Butler & Harvey Havel ....................Noble Coffee Roasters, Campbell Hall, Aug 4, 7pm Hudson River Poets......................................................Newburgh Free Library, Aug 4, 7pm FREE Taylor & Marie Elizabeth Mali First Friday Contemporary Writers ............................................ Narrowsburg Library, Aug 5, 7:30pm Alison Koffler & Daryl Wise ................................Howland Cultural Center, Beacon, Aug 5, 8pm Calling All Poets Marathon ............Howland Cultural Center, Beacon, Aug 6, 11am-11pm FREE Addison Goodson Poetry on the Loose........................7 West Street, Warwick, Aug 6, 4pm FREE Sonia Hicks Lynch Poetry in the Gallery ..............................Wurtsboro Art Alliance, Aug 7, 8pm Kirpal Gordon Northeast Poetry Center ..................7 West Street, Warwick, Aug 13, 4pm FREE Featured poet & open mic ............................................The Coffee Shoppe, Beacon, Aug 18, 7pm Poetry Night ..................................................UpFront Exhibition Space, Port Jervis, Aug 27 TBA Poetry at the Church Ted Gill, host ................................Goshen Methodist Church, Aug 29, 7pm Sharon Butler & Ed Fisher....................................................Tuscan Cafe, Warwick, Aug 30, 7pm James Cotter Poetry on the Loose ................................7 West Street, Warwick, Sep 3, 4pm FREE

Broadway Concerts Direct “Summer Lovin’” ..........Wurtsboro Community Church, Jul 16, 8pm puppetry Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra “You’ll get a Kick out of Porter”..Bethel Woods, Aug 6, 8pm “Smart & Small Conquers All” The Crabtree Puppet Theatre .................................................... West Pont Concert Band “Night at the Movies” Trophy Pt. Amphitheatre, Aug 7, 7:30pm FREE Newburgh Free Library, Aug 4, 6:30pm FREE Song of the Valley - Sweet Adelines barbershop ..........Pine Bush Bandstand, Aug 19, 7pm FREE theatre musical Neil Sedaka & NJ Symphony Orchestra......................................Bethel Woods, Aug 21, 7:30;pm ”Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” New Windsor Playhouse .............................. “Lovely Songs for a Summer Night” vocalists ............Pine Bush Bandstand, Aug 26, 7pm FREE St. Joseph’s School, New Windsor, Aug 4-14 West Pont Concert Band “Something Old, New, Borrowed, and Blue” ........................................ “Buddy - The Buddy Holly Story” ..........................................Forestburgh Playhouse, thru Aug 7 Trophy Point Amphitheatre, Aug 28, 7:30pm FREE “The Andrews Brothers” ..........................................Shadowland Theatre, Ellenville, thru Aug 14 music - classical “Chicago” ....................................................................................Forestburgh Playhouse, Aug 9-21 Brett Williams guitar .......................... Shandelee Music Festival, Livingston Manor, Aug 6, 8pm “Ain’t Misbehavin’” ............................................................Forestburgh Playhouse, Aug 23-Sep 4 “An Evening of Early Music” ............ Shandelee Music Festival, Livingston Manor, Aug 9, 8pm “An Evening of Chamber Music”......Shandelee Music Festival, Livingston Manor, Aug 11, 8pm theatre - Physical Alexander Shtarkman piano ..............Shandelee Music Festival, Livingston Manor, Aug 13, 8pm “The Little Farm Show” NACL Theatre ........Barryvillle Farmers Market, Aug 13, Noon, FREE Gregory Hayes harpshichord & Karen Hosmer oboe....Pacem In Terris, Warwick, Aug 14, 5pm Callicoon Farmers Market, Aug 14, Noon, FREE International Artists of Shandelee pianists...................................................................................... “Stray Dog” by Laura Moran ..................................NACL Theatre, Highland Lake, Aug 27, 8pm Shandelee Music Festival, Livingston Manor, Aug 18, 8pm, & Aug 20, 3pm Keyboard Marathon Hudson Valley BachFest ..Cornwall Presbyterian Church, Aug 19, 7:30pm Hudson Valley BachFest Concertos ....................Cornwall Presbyterian Church, Aug 21, 3:30pm theatre - Play “Strange Business” by Rilla Askew w/Askew & Paul Austin ..........Liberty Free Theatre, Aug 4-7 Scott Jackson Wiley guitar, Villa-Lobos program............Pacem In Terris, Warwick, Aug 28, 5pm “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged” Wharf @ Lycian Centre, Aug 12-21 “The Ladies Man” dir. Brendan Burke ..............................................................ST Aug 19-Sep 11 music - jazz Jeff Clampa Jazz Trio....................Black Dirt Feast, Scheuermann Farms, Warwick, Aug 2, 7pm TJ Tomlin Dixieland All-Stars Newburgh Jazz Series ....Waterfront Park, Aug 3, 6:30pm FREE theatre - Play reading “The Suicide Tapes” Terra Firma Theatre Co. ........Railroad Playhouse, Newburgh, Aug 7, 8pm Matt Jordan Big Band Newburgh Jazz Series ................Waterfront Park, Aug 4, 6:30pm FREE “Mr. Bengt’s Wife” by Strindberg ............................Railroad Playhouse, Newburgh, Aug 26, 7pm Peter Muir piano jazz, rags, blues......Sullivan Cty Comm. Col., Loch Sheldrake, Aug 4, 8pm “Is This The Beginning” Air Pirates Live Radio Theater................................................................ The Davis Heckendon Quartet ..................The Falcon, Marlboro, Aug 7, 10:30am-1:30pm Railroad Playhouse, Newburgh, Aug 27, 8pm Gabreile Tranchina Quartet Newburgh Jazz Series......Waterfront Park, Aug 10, 6:30pm FREE “Lost on the Natchez Trail” Page 2 Stage Readings ...................................................................... Joe GiI & the Trio of Terror Newburgh Jazz Series ......Waterfront Park, Aug 11, 6:30pm FREE UpFront Exhibition Space, Port Jervis, Sep 3, 7pm

August 2011

Delaware & Hudson CANVAS

21


Augus BW CTMW DVAC FAL FP

= Bethel Woods Center for the Arts =Creative Theatre-Muddy Water Players, Playhouse at Museum Village, Monroe = Delaware Valley Arts Center, Narrowsburg = The Falcon, Marlboro = Forestburgh Playhouse

MONDAY

1

TUESDAY

2

Please check the schedule for Gallery Art and Photography Opening Receptions see page 24

Poetry Reading Walter Worden & John Kenselaar Tuscan Cafe, Warwick 7pm Music Newburgh Doo Wop Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm

WEDNESDAY

3

9

Cinema “Making the Boys” Downing Film Center, Newburgh, 7:30pm Music Problems The Wherehouse, 8pm

15 Please check the schedule for Gallery Art and Photography Opening Receptions see page 24

Music Newburgh Doo Wop Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm Theatre-Musical “Chicago” FP 8pm

Music - Jazz Newburgh Jazz Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm Theatre-Musical “The Buddy Holly Story” FP 2pm & 8pm

10 Music-Jazz Newburgh Jazz Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm Theatre-Musical “Chicago” FP 2pm & 8pm

Music - Classical Shandelee Music Festival Livingston Manor, 8pm

16

17

Music Newburgh Doo Wop Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm

= Howland Cultural Center, Beacon = Lycian Centre for the Performing Arts, Sugar Loaf 845-469-2287 = North American Culture Lab, Highland Lake = Noble Coffee Roasters, Campbell Hall, 845-294-1056 = Newburgh Free Library

NRT NVAM PEEC PV / PVT RR

THURSDAY

4

Theatre-Musical “Buddy Holly Story” FP 8pm

8

HCC LC NACL NCR NFL

Music - Jazz.........Newburgh Jazz Series ......Waterfront Park. 6:30pm Puppets ..................Crabgrass Puppet Theatre ..............NFL 6:30pm Music - Rockabilly..........Mark Gamsjager & Lustre Kings............LC 6:30pm Cinema ................................Reel Eclectic Film Series ....................NFL 7pm Poetry Reading................Sharon Butler & Harvey Havel ..............NCR 7pm Poetry Reading ........................Hudson River Poets............................TL 7pm Open Mic ....................................Palaia Vineyards..............................PV 7pm Theatre - Play......”Strange Business” ..............Liberty Free Theatre, 7:30pm

= New Rose Theatre, 35, East M = Neversink Valley Area Museu = Pocono Environmenal Educa = Palaia Vineyards / Palaia Vine = Railroad Playhouse, Newburg

FRIDAY

5

Music - 60s.........Groovy Tuesday ....F Music.......................Bob Martinson B

Music ............................Selena Gomez & Th

Music ....................Jonah Smith Band, The K Music ..........................................Steve Wells

Theatre - Play..............“Strange Business” ..

Theatre-Musical....”Joseph &...Dreamcoat”......St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 7:30pm

Open Mic...................Musician’s Gathering ....The Dancing Cat, Bethel, 8pm Prose Reading.First Friday Contemporary W Dance & Drumming ..............The Street Beats Group ..................SCCC 8pm Theatre - Musical ................“The Buddy Holly Story” ......................FP 8pm Theatre - Musical ................“The Andrews Brothers” ......................ST 8pm Music.........................`Talking Machine ....The Wherehouse, Newburgh, 8pm Music ............................................Janet Jackson ..............................BW 9pm Music - Jazz...............Jazz Trio ....Aroma Thyme Bistro, Ellenville, 8pm-11pm

11

Theatre-Musical....”Joseph & Amazing..Dreamcoat”S

Opera - Theatre”The Elixir of Love”Sullivan Theatre - Musical..........“The Buddy Holly

Theatre - Musical ..........The Andrews Bro

Poetry reading ............Alison Koffler & Da

12

Music ................Henderson & Os

Music - Latin.........Sonando ........F Misic - Jazz..........Newburgh Jazz Series....Waterfront Park. 6:30pm Music - Rock n Roll, Country.......The Greyhounds ..........LC 6:30pm Music..................................Side By SIde ....... Circus ......................The Acrobats of Cirque-tacular ......SCCC 7pm Music.............Winard Harper, Sam Reider’s Open Mic ..................................Open Mic ............................PV 7pm Theatre-Musical....”Joseph & Amazing..Dreamcoat”S Music.........Mojo Myles Mancuso Band, Zumbi Zumbi ......FAL 7pm Opera - Theatre ................“The Elixir of Lo Theatre-Musical....”Joseph &...Dreamcoat” ..St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 7:30pm

Open Mic.....Musician’s Gathering ....The Dancing Cat, Bethel, 8pm Music - Classical..Evening of Chamber Music ..................SMF 8pm Theatre-Musical ........................“Chicago” ............................FP 8pm Theatre - Musical ..........“The Andrews Brothers” ................ST 8pm Music - Jazz...Jazz Trio. ..Aroma Thyme Bistro, Ellenville, 8pm-11pm

18

Theatre - Play..”The Complete Works of W S

Theatre - Musical ..........“The Andrews Bro Theatre-Musical ........................“Chicago” Music ..........................Bob Dylan & Leon

19

Music - Country...River’s Edge ....F

Music - Jazz...Newburgh Jazz Series ........Waterfront Park. 6:30pm Music - Barbershop.......Song of the Valley ...

Music-Jazz Newburgh Jazz Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm

Music - Blues, Jazz, Swing......Annie & the Hedonists ....LC 6:30pm Music ....................................Gregg Van Geld

Theatre-Musical “Chicago” FP 2pm & 8pm

Poetry Reading...Featured Poet ..The Coffee Shoppe, Beacon, 7pm Music - Classical....Bach Keyboard Marathon .

Music Kid Rock, et al BW 7:30pm

Theatre-Musical “Chicago” FP 8pm

Music - Jazz..Warwick Jazz Festival ..Various Locations, 7pm-11pm Music ........................Tom Freund & Friends

Open Mic ..................................Open Mic ............................PV 7pm Music..................Leonard Skynryd & The Do

Music - Jazz..E.J.Strickland Quintet, O’Farrill Bros. Band ..FAL 7pm Theatre - Play..”The Complete Works of W S Open Mic......Musician’s Gathering....The Dancing Cat, Bethel, 8pm Theatre-Musical ........................“Chicago”

Music - Classical.........Int’l Artists of Shandelee piano ....SMF 8pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Ma

Theatre-Musical ........................“Chicago” ............................FP 8pm Music - Jazz ....................Warwick Jazz Fe Music - Jazz...Jazz Trio...Aroma Thyme Bistro, Ellenville, 8pm-11pm

22 Cinema Monday Night Movie NFL 6:30pm

23

24

Theatre-Musical “Ain’t Misbehavin’” FP 2pm & 8pm

Music Newburgh Doo Wop Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm

Music-Jazz Newburgh Jazz Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm Music Lucky Peterson, Doug Yoel FAL 7pm

Theatre-Musical “Ain’t Misbehavin’” FP 8pm

25

Music - Jazz...Newburgh Jazz Series ........Waterfront Park. 6:30pm Music - Rock-Reggae-Jam...Nailed Shutt, Free Shrimp Band ......LC 6:30pm

Open Mic ..................................Open Mic ............................PV 7pm Music - Jazz - Rags - Blues.....Peter Muir piano ..............SCCC 7pm Music..............................Mike Miz & Billy Rogan ................FAL 7pm Open Mic......Musician’s Gathering....The Dancing Cat, Bethel, 8pm Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehavin’” ....................FP 8pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Man” ......................ST 8pm

26

Music - Rock..................White Light ............F

Music. - Barbershop.......”Lovely Songs” .....

Theatre - Play Reading.........“Mr. Bengt’s Wi

Music ........................................Bruce Perone

Music ................Bernard Purdie & The Huds

Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehav

Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Ma

Music - Jazz...Jazz Trio ..Aroma Thyme Bistro, Ellenville, 8pm-11pm

29

Poetry Poetry at the Church Goshen Meth. Ch., 7pm

Cinema Sholom Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness Downing Film Ctr, Nwbgh 2pm

22

Cinema Sholom Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness 30 Downing Fim Ctr, Nwbgh, 2pm Poetry Reading Sharon Butler & Ed Fisher Tuscan Cafe, Warwick 7pm Music Newburgh Doo Wop Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm

31

Music-Jazz Newburgh Jazz Series Waterfront Park, 6:30pm heatre-Musical “Ain’t Misbehavin’” FP 2pm & 8pm

Theatre-Musical “Ain’t Misbehavin’” FP 8pm

Delaware & Hudson CANVAS

August 2011

1

Music - Jazz...Newburgh Jazz Series ........Waterfront Park. 6:30pm Open Mic ..................................Open Mic ............................PV 7pm Cinema ........................Reel Eclectic Film Series ................TL 7pm Open Mic......Musician’s Gathering....The Dancing Cat, Bethel, 8pm Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehavin’ ......................FP 8pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Man” ......................ST 8pm

2

Music - Jazz.....Liberty Jazz Festival..Libe

Open Mic..........Den Series & Open Mic......N

Music - Rock.......................Spectrum ..........F

Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehav

Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Ma


st 2011

Main Street, Route 52, Walden 845-778-2478 m, Cuddebackville ation Center, Dingmans Ferry eyards Outdoor Tent, Highland Mills gh

SCCC SMF ST SUNYO TT

Y

= Sullivan County Community College, Seelig Auditorium = Shandelee Music Festival, Livingston Manor = Shadowland Theatre, Ellenville = Orange Hall, OCCC, Grandview & Waywayanda Aves., Middletown = Tusten Theatre, Narrowsburg

UUC WAA WH

= Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Rock Tavern, 917-613-3489. = Wurtsboro Art Alliance,, 73 Sullivan Street = Wherehouse, Newburgh

SATURDAY

Festival Square, Middletown, 7pm

6

Poetry Reading.....Calling All Poets Poetry Marathon ....HCC 11am-11pm

SUNDAY

7

Festival ......................Festival of Wood ..................Grey Towers, Milford Music - Jazz ......Davis Heckendon Quartet..........FAL 10:30am-1:30pm Music - Jazz............Jazz Lunch & Brunch ......................Dancing Cat Saloon, 1pm Theatre-Musical....”Joseph & Amazing...Dreamcoat” ........St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 2pm & 7:30pm e Scene ........................BW 7pm Theatre - Musical ................“The Andrews Brothers” ................................ST 2pm

and ..Pine Bush Bandstand, 7pm

Knox Sisters ................FAL 7pm ..............................PV 7pm-10pm

Festival.......Family Fun Day ......Ann Street Market, Newburgh, 11am-7pm

Poetry Reading ..................Addison Goodson ..............7 West Street, Warwick,. 4pm

Music ........................................The Roost ..................................PVT 6:30pm-9:30pm

Theatre-Musical....”Joseph & Amazing...Dreamcoat” ..St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 2pm

Music ..............................................Joey Frazita ........................PV 2:30pm-5:30pm Music - Salsa ..................Cuboricua Salsa Band ..........................................FAL 7pm Theatre - Musical ................“The Buddy Holly Story” ................................FP 3pm .......Libetry Free Theatre, 7:30pm Theatre - Play..............“Strange Business” ..........................Libetry Free Theatre, 7:30pm Theatre - Play..............“Strange Business”............................Libetry Free Theatre, 3pm

Writers Narrowsburg Lib. 7:30pm

St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 7:30pm

Opera - Theatre...........”The Elixir of Love” ........Sullivan West HS, Lake Huntington, 8pm Music..............................Jamie Kay ....................The Wherehouse, Newburgh, 3pm

West HS, Lake Huntington , 8pm Music - Classical....Bret Williams guitar ..Shandelee Music Fest., Livinsgton Manor, 8pm Music - Film Music ..............West Point Concert Band ..........Trophy Point, 7:30pm Story”..........................FP 8pm Theatre - Musical..........“The Buddy Holly Story” ..........................................FP 8pm Cinema...............“Making the Boys” ......Downing Film Center, Newburgh, 7:30pm thers” ..........................ST 8pm Theatre - Musical ..........“The Andrews Brothers” ..........................................ST 8pm Poetry Reading ........................Sonia Hicks Lynch ..................................WAA 8pm

ayl Wise ....................HCC 8pm Music - Classic Pop............Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra ..................BW 8pm Play Reading ..........................“The Suicide Tapes” ..................................RR 8pm

inksi ..........PVT 6:30pm-9:30pm

Festival Square, Middletown, 7pm

..........Pine Bush Bandstand, 7pm Tres Amigos ................FAL 7pm

13

Art Walk.................Second Saturday in Beacon ..............Downtown Beacon, all day

14

Music - Jazz..Big Joe Fitz & Mark Dzuiba ............FAL 10:30am-1:30pm

Theatre - Physical.”The Little Farm Show”..Callicoon Farmers Market, Noon

Music - Jazz...Brian Lynch & Herve Sellin, Sasha Klasen & The Vocal Soul FAL 10:30am-1:30pm Music - Jazz.............Jazz Lunch & Brunch ......................Dancing Cat Saloon, 1pm

Theatre - Physical ................“The Little Farm Show” ..............Barryville Farmers Market, Noon Theatre - Musical ................“The Andrews Brothers” ................................ST 2pm

Theatre-Musical..”Joseph & Amazing...Dreamcoat”....St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 2 & 7:30pm Theatre-Musical....”Joseph & Amazing...Dreamcoat” ..St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 2pm Music ......................................The Redden Brothers ..............PVT 2:30pm-5:30pm ove” ..............................TT 8pm Music ............................................Robert Schiff....................................................PVT 3pm-6pm Art Walk ........................................Art After Dark ............................Downtown Milford, 6pm-9pm Theatre - Play..”The Complete Works of W Shakespeare Abridged”........LC 3pm

St. Joseph’s School, New Windor, 7:30pm

Shakespeare Abridged” LC 8pm

Theatre - Play...”The Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged” ..Wharf @ LC 8pm Opera - Theatre........................“The Elixir of Love” ....................................TT 3pm

others” ..........................ST 8pm Music - Classical..Alexander Shtarkman piano ..Shandelee Music Fest, Livingston Manor, 8pm Theatre-Musical ..............................“Chicago” ............................................FP 3pm ......................................FP 8pm Opera - Theatre........................“The Elixir of Love” ........................................................TT 8pm Music - Classical............Oboe & Harpsichord ........Pacem In Terris, Warwick, 5pm Russell ......................BW 8pm Theatre-Musical ..............................“Chicago” ................................................................FP 8pm Music..Tommy Jones, Blood Sweat & Tears, Family Stone ................BW 6:30pm Theatre - Musical ..................The Andrews Brothers”......................................................ST 8pm Music - Jazz............Jazz Knights ......................Trophy Point Amphitheatre, 7:30pm

Festival Square, Middletown, 7pm

..........Pine Bush Bandstand, 7pm

der ..................................PV 7pm

20

Holistic Living...New Consciousness Connection Day ..Crystal Connection, Wurtsboro, 930am-9pm Music - Jazz ..............................Warwick Jazz Festival........................Various Localtions, 4pm-12am Music........................................Patrick Parone as Elvis!........................................................PVT 7pm

21 Music - jazz ..........................Saints of Swing ..........FAL 10:30am-1:30pm Music - Jazz.......Warwick Jazz Festival ......Various Locations, 11am-9pm

s, Tanager ....................FAL 7pm Music - Jazz ................Greg Osby, Chad McLoughlin Jazz Trio ..........................................FAL 7pm Music - Jazz............Jazz Lunch & Brunch ........Dancing Cat Saloon, 1pm ....Cornwall Presbyterian Ch., 7:30pm Cinema ................................................“Godzilla” ................Paramount Theatre, Middletown, 7:30pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Man” ..............................ST 2pm

oobie Brothers ........BW 7:30pm Theatre - Play....”The Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged”..Wharf @ LC 8pm Music ........................................Blues Fest................................PV 2:30pm

Shakespeare Abridged” LC 8pm Theatre-Musical ..............................“Chicago” ................................................................FP 8pm Theatre - Play..The Complete Works of W Shakespeare Abridged”..LC 3pm

......................................FP 8pm Music - B’way-Pop-Operetta, etc...Broadway Concerts Direct ....Wurtsboro Community Church, 8pm Music - Classical.....Bach Concertos ..Cornwall Presbyterian Church, 3:30pm

an”................................ST 8pm stival ..............The Dautaj, 8pm

Music - Classical.........Int’l Artists of Shandelee piano ................................................SMF 8pm Theatre - Play ............................“The Ladies Man” ..........................................................ST 8pm Music................................................Slam Allen ..............................................Dancing cat Saloon

Music - Classical.Scott Jackson Wiley guitar ..Pacem In Terris, Warwick, 5pm Music - Jazz............Jazz Knights ......Trophy Point Amphitheatre, 7:30pm Music - Pop ......Neil Sedaka & NJ Symphony Orchestra ......BW 7:30pm Theatre-Musical ........................“Chicago” ....................................FP 8pm

27

Music - Jazz................Eric Hardin, Julian Lange & Taylor Eigsti ................FAL 7pm

28

Music - Jazz ........Derek James Sax ........FAL 10:30am-1:30pm Music - Folk ............................Folk Concert ..........................................NVAM 7:30pm Music - Jazz............Jazz Lunch & Brunch ........Dancing Cat Saloon, 1pm Festival Square, Middletown, 7pm Music ..................Rick Lattimore Rod Stewart Tribute ............................PV 7:30pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Man” ..............................ST 2pm ..........Pine Bush Bandstand, 7pm Poetry Reading.............PoetryNIght ..........UpFront Exhibition Space, Port Jervis TBA Cinema...Sholom Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness ....Downing Film Ctr, Newburgh, 2pm fe” by Strindberg ..........RR 7pm Theatre - Play reading...”Is This The Beginning” Air Pirates Live Radio Theater ..RR 8pm Symposium..“I Remember Woodstock” ..Liberty Museum & Arts Center, 2pm-4pm e ......................................PV 7pm Theatre - Physical ..................“Stray Dog” ................................................NACL 8pm Music ..............................................Victor Fiore ........................PV 2:30pm-5:30pm son River Rates ............FAL 7pm Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehavin’”................................................FP 8pm Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehavin’ ..............................FP 3pm vin’ ..............................FP 8pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Man” ................................................ST 8pm Music - Jazz...Liberty Jazz Festival ..Liberty Museum & Arts Center, 4pm an”................................ST 8pm Music ......................................Stevie Nicks ....................................................BW 8pm Music - Jazz....NY Pops, John Pizzarelli, Jessica Molaskey......BW 7pm Music ....................................Murali Coryell ....................Dancing Cat Saloon, Bethel Music - Jazz ........Brad Mehldau & Mark Guiliana Duo ..............FAL 7pm

erty Museum & Arts Center, 4pm

NY School of Music, Walden, 7pm

Festival Square, Middletown, 7pm

vin’ ..............................FP 8pm

Music............West Point Concert Band........Trophy Point Amph., 7:30pm

3

Poetry Reading ....James Cotter Poetry on the Loose 7 West Street, Warwick,. 4pm

4

Play Reading...”Lost on the Natchez Trail” ....UpFront Exhibition Space, Port Jervis, 7pm Music - Jazz...........Jazz Lunch & Brunch ........Dancing Cat Saloon, 1pm Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehavin’”................................................FP 8pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Man” ..............................ST 2pm Theatre - Play ....................“The Ladies Man” ................................................ST 8pm Theatre - Musical ..............“Ain’t Misbehavin’ ..............................FP 3pm

an”................................ST 8pm

August 2011

Delaware & Hudson CANVAS

23


Art & Photography receptions

ART exhibits

River Valley Artists Guild Summer Show........................................................................................ CAG ................................................................................................................Catskill Artists Gallery, Liberty Seligmann Homestead, Sugar Loaf, Aug 5, 5:30pm-7:30pm CAS....................................................................................................Catskill Art Society, Livingston Manor Mike Jaroszko & Tom Doyle, Marguerite Violante ..................................WRS Aug 6, 5pm-7pm DVAC..........................................................................................Delaware Valley Arts Center, Narrowsburg “Our Worlds In Focus” 9 photographers ............Old Stone House, Hasbrouck, Aug 7, 1pm-4pm KMM............................................................................................Karpeles Manuscript Museum, Newburgh Linda Bock-Hinger......................................................................................HPG Aug 13, 6pm-9pm NFL ..............................................................................................................................Newburgh Free Library Marie Liu & Linda Barboni “Fluid By Nature” ..........................The ARTery, Aug 13, 6pm-9pm SUNYO ........................................SUNY Orange Middletown, Orange Hall Gallery & Loft 845-341-4891 Erice Ansel paintings ..........................................................The Forge , Milford, Aug 13, 6pm-9pm TL ..........................................................................................................................Thrall Library, Middletown UUC....................................Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Rock Tavern Gallery 917-613-3489. Michael Gaydos, Catharine Welshman “The figure, Two artists, Two visions”.................................... Beacon Artist Union, Aug 13, 6pm-9pm WAA ..........................................................................................Wurtsboro Art Alliance, 73 Sullivan Street Eileen MacAvery Kane “Chakra Garden Meditation” digital collage............................................ WRS................................................................................Wallkill River School, Montgomery 845-457-2787 Carolyn Duke pottery ............................................Duke Pottery, Tennanah Lake, Roscoe, ongoing Mike Jarozsko luminist paintings ..........................James Douglas Gallery, Montgomery, ongoing Manville B. Wakefield ..........................Time and the Valleys Museum, Grahamsville, thru Aug 5 Tom Holmes “Frozen in Frost” sculptures ................................Beacon Artists Union, thru Aug 7 “Fields & Streams” 13 artists juried show ..............................Wurtsboro Art Alliance, thru Aug 7 Tom Holmes and Richard Weber "Expanding Questions, Frozen Light" .................................... The ARTery, Milford, thru Aug 8 John D. Wolf & John A. Wolf “Sympathy for the Devil” ................................................................ WolfGang Gallery, Montgomery, thru Aug 10 Donise English “Encaustic Works” ..............SUNY Orange, Kaplan Hall, Newburgh, thru Aug 12 Cheryl Korb “Olde Towne America” landscapes ..........River Gallery, Narrowsburg, thru Aug 20 “Just...Air” 8 artists, mixed media ....................................................................DVAC thru Aug 20 Gail Robinson, Kerry Law, Khara Gilvey “Three at the Beach” ................................................ Hudson Beach Glass, Beacon, thru Aug 26 2011 Members Show ..................................................Liberty Museum & Arts Center, thru Aug 27 Dana Duke & Joni Wehrli “Narcoona” ..............................................................CAS thru Aug 28 “Visions” Hemlock Farms Artists & Friends ................Chant Realtors, Lords Valley, thru Aug 30 Harriet Finck ........................................................................................................UUC thru Aug 30 Valerie Taggert watercolors & botanicals ........................Livingston Manor Library, thru summer “Windows on Broadway” Sullivan HS Students Strong Building, Broadway, Monticello, thru Sep Small Works Show ..................................................................................................CAG thru Sep 4 “The Great Hudson River Exhibition” ........................Mill Street Loft ARTS, Beacon thru Sep 4 Pat Mohr and Tom Spisany “Double Visions”Executive Suite, Gov’t Center, Goshen, thru Sep 9 “Inspiration-Transformation” multiple genres ................Collage Gallery, Warwick, thru Sep 11 Walter Bill “Watercolors of Times to Remember ............................................SUNYO thru Sep 15 Robert Harry Score “Mending Wall: A Nostalgic, Pen & Ink Reflection” ..SUNYO thru Sep 15 Zhang Huan, Daniel Buren, Maya Lin et al, sculptures ................................................................ Storm King Art Center, Mountainville, thru Nov 13

New ART exhibits Mike Jaroszko, Marguerite Violante ......................................................................WRS Aug 1-31 “Harvest” Wallkill River School Members........................................Hall Gallery WRS Aug 1-31 Judith Ann Michael Mable ......Sweet Clover Room, Palaia Vineyards, Highland Mills, Aug 1-31 River Valley Artists Guild Summer Show ..............Seligmann Homestead, Sugar Loaf, Aug 6-31 Marie Liu & Linda Barboni “Fluid By Nature” ................................The ARTery, Aug 11-Sep 12 Michael Gaydos, Catharine Welshman “The figure, Two artists, Two visions”............................ Beacon Artist Union, Aug 13-Sep 4 Erice Ansel paintings..................................................................The Forge , Milford, Aug 13-Sep 8 Eileen MacAvery Kane “Chakra Garden Meditation” digital collage............................................ Windows on Main Sacred Spaces, Beacon, Aug 13-Sep 10 25 Artists ..............................................................UpFront Exhibition Space, Port Jervis, Aug TBA Orange County Art Federation ....................................CSArch Gallery, Newburgh, Sep 2-Oct 16

Windows on Main Sacred Spaces, Beacon, Aug 13, 6pm-9pm 25 Artists ..................................................................UpFront Exhibition Space, Port Jervis, Aug 20 Nick Zungoli “Mekong Journey”...................................................................................................... Exposures Gallery, Sugar Loaf, Aug 20, 7pm-10pm, w/Slide Show 8pm “In and Out, Open and Shut” 9 photographers ..Old Stone House, Hasbrouck, Sep 4, 1pm-4pm

books & clubs Audubon Society First Sunday Field Trip..............................845-744-6047 Goshen, 8am or 9am Book Discussion “The Reader” by Bernard Schlink ..Mamakating Lib., Wurtsboro, Jun 30, 3pm Book Game -Jeopardy (based on books)....................Newburgh Free Library, Aug 11, 7pm FREE Book Signing Lisa Melville “The Grace Murder Case” ..........................WRS Aug 14, 3pm-5pm Book Signing Robert Simmons “The Book of Stones”, “Stones of the New Consciousness.......... Crystal Connection, Wurtsboro, Aug 20, 1pm-2:30pm Book Signing Nick Zungoli “Mekong Journey” ................Exposure Gallery, Aug 20, 7pm-10pm Walden Chess Club all ages, all levels ................Walden Library, Saturdays 10am, Mondays 6pm Friday Night Chess ....................................................................Narrowsburg Library, Fridays 6pm Knit and Stitch ......................................................................Narrowsburg Library, Mondays, 6pm Knimble Knitters......................................................................Ellenville Library, Saturdays, 10am Laurel & Hardy Sons of the Desert Int’l Org. ....................Last Sundays, ray@themtharhills.org The Music Lovers Guild ............................3rd Thurs, 7:30pm FREE, Montgomery 845-457-9867 Listen to recorded classical music, open informal discussion follows. Photography Club Hudson Highlands Photo Workshop ..............................2nd Monday, 7:30pm St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Chester Science Cafe "String Theory: A Theory of Everything? Or a Theory of Nothing?" ................ Dr. David L. Morgan Diana’s, New Windsor, Aug 24, 7pm Scrabble Players............................................................................Walden Library, Thursdays, 6pm Scrabble Players..........................................................................Ellenville Library, Tuesdays, 6pm Trivia Night ..........................................................2 Alices, Cornwall-on-Hudson, Thursdays, 8pm

museum exhibits Meet the Animals ..................................................................HHNM Saturdays & Sundays 2:30pm Brook Trout Exhibit ........................................................HHNM-CoH, Fri, Sat & Sun, Noon-4pm Grey Towers House Tours ..........................................................Weekends, Grey Towers, Milford “Summer Camps of the early 1900’s in Pike County”................The Columns, Milford, ongoing Sculpture Exhibits Imi Knoebel, Walter De Maria ........................................Dia:Beacon, ongoing Sullivan County Museum Historical Museum & Archives............................Hurleyville. ongoing Museum & Frederick Franck Sculpture Garden ......Pacem in Terris, Warwick, thru Oct. FREE Charles Darwin manuscripts ....................Karpeles Manuscript Museum, Newburgh, thru Aug 29 “Strange, Kozmic Experience:: The Doors, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix”. .................................. Bethel Woods Museum, thru Oct 30 2011 Exhibit ....................................Neversink Valley Area Museum, Cuddebackville, thru Oct 31 “The Million Dollar Club: Early Banks & Anthracite Canals” ..................NVAM thru Nov 27

school & conservatory calendar

PhotograPhy exhibits FOV ......................................................................................................................Fovea Exhibitions, Beacon HPG..................................................................................................Highlands Photographic Guild, Milford

“Early to Rise: Working Farms in Orange County” ........................................................ongoing Cornell Cooperative Extension, Middletown James Hiller ............................................................James Douglas Gallery, Montgomery, ongoing Nick Zungoli “Trifecta” ....................................................Exposures Gallery, Sugar Loaf, ongoing Eileen MacAvery Kane Chakra Garden ........Brody’s Best Cafe & Juice Bar, Goshen, thru Aug 1 Tom Holmes “Frozen in Frost” ..................................................Beacon Artists Union, thru Aug 7 Thom O’Connor“Intersecting” ..............................................................................HPG thru Aug 7 Brian Moss “Body Built” ....................................................................................DVAC thru Aug 20 William G. Scheele “Bob Dylan and the Band: From Woodstock to California, 1973-1975” ...... Bethel Woods Museum, thru Aug 28 Pat Peters “My Backyard, A Pictorial” ..............................................Ellenville Library, thru Sep 1 Emily Schiffer “Children of the Cheyenne Nation” ..............................................FOV thru Sep 4

“The Hobbit” King’s Youth Theater............Wharf at Lycian Centre, Sugar Loaf, Aug 5 & 6, 8pm Young Performers Hudson Valley BachFest ............Cornwall Presbyterian Church, Aug 20, 2pm

Children and teens calendar HHNM ......................................Hudson Highlands Nature Museum, Outdoor Discovery Center, Cornwall HHNM-CoH ............................Hudson Highlands Nature Museum, Education Center, Cornwall-on-Hudson PEEC......................................................................Pocono Environmental Education Center, Dingmans Ferry

cinema Family Fun Films ........................................................Newburgh Free Library, Aug 5, 2pm FREE

Museum Meet the Animals ........................................................................HHNM-CoH, Sat & Sun, 2:30pm

Music “Kids Night with Quintette 7”West Point Band ..Trophy Point Amphitheatre, Jul 10, 7pm FREE

New photography exhibits

Judith Ann Michael Mable ......Sweet Clover Room, Palaia Vineyards, Highland Mills, Aug 1-31 Tom Doyle ..................................................................................................................WRS Aug 1-31 storytelling Page Turner Adventures all ages........................Josephine-Louise Library, Walden, Jun 30, 2pm “Our Worlds In Focus” multiple photographers..............Old Stone House, Hasbrouck, Aug 7-28 Linda Bock-Hinger ............................................................................................HPG Aug 13-Sep 4 Nick Zungoli “Mekong Journey”........................Exposures Gallery, Sugar Loaf, Aug 20-thru Dec Theatre - musical The Grand Catskill Resorts photography & architecture .............................................................. “The 3 Little Pigs” ....................................................Forestburgh Playhouse, Aug 4, 18, 20, 11am Liberty Museum & Arts Center, Sep 2-Dec 16 “The Wizard of Oz”..................................................Forestburgh Playhouse, Aug 6, 11, 13, 11am “In and Out - Open and Shut” 9 photographers ..............Old Stone House, Hasbrouck, Sep 4-25 “My Emperor’s New Clothes”................Lycian Centre, Sugar Loaf, Aug 16 & 18, 11am & 1pm

24

Delaware & Hudson CANVAS

August 2011


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