BERKSHIRESWEEK www.berkshiresweek.com
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2019
Who is she? ‘Still I Rise’ at Mass MoCA sparks conversation about women, women of color in art ..... Page 4 Five questions for ‘Live from Here’ host Chris Thile ..... Page 3 Second Annual Northeast Fiddlers’ Convention ..... Page 6 Plan your weekend with our events calendar ..... Page 10 PHOTO PROVIDED BY KAELAN BURKETT/MASS MOCA
ART
FAIRS
MUSIC
MUSIC
WALKS AND TALKS
Watch where you step!
Kick off the season
Take a walk on the wild side
Norman Rockwell Museum is celebrating Fathers Day with a special program, “Father’s Day: Fatherhood Illustrated,” with admission, 2 p.m. Sunday, June 16. Also, enjoy a look at “Woodstock to the Moon: 1969 Illustrated,” and “For the People: Memories of the Old Corner House.” 9 Glendale Road, Stockbridge.
The Berkshire Mountain Faerie Festival returns to Bowe Field, with a day of programming for the whole family, including storytime and marionette shows for the kids, as well as music, artisans and merchants and more, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, June 15. Admission is $10, children under age 5 get in free. 371 Old Columbia St., Adams.
The 8th Annual Berkshire Gateway Jazz Weekend welcomes a concert by Samirah Evans and Wanda Houston Friday, June 14, and Diego Figueiredo and Ken Peplowski Saturday, June 15, and more, as well as a vintage automobile display and vendors Saturday. 25 Park Place, Lee.
Take a special guided Ghost Tour of the most haunted parts of Edith Wharton’s Lenox home The Mount, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 19. Tickets are $24, $20 ages 1218. 2 Plunkett St., Lenox.
A summer of great concerts at the Great Barrington Gazebo kicks off 5:30 p.m. Friday, June 14, with a show by Sandy & Sandy. Behind Town Hall, 334 Main St., Great Barrington. This event is free so bring the whole family, blankets and lawn chairs.
Stop by the Berkshire Botanical Garden to check out the newly opened Lucy’s Garden, a collection of 22 topiaries that were donated last fall. Among the exotic shrub animals is Jumbo the elephant with his spouting trunk of greenery. Lucy’s Garden is part of general admission.
NRM.ORG
BERKSHIREMOUNTAINSFAERIEFESTIVAL. COM
The Naumburg Trio, featuring violinist Frank Huang, cellist David Requiro and pianist Gilles Vonsattel will perform a program of Beethoven, Shostakovich and Tchaikovsky, 8 p.m. Saturday, June 15. Concerts are held in the Tannery on the grounds of Mount Lebanon Shaker Village and Darrow School, 110 Darrow Road, New Lebanon, N.Y. $30-$39.
Get your whimsy on
Concerts all weekend
BERKSHIREGATEWAYSJAZZ.ORG
Don’t miss this concert
EDITHWHARTON.ORG
MUSIC
TOWNOFGB.ORG
FAMILY FUN
BERKSHIREBOTANICAL. ORG
Celebrate! New Exhibitions & Programs Woodstock to the Moon: 1969 Illustrated Norman Rockwell: Private Moments Inspired: Rockwell & Erikson Major sponsors: Brenda & Jeffery Bleustein, Audrey & Ralph Friedner, Dena M. Hardymon
Friday, June 14, 10 a.m. U. S. Naturalization Ceremony Saturday, June 15, 1 p.m. Rockwell on Baseball Talk Sunday, June 16, 2 p.m. Fatherhood Illustrated Talk
5o years of illustration art NRM.org • Stockbridge, MA • 413.298.4100 • open daily • KIDS & TEENS FREE!
Norman Rockwell Museum. All rights reserved.
An art-filled Fathers Day
Norman Rockwell , The Final Impossibility, 1969 (detail). Collection of Smithsonian Institutions. © Norman Rockwell Family Agency. All rights reserved.
Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week BerkshiresWeek.com 2
BEST BETS >> THINGS TO DO IN THE BERKSHIRES
questions with
BY BENJAMIN CASSIDY >> The Berkshire Eagle
LENOX
‘A
Prairie Home Companion” and its successor, “Live from Here,” have long been tied to the Midwest. But come September, Chris Thile will be hosting the variety show in New York City instead of St. Paul, Minn. Before that switch, Thile, comedian Tig Notaro, Ben Folds and I’m With Her will stop at Tanglewood on Saturday, June 15, as part of the program’s summer tour. The show will broadcast live from the Koussevitzky Music Shed beginning at 5:45 p.m. In advance of the event, Thile answered five questions by phone. The interview has been edited for length.
1
This edition of “Live from Here” will feature Tig Notaro, Ben Folds and I’m With Her. For you, what makes each of these acts distinctive?
2
After this summer’s touring, you will be settling into the show’s new home at The Town Hall in New York City. Why the change? It’s been a pretty steady diet of change for us since I became the host of this show, and the show keeps becoming more and more like itself. I love New York. I live in New York. I think New York is, maybe in certain ways, America’s window to the world and the world’s window to America. I love the Twin Cities, as well, but this is where I live. There’s just so much going on here all the time. I feel like the world journeys through New York, and I’m excited to hear what that does to our radio show.
3
What were your concerns, if any, about making the switch?
PHOTO PROVIDED BY NATE RYAN
Chris Thile will perform “Live From Here” on Saturday, June 15, at Tanglewood.
year, you got bit on the eyelid by a mosquito. That’s right!
There are myriad concerns attached to any amount of change, as I’m sure you’ve experienced in your own life and any of us experience as we go through our lives, wondering if the decisions that we make are correct. But I suppose I’m not really worried about it. There’s a sound that I hear in my head, and I’m so fortunate to have the collaborators that I have who also have sounds in their head and as long as we hear those sounds in our head, the show’s going to be OK. Of course, the work of getting those sounds that we hear in our heads onto the airwaves is real and difficult and at times stressful work, but it’s also beloved, and it’s limitless edifying. I think that these changes will introduce new obstacles, and then also take obstacles away. That sense really curtails any worry that I have surrounding the transition.
4
Back to the summer. At Tanglewood last
Are bug bites a big problem for musicians during these outdoor performances during the summertime? You don’t really have a free hand for swatting them away. That’s true. I had not thought about that since it happened. I think it’s a fact of outdoor performance, and you just sort of accept it. There might be wind through the microphone. There might be — a fire engine might careen by. As we’ve had before outdoors there, you might have a lowing peacock. Just any number of things, all of which are just kind of delightful in their own way. Certainly a mosquito bite is not that delightful except that it made for [a funny opening].
5
What would your ideal 24 hours in the Berkshires involve? I’ve got to say being at Tan-
glewood is one of my very favorite things, ... [and] just to make sure I’m outside as much as possible. I want to eat a tomato while I’m there. I want something to be grilled. I want to eat outside. I want to listen to music outside or make it, and I want to go on a hike. And I want to be up late with some sort of regal snifter of something, like brandy or old whiskey — something old. I want to drink something old while I’m up there, I think is what I’m trying to say. It might be an old wine. It might be an old brandy. And I want that to happen in the neighborhood of hardwood furniture and a leather chair. I don’t have to be on either, but I want to see them while I’m having my old beverage after a day of listening to and/ or making music outside and walking around. Benjamin Cassidy can be reached at bcassidy@berkshireeagle.com, at @bybencassidy on Twitter and 413-496-6251.
BerkshiresWeek.com
For starters, I think Tig Notaro is one of the most creative comedians in the world. She was on the show my first season as host, and I was agog. I think she’s brilliant. ... [There’s ] a routine she did on late-night once where she was basically just making a chair squeak against the floor — it’s worth a look. ... Ben Folds is a total hero of mine. I’ve been obsessed since I was in college, if not before. I remember when that second Ben Folds Five record [“Whatever and Ever Amen”] came out and putting on that first song, “One Angry Dwarf and 200 Solemn Faces” ... just sort of, oh, this is a real thing that I’m going to need to deal with now as an aspiring evolving musician. He’s continued to do it. He’s just continuing to do extraordinary work. He was on the show last year. ... As far as I’m With Her, where do I
even start? They’re one of the best bands in the world, and I’m just the luckiest man in the world [because] I feel like I’m good friends with all three [Sara Watkins, Sarah Jarosz and Aoife O’Donovan] of them. But I actually mean that; that’s not hyperbole. I really feel like they’re one of the best bands in the world.
Berkshires Week | Thursday, June 13, 2019
TAKE 5 Chris Thile Q&A
3
Art that evokes ‘thoughtful experiences’ Mass MoCA exhibit examines women, women of color’s place — or lack thereof — in art history NORTH ADAMS — In Gene-
vieve Gaignard’s portrait, “The 99cent Store,” a young woman, dressed in a pink sweatshirt with black kittens on it, jeans with a rip in one knee and white boots stands on a street corner outside a discount store. Her hair is crimped and frizzy. She stares directly at the viewer, as if she can see them too. The image is simple, but the young woman’s stare is intense, confident. Who is she? Does she live in that neighborhood? Or is she a tourist taking an ironic photograph? The viewer’s questions are left unanswered, but hopefully, those questions will spark a conversation or internal dialogue on a deeper level. “My hope is that the work sparks conversations around acceptance of others and breaks the notions of stereotypes in order to embrace the many complexities of identity,” Gaignard said of her work in an email interview with The Berkshire Eagle. Gaignard, a Los Angelesbased artist, uses photographic self-portraiture, sculpture and installation to explore race, femininity and class. With “The 99cent Store,” she’s posed herself as a teenager, in an ordinary situation. “She’s challenging the immediate judgment you make when you see this image. She requires us to go deeper, to think about the assumptions being made about that person,” said Laura Thompson, curator of Kidspace and director of education at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art.
Originally from Orange, Gaignard’s artwork focuses on her biracial identity — her father is African American, her mother is white. “The inspirations behind my photography, and all my work, stems from the voice of my inner child and the experiences I had growing up biracial in America,” she said. “As I play back moments from from my past, I’m able to explore through my art a lot of the questions and feelings I had about not fitting in or belonging in a racially divided society.” Gaignard’s work will be part of the year long exhibition, “Still I Rise” — opening Saturday, June 15, at Kidspace at Mass MoCA — which uses portraiture, specifically of women and women of
color, to explore the topics of female power, social privilege and the representation of women in art history. “We’re coming off of a four-year project focused on social-emotional learning, with series on empathy, optimism, courage and problem solving. We wanted to look at exhibitions in which that skill set could be applied,” Thompson said. “We also wanted to look at portraiture and it has been a while since we’ve done anything that focused on revisiting art history. We also really wanted to examine race with kids, to be able to have some conversations with them about why certain people were not included in the western art historical cannon.” Artists like the duo E2 -
PHOTO PROVIDED BY MASS MOCA
Artists E2 - Kleinveld & Julien reinterpret paintings, such as “American Gothic” to include historically under represented people.
SE S
The Berkshire Eagle
R TH EN TH E B O E S O IR EN DY,
BY JENNIFER HUBERDEAU
JU SE NE PT 8 T EM HR BE OU R 2 GH 2
Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week BerkshiresWeek.com 4
‘STILL I RISE’
Williamstown, Massachusetts clarkart.edu
Renoir: The Body, The Senses is organized by the Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts, and the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. The Clark’s summer 2019 exhibitions and programs are made possible in part by generous support from Denise Littlefield Sobel. Major contributors to the presentation of Renoir: The Body, The Senses at the Clark are Robert and Martha Berman Lipp, Acquavella Galleries, and the Robert Lehman Foundation.
What: “Still I Rise” opening reception When: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday, June 15
Where: Kidspace at Mass MoCA, 1040 Mass MoCA Way, North Adams
A NEW MUSICAL AT BARRINGTON STAGE!
More information: 413-662-2111, massmoca.org
Berkshires Week | Thursday, June 13, 2019
IF YOU GO
Genevieve Gaignard’s “The 99cent Store” is on display at Kidspace at Mass MoCA. PHOTO PROVIDED BY THE ARTIST AND SUSANNE VIELMETTER LOS ANGELES PROJECTS
African American identity. “Both Genevieve and Deborah create work based on their personal experiences growing up. They share the same experience of questioning their identity and of how they are being perceived,” Thompson said. Also included in the show are works by Japanese Canadian artist Tim Okamura and Gustave Blanche III. Blanche, a figurative painter known for his portraits of everyday laborers, ranging from life-size images to pocket-sized paintings, will exhibit a painting of celebrated New Orleans chef Leah Chase. Chase, who recently died at the age of 96, was known as the “Queen of Creole Cuisine” and was famous for hosting many heads of state at Dooky Chase’s Restaurant. “This show makes good connections to other exhibi-
tions at the museum, such as Cauleen Smith’s ‘We Already Have What We Need’ or ERRE’s ‘Them and Us / Ellos y Nosotros,’ opening in August,” Thompson said. “In a lot of cases, across the museum, we’re really thinking about identity and contemporary issues at the forefront of politics, discussions, debates and protests that are happening ... We really want to acknowledge that our visitors are coming to us with all sorts of knowledge and we want to capitalize on it and use the art to facilitate discussions that need to be had and are happening. We really want to provide opportunities for these very thoughtful experiences to happen.” Jennifer Huberdeau can be reached at jhuberdeau@berkshireeagle.com, on Twitter at @ BE_DigitalJen and 413-496-6229.
TAVERN AT THE A , PITTSFIELD SPONSORED IN PART BY WUPE/WBEC FM
Inviting local, amateur bands to showcase their talents and win great prizes! The “battle” will take place on Sunday, July 28. It will be an exciting night of music, laughter and a performance by Impending Doom singing “Sinking Into Oblivion,” one of the signature songs in Fall Springs.
Hosted by 95.9’s Bryan Slater and Cheryl Adams from WUPE FM. To apply for a space in our lineup, please contact:
BattleOfTheBands@BarringtonStageCo.org or call (413) 997-6108.
BARRINGTONSTAGECO.ORG
BerkshiresWeek.com
Kleinveld & Julien (Elizabeth Kleinveld and Epaul Julien) reinterpret famous paintings, such as “Washington Crossing the Delaware” or “American Gothic” to include historically underrepresented people. “A lot of artists included in the show use their art to build an awareness of the fact that these groups have been marginalized and not included in these very white western canons; whether visual or art historical narrative,” Thompson said. She said collage artist Deborah Roberts uses her art to question what is “considered beautiful and who gets that word placed on them.” With her collage work, Roberts challenges how race and beauty are portrayed in popular media and how these images have contributed toward the marginalization of
JULY 28 AT 7 PM
5
Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week BerkshiresWeek.com 6
Old music in a new world proud that The Down Hill Strugglers can act as ambassadors to it.” Mullen highlighted the underlying sentiment that will bring all these different people together this weekend. “The Shakers had this belief that whether you were
Shaker Village to Host Second Annual Northeast Fiddlers’ Convention
peeling an onion or dancing, you immersed yourself in the task and did your absolute best at it,” he said. “I think this music speaks to that. There is an authenticity and sincerity that is echoed in that kind of music.”
BY NICOLAS DAVIDOFF The Berkshire Eagle
PITTSFIELD — The strum of banjos and the thumping of dancing feet have lured Americans from North and South to the warmth of a campfire for centuries. This weekend at Hancock Shaker Village, musicians, dancers and listeners alike will play an equal part in honoring this jovial tradition of folk and bluegrass music. Oldtone Productions will host the Second Annual Northeast Fiddlers’ Convention from Friday, June 14, through Sunday, June 16. The event’s organizers hope to build on the success of last year’s convention by prolonging the festivities through the entire weekend and making camping available on site this year. “Sleeping under the stars, surrounded by great music, will really be fantastic,” said Karl Mullen, music curator at Hancock Shaker Village. John Cohen, a widely recognized musicologist specializing in old-time folk music and a successful musician in his own right, will lead a film screening Friday night. The Down Hill Strugglers, a Brooklyn-based, old-time string band and mentees to Cohen, will then headline the square dance on Saturday. There will also be workshops led by the musicians in attendance, as well as band and instrument contests throughout the day before the convention comes to a close with a gospel performance Sunday. Eli Smith plays the banjo and guitar for The Down Hill Strugglers. He believes that
PHOTO PROVIDED BY THE DOWN HILL STRUGGLERS
The Down Hill Strugglers will perform this weekend at the Second Annual Northeast Fiddlers’ Convention at Hancock Shaker Village. old-time folk has as much of a place in today’s world than it did before. “We live in a very alienating time for so many reasons. The kind of down home, grassroots music we want to play and hear seems to offer an alternative vision of culture that feels good and right,” Smith said. Avid guitar player Jim Wright — one of the three founders of Oldtone Productions and the annual Oldtone Roots Music Festival, which is held in Hillsdale, N.Y. — said he is excited to keep this “more Southern style fiddlers’ convention” going. On the strong partnership with Hancock Shaker Village, he said, “it really is a perfect setting for this kind of music.” The Shakers’ ideals of communal living and sharing will extend to nearly every aspect of this convention. Aside from the workshops, where people with any level of experience can learn from professional musicians and bond over their love of old-time music, participation will be at the core of every event. “It’s not necessarily a concert, it’s more of a gathering,” Wright said. “People can go up on the stage, they can bring their own instruments, and of course — square dance to their hearts’ content.” Mullen added that “the beautifully built barns
are perfect acoustically for this kind of music.” Smith said that growing up in Greenwich Village greatly influenced his love for folk. In the 1960s, the village was host to a folk revival with musicians such as Bob Dylan walking its streets. “It was the music that spoke to me,” Smith said. “I picked up folk records lying around the house and instantly realized it was the human music I was looking for. It does what music should do — and it hasn’t been distorted by the extreme pressure of the entertainment industry.” His bandmate, Jackson Lynch, who plays the fiddle among other instruments, had a similar experience to Smith while he was growing up in the East Village. They connected through Cohen and added Walker Shepherd from Virginia to form their old-time string band. “Old-time folk isn’t just limited to the South,” Smith said. “It really spans across all of rural America, from Appalachia to the Northeast.” Folk music has greatly evolved, but its old-time variety still resonates with listeners who want to bask in the nostalgia and the warmth of the community it fosters. “I like to think of it as old music in the new world,” Smith said. “And I’m very
Downtown Lee (413) 243-0852
Berkshires Week | Thursday, June 13, 2019
SAVE OUR PARADE FUNDRAISER FOR THE PITTSFIELD 4TH OF JULY PARADE
Tavern At The A June 23
12:00 pm - 7:00 pm Pasta dinner, Raffles and 50/50 all proceeds will support the parade
Live Music By:
Buy Tickets Here https://www.pittsfieldparade.com/ event/rock-the-4th-save-our-parade/ Checks made payable to Pittsfield Parade Committee media sponsor:
BerkshiresWeek.com
Pete Boyd 12:30 to 1:30 Mr Doubtfire 1:45 to 2:45 F Bomb 3 to 4 Live Wire 4:15 to 5:15 Members of Whiskey City/ Hotshot Hillbillies 5:30 to 6:30 Tickets $20 • Kids 12 & under Free
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Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week BerkshiresWeek.com 8
A ‘rock star’ of the dinosaur world comes to the Berkshires BY SHARON SMULLEN Eagle correspondent
Each year, paleontologist Jack Horner addresses thousands of fans and scientists in the U.S. and around the world. His TED talk has been seen by millions. Four dinosaurs are even named after him. And on Saturday, he’ll make a stop in the Berkshires. Horner, who spent 30-plus years as curator of paleontology at Montana State University’s Museum of the Rockies, earning honorary degrees and awards including the MacArthur Fellowship, will speak at the West Stockbridge Old Town Hall, hosted by Shaker Dam Coffeehouse and West Stockbridge Historical Society, at 6:30 p.m., Saturday. “As soon as the semester’s over, I go on the road lecturing,” said Horner, who currently teaches at Chapman University in Orange, Calif. Horner has uncovered fossils in many locations, including Mongolia, Patagonia and Romania. Dinosaurs lived for 150 million years on every continent, he said. Each summer he returns to his native Montana — “the best place in the world” — with right-aged rock exposed and an abundance of fossils. He visits digs run by former students who are now professors. Horner found his first fossil at 5 years old, a dinosaur bone at 8, skeleton at 13. His mother drove him wherever he wanted to go across Montana and into Canada. He later found one of the first dinosaur eggs in the Western Hemisphere near that early bone. “I definitely feel I was born this way,” he said. As uncovering a sauropod can take years — his largest measured 80 feet — Horner
prefers finding baby dinosaurs. “Thousands [fit] in a Ziplock bag,” he said. In the 1950s and ‘60s, paleontologists lost interest in dinosaurs, regarding them as “big cold-blooded reptiles who wandered for billions of years looking for a place to go extinct,” he said. His University of Montana professor told him to study mammal fossils like everyone else, but Horner said no, he was going to study dinosaurs. Dyslexic, he failed to graduate, he said. As he knew a lot about dinosaurs, Princeton University employed him in 1975 to collect and clean bones for professors. In 1978, Horner found a nest of baby dinosaurs, proving dinosaurs cared for their young. He named the species “Maiasaura” meaning “Good Mother Lizard.” His discovery made headlines around the world. It was a turning point, he said. “People realized dinosaurs were more like birds, warmblooded, very social animals,” he said. Some “flat-earthers,” as he calls them, remain unconvinced animals share common ancestry. “People are conservative about change,” he said. With professorial support, Horner published papers and won National Science Foundation grants — all without a degree. Even at Montana State University, he wasn’t allowed to teach. After receiving the MacArthur Fellowship, however, “they said I could do whatever I wanted.” He raised millions of dollars for research. When awarded an honorary University of Montana doctorate in 1986, the professor who hooded him had flunked him seven times as
an undergraduate, he said. Even his father frowned on his many accomplishments until his favorite magazine, Time, profiled his son in 1990. “After that he didn’t say anything more,” Horner recalled. Horner was technical advisor to Steven Spielberg’s blockbuster “Jurassic Park” film series. While the dinosaur dig is modeled after Horner’s own camp, “virtually all the dinosaurs are wrong,” he said. “Meat-eating dinosaurs were feathered and very colorful. In 1993, we knew a lot less than we know now.” Kim Hubbard, art and coffee curator at Stanmeyer Gallery and Shaker Dam Coffeehouse, invited Horner to the Berkshires and will celebrate the paleontologist’s birthday at a reception following the talk. Since Hubbard — a former National Geographic, Audubon magazine and Obama White House photo editor — took the job at photographer John Stanmeyer’s coffeehouse and art gallery last spring, she has attracted toptier speakers through her extensive connections. “It’s a rare opportunity to listen to one of the world’s foremost experts on dinosaurs,” she said. “He is larger than life, an honest-to-goodness rock star.” She met Horner at a 2011 paleontology conference while working on a National Geographic story. They recently drove thousands of miles through Montana and Canada, visiting his major discovery sites. “I sat in a dinosaur nest with eggshells everywhere,” she recalled, “it was unbelievable.” Through July 15, she will exhibit 30 micrograph images of internal bone and teeth
structures photographed through a petrographic microscope, with jewel-toned colors identifying specific densities and tissues. “They’re like abstract art,” she said, “all taken from Jack’s work.” Hubbard credits a childhood dinosaur book with inspiring her professional curiosity. Homer finds children are fascinated by dinosaurs, even when scientists lose interest. ”They were really different kinds of animals than anything alive today — gigantic, the largest land animal — and they’re gone,” he said. “They feed the imagination.”
If You Go: What: “Coloring Dinosaurs, Inside and Out,” talk by paleontologist Jack Horner Where: Old Town Hall, 9 Main
St., West Stockbridge Who: Shaker Dam Coffeehouse and West Stockbridge Historical Society
When: 6:30 p.m. Saturday,
June 15. Reception follows at Shaker Dam Coffeehouse
Cost: $20 general admission Tickets/Information: weststockbridgehistory.org, facebook.com/ShakerDamCoffeehouse, 413-232-7707
John L. McLean ABR, CRS, Broker Associate
Residential - Condominiums - Land - Rentals Same Great Service. New Location! call/text: 413.441.4403 JohnMcLean@MyBerkshireHome.com 2 South Street, Suite 160, Pittsfield, MA 01201
Over 35 years of helping Buyers and Sellers in the Berkshlres. Let Me Help You!
Sunday, June 16: Dharmasoul with Ali McGuirk, 8 to 10 p.m.
LIVE MUSIC
THE EGREMONT BARN
CHESTER COMMON TABLE 30 Main St., Chester 413-354-1076, chestercommontable.com Friday, June 14: The Beeline Ramblers, 6:30 p.m. CLUB HELSINKI HUDSON 405 Columbia St., Hudson, N.Y.
The Egremont Village Inn, 17 Main St., South Egremont 413-528-1570, theegremontbarn. com Thursday, June 13: The Hayrollers, $10, 8 to 11 p.m.
JoAnne Redding.
30 Main St., Stockbridge
10 p.m.
THE GUTHRIE CENTER
redlioninn.com
RACE BROOK LODGE
2 Van Deusenville Road,
Thursday, June 13: Two Bit Cowboys, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
864 S. Undermountain Road, Sheffield
Friday, June 14: Roger Salloom Duo, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
rblodge.com
Great Barrington 413-528-1955, guthriecenter.org Thursdays: Hootenanny night, $5, $3 members, music begins at 7 p.m. Troubadour Series
Friday, June 14: Grateful Dread, $15, 8 to 11 p.m.
Doors open at 6 p.m., shows start at 8 p.m.
Saturday, June 15: Revel in Dimes, $15, 8 to 11 p.m.
Friday, June 14: John Flynn, $25, $20 members.
FIREFLY GASTROPUB
Saturday, June 15: Krishna Guthrie Band, $20, $15 members.
Saturday, June 15: Tom Savoy Duo, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Thursday, June 13: DCSC: Dana Lyn and Kyle Sanna, $10, 8 to 11 p.m. STATIONERY FACTORY
Sunday, June 16: The Adams Brothers, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
63 Flansburg Ave., Dalton
Monday, June 17: Dave Brinnel, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
413-659-6299
stationery-factory.com
Tuesday, June 18: Tom Savoy, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, June 15: TOMMY-The Album-Live, $20-$25, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, June 19: Lisa Martin, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
VILLAGE CHURCH
HOTEL ON NORTH 297 North St., Pittsfield
MISSION RESTAURANT
hotelonnorth.com
438 North St., Pittsfield
Friday, June 14: John Walker and Shevaun Keogh-Walker, free.
missionberkshires.com
GATEWAYS INN
Friday, June 14: Lita Williams, 8 to 11 p.m.
DREAM AWAY LODGE
51 Walker St., Lenox
KNOX TRAIL INN
1342 County Road, Becket
413-637-2532, gatewaysinn.com
1898 East Otis Road, East Otis
thedreamawaylodge.com
Shows begin at 7:30 p.m., $15
knoxtrailinn.com
Thursday, June 13: Wes Buckley, 8 to 10 p.m.
minimum food/beverage purchase
Friday, June 14: Radioactive Band, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
NUMBER 10
Friday, June 14: Dave Dersham, 8 to 10 p.m.
per person suggested.
Saturday, June 15: Generation X Rock, 9 p.m.
numbertengb.com
helsinkihudson.ticketfly.com Thursday, June 13: Those People, $20, cabaret, 7 p.m. Friday, June 14: Those People, $20, cabaret, 7 p.m. Saturday, June 15: Miss Sherry Vine, $25, 7 p.m. Monday, June 17: Nelson and the Wolf, $10, 8 p.m.
Saturday, June 15: Greg Hall and the Barnhouse Band, 8 to 10 p.m.
71 Church St., Lenox fireflylenox.com Friday, June 14: Misty Blues, 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday, June 15: The BTUs.
Friday, June 14: Johnny Segalla, Mike Schiffer. Saturday, June 15: Rob Kelly,
Thursday, June 13: Picky Bastards, 8 p.m. Monday, June 17: Andy Wrba and Friends, 7 to 10 p.m. 10 Castle St., Great Barrington
THE LION’S DEN
Friday, June 14: David Reed, 7 to 10 p.m.
The Red Lion Inn,
Saturday, June 15: Jaane Doe, 7 to JULY 3 WEDNESDAY & JULY 4 THURSDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 8pm, Shed James Taylor at Tanglewood James Taylor returns to Tanglewood with his All-Star Band for two nights!
2019 summer
j u n e a n d j u ly h i g h l i g h t s View complete season at tanglewood.org
JUNE 15 SATURDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 5:45pm, Shed Live From Here with Chris Thile at Tanglewood Guests include Ben Folds, I’m With Her, and Tig Notaro Live broadcast JUNE 16 SUNDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 2:30pm, Shed Brian Wilson presents Pet Sounds JUNE 21 FRIDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 8pm, Ozawa Hall Richard Thompson
JUNE 27 THURSDAY BOSTON POPS 8pm, Shed The Boston Pops Celebrates Queen with Marc Martel James Burton, conductor JUNE 28 FRIDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 7pm, Shed Earth, Wind & Fire JUNE 30 SUNDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 2:30pm, Shed Rodrigo y Gabriela JULY 2 TUESDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 7pm, Shed Josh Groban at Tanglewood
Fireworks to follow the July 4 concert Proceeds from the July 4 concert will be donated by Kim and James Taylor to Tanglewood.
JULY 5 FRIDAY BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA The Robert and Jane Mayer Concert 8pm, Shed OPENING NIGHT AT TANGLEWOOD Andris Nelsons, conductor Emanuel Ax, piano Music of MOZART and MAHLER JULY 6 SATURDAY TLI—THE BIG IDEA 5pm, Ozawa Hall Madeleine K. Albright BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA The Stephen and Dorothy Weber Concert 8pm, Shed Andris Nelsons, conductor Anne-Sophie Mutter, violin Music of Joan TOWER, PREVIN and DVO ÁK JULY 7 SUNDAY BOSTON POPS ORCHESTRA 2:30pm, Shed John Williams and David Newman, conductors Anne-Sophie Mutter, violin Across the Stars: Music of John Williams Sponsored by Canyon Ranch
OPEN MIC AND KARAOKE THE EGREMONT BARN The Egremont Village Inn, 17 Main St., South Egremont 413-528-1570, theegremontbarn. com Sunday, June 16: Karaoke, 7:30 to 10 p.m. Wednesday, June 19: Open mic, 7 to 10 p.m.
JULY 9 TUESDAY TLI—FULL TILT 8pm, Ozawa Hall Meow Meow Pandemonium Please note that this concert contains adult themes. Parental guidance for those under the age of 15 is recommended. JULY 12 FRIDAY BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA The Cynthia and Oliver Curme Concert Berkshire Night* 8pm, Shed Andris Nelsons, conductor Jan Lisiecki, piano Thomas Rolfs, trumpet Robert Sheena, English horn Music of COPLAND and GRIEG *Berkshire Night ticket distribution begins July 8. See tanglewood.org for more details. JULY 13 SATURDAY BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA The Catherine and Paul Buttenwieser Concert 8pm, Shed TANGLEWOOD GALA Andris Nelsons, conductor Kristine Opolais, soprano Oksana Volkova, mezzo-soprano Jonathan Tetelman, tenor Ryan Speedo Green, bass-baritone Tanglewood Festival Chorus, James Burton, conductor VERDI Requiem
TLI — Introducing the first summer of Tanglewood Learning Institute. Curious? Discover more at TLI.org.
season sponsors
LAWN: $12–$33 INSIDE SHED: $16 –$159
tanglewood.org • 888-266-1200
BerkshiresWeek.com
JUNE 23 SUNDAY 9:30am–1:15pm, Ozawa Hall One Day University at Tanglewood Impactful Immigration, Life-changing Books & Musical Masterpieces General Registration: $159 Each registration includes all three lectures and parking in the Ozawa Hall lots.
JUNE 22 SATURDAY POPULAR ARTISTS SERIES 8pm, Ozawa Hall Postmodern Jukebox
Only New England Performances this summer
32 Main St., Cummington
Berkshires Week | Thursday, June 13, 2019
NIGHTLIFE
OFFICIAL CHAUFFEURED T R A N S P O R TAT I O N
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Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week
CALENDAR
sculptural epic with 150 life-sized figures, 250 low-relief ceiling figures and a Sept. 11 Memorial Garden, first opened in 2001.
ART aMUSE GALLERY
BERKSHIRE BOTANICAL GARDEN
7 Railroad Ave., Chatham, N.Y. amusechatham.com
5 W. Stockbridge Road, Stockbridge
Gallery hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday to Saturday, noon to 4 p.m. Sunday.
413-298-3926, berkshirebotanical.org
Through July 28: Peter Dellert, “imMaterial reActions.” ART OMI
June 1 - Sept. 30: “Shimmering Flowers: Nancy Lorenz’s Lacquer and Bronze Landscapes,” with admission, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 1 - Oct. 11: “Contained Exuberance,” with admission, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
1405 County Route 22, Ghent, N.Y. 518-392-4747, artomi.org On view: “Gold,” Katharine Bernhardt; “Untitled (Mobile),” Virginia Overton; “Somos 11 Millones / We Are 11 Million,” Andrea Bowers; “Eureka,” Brian Tolle; “Untitled,” Christopher Wool; “Day Trip,” Sarah Braman; “To Be Of Use,” David Shrigley; “Oculi,” Aleksandr Mergold; “International Institute of Intellectual Co-operation, Configuration 29, End of the American Dream: Noam Chomsky, Jim Jones, Martin Luther King, Edward Snowden, Joe Stack, Donna Haraway,” Goshka Macuga; “Prismatic,” Hou de Sousa, and more. BERKSHIRE ART MUSEUM 159 E. Main St., North Adams 413-664-9550, BAMuseum.org Summer hours: Noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday to Sunday, beginning June 19. Admission: $5, $3 seniors, students and children ages 6-12, free for Berkshire County residents, children and donors. On view: Eric Rudd’s Iceberg Installation, Robotic Sculpture, and “Berkshire Art Museum Annex – A Chapel for Humanity,” a massive
June 9 - Oct. 11: Lucy’s Garden, a whimsical topiary collection featuring nearly two dozen exotic creatures and other living sculptures, with admission, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. BERKSHIRE MUSEUM 39 South St., Pittsfield 413-443-7171, berkshiremuseum. org Ongoing: Animals of the World in Miniature, Aquarium, Berkshire Backyard, Curiosity Incubator, Feigenbaum Hall of Innovation, Rocks and Minerals, Window on the World. Through July 28: “BerkshireNow: John MacDonald.” This solo show of atmospheric landscapes by accomplished artist John MacDonald reflects his love of the craft of painting, depicting the beauty of nature in all seasons. Through Sept. 8: “Leonardo da Vinci: Machines in Motion.” Experience genius in motion at Berkshire Museum as you use cranks, levers and pulleys to test Leonardo’s inventions, marvel at his flying machines, and step inside his wooden battle tank. Each mechanism in the exhibit was constructed based on Leonardo
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TOTAL bill.
PHOTO PROVIDED BY HANCOCK SHAKER VILLAGE
Barbara Ernst Prey’s exhibit “Borrowed Light” is now on display at Hancock Shaker Village. da Vinci’s Renaissance drawings, using the tools and materials available during his time. A Feigenbaum Innovative Experience, sponsored by the Feigenbaum Foundation. Through Sept. 29: “Objects and Their Stories: Shoes.” Step into the history, technology and fashion of footwear from around the world as illustrated by moccasins, sandals, clogs and more from the museum’s collection. Through Sept. 8: “Amy Myers: The Opera Inside the Atom, Large Scale
Drawings 2007- 2008.” Explore the world of particle physics at a massive scale through Amy Myers’ largescale, abstract drawings inspired by subatomic phenomena and the unpredictable nature of the universe. CLARK ART INSTITUTE 225 South St., Williamstown 413-458-2303, clarkart.edu Admission: $20, children under 18 free. June 8 - Sept. 15: Janet Cardiff’s 2001 sound sculpture, “The Forty
DON’T MISS THE MOST IMPORTANT NEW PLAY OF THE SUMMER
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BY STACEY ROSE • DIRECTED BY LOGAN VAUGHN
WORLD PREMIERE BONNIE & TERRY BURMAN
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Part Motet,” 40 separately-recorded choral parts are played through 40 speakers in a reworking of Thomas Tallis’s 16th-century composition, “Spem in alium” (Hope in any other). June 8 - Sept. 22: “Renoir: The Body, The Senses.” This daring exhibition is the first major exploration of Renoir’s unceasing interest in the human form. The exhibition reconsiders Renoir as a constantly evolving artist whose style moved from Realism into luminous Impressionism, culminating in the modern classicism of his last decades. COMMUNITY ACCESS TO THE ARTS CATAarts.org On view through June 30: “What I See,” an exhibit of artwork by CATA artists with disabilities with a focus on work by artists from Berkshire Family & Individual Resources and United Cerebral Palsy, at Tunnel City Coffee at Mass MoCA, 1040 MASS MoCA, North Adams. FERRIN CONTEMPORARY 1315 Mass MoCA Way, North Adams 413-346-4004, ferrincontemporary.com Through June 30: Lauren Mabry, “Fused.” HANCOCK SHAKER VILLAGE
413-443-0188, hancockshakervillage.org Through Nov. 11: “Borrowed Light,” Barbara Ernst Prey. A new body of watercolors inspired by visits across three seasons where Prey immersed herself in the buildings, historic artifacts and landscape of this site. Her voice brings new consideration to the visual and haptic experience of this site, historically and today. Through Nov. 11: “While Mighty Thunders Roll: Popular Artists Sing the Shakers,” explores and expands this musical legacy through a display of historic objects and ephemera shown alongside newly commissioned a capella renditions of Shaker songs performed by a selection of popular musicians including Laurie Anderson, Yo-Yo Ma and Natalie Merchant. JACOB’S PILLOW 358 George Carter Road, Becket 413-243-0745, jacobspillow.org Through Aug. 25: “Jacob’s Pillow: Taking Dance Off the Mountain” photography exhibition, 5 p.m. to 1 a.m., at Methuselah Bar & Lounge, 391 North St., Pittsfield. June 19 - Aug. 25: “Dance We Must: Another Look” exhibition, open daily, noon to final curtain, free, in Blake’s Barn; “Assemblages by Paul Taylor” exhibition, open daily, noon to final curtain, free, Ted Shawn Theatre lobby; “Merce Cunningham: Loops” exhibition, open daily, noon to final curtain, free, Doris Duke Theatre lobby. Jacob’s Pillow Archives/ Norton Owen Reading Room, open Wednesday to Saturday, noon to final curtain, and Sunday to Tuesday, noon to 5 p.m., free. LABSPACE 2642 NY-23, Hillsdale, N.Y. labspaceart.blogspot.com: Sunday, June 16: Opening of “Mystic Pizza” featuring Kelsey Renko, Jenn Brehm, Brent Owens and Jon Cowan, 4 to 6 p.m. MASS MOCA 1040 Mass MoCA Way, North Adams Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Wednesday through Monday; Open June 15-Oct 14, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. On view now: Trenton Doyle Hancock, “Mind of the Mound: Critical Mass.” Hancock presents his most ambitious project to date in Mass MoCA’s signature Building 5 gallery. Annie Lennox, “Now I Let You Go…” Lennox juxtaposes her public
Saturday, June 15: “Still I Rise,” an exhibition in Mass MoCA’s Kidspace gallery featuring nuanced representations of women of color in all stages of life. MCLA GALLERY 51
well’s work, examining his carefully constructed fictional scenes for the covers and pages of American publications. June 8 - Oct. 27: “Inspired: Norman Rockwell and Erik Erikson.” This exhibition will explore the relationship of these two giants in their fields, who inspired each other’s creativity in unique and important ways. Work on view will include images of Erikson’s own art, Rockwell artworks that were directly influenced by Erikson, and a collection of Rockwell portraits of Erikson and other clinical staff from Austen Riggs. Organized by the museum in collaboration with the Austen Riggs Center, which celebrates its 100th anniversary in 2019. June 15 and 18: “Rockwell on Baseball,” curator of education and baseball enthusiast Tom Daly explores Norman Rockwell’s depictions of America’s favorite pastime, $25, $15 members, 1 p.m. Reservations required.
Through June 22: Works by Anina Major.
Sunday, June 16: “Father’s Day: Fatherhood Illustrated,” enjoy a look at Norman Rockwell’s work that relates to fatherhood and the work of the artist’s three sons, with admission, 2 p.m.
NORMAN ROCKWELL MUSEUM
REAL EYES GALLERY
9 Glendale Road, Stockbridge
71 Park St., Adams
413-298-4100, nrm.org
May 31 - June 23: Sean O’Conner, “Vails.” Opening reception, Saturday, June 1 at 4 p.m.
51 Main St., North Adams 413-662-5320, mcla.edu/gallery51
Ongoing: Norman Rockwell’s 323 Saturday Evening Post covers, ArtZone. Gallery talks daily at 11:30 a.m., 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. Daily gallery talks of the museum’s Frank E. Schoonover and Rube Goldberg exhibitions at 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Through Oct. 27: “For the People: Memories of the Old Corner House,” commemorative installation for the 50th anniversary of the founding of Norman Rockwell Museum at The Old Corner House on Main Street, Stockbridge.
358 George Carter Road, Becket
790 NY-203, Spencertown, N.Y.
413-243-0745, jacobspillow.org
518-392-3693, spencertownacademy.org
June 3 - Aug. 23: Community Dance Classes, for dancers of all levels ages 16 and up, $10, $55 for a 6-class card, 8 to 9 a.m. Mondays: Pilates; Tuesdays: Ballet; Wednesdays: Modern; Thursdays: Zumba; Fridays in June and August: Hip-Hop; Fridays in July: African Dance.
Gallery hours: Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. On view through June 16: “Gardens of Delight,” featuring artists Stephanie Anderson, Amy Bergeron, Marilyn Orner, Mary Ellen Riell, Laura Shore, Pamela Stoddart and Marianne Van Lent, admission is free and the artworks are for sale, 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Ted Shawn Theatre Performances: 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday; 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, unless noted. June 19 - 23: Ballet BC dance performance, starting at $45.
TURN PARK ART SPACE 2 Moscow Road,
Doris Duke Theatre
West Stockbridge turnpark.com Through Oct. 31: Kathleen Jacobs’ “Echos.” Liane Nouri and Jaanika Peerna, “Flow / Flux / Fold.”
Performances: 8:15 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday; 2:15 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, unless noted.
DANCE
June 19 - 23: Circa dance performance, starting at $35, 8:15 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday; 2:15 p.m. Sunday.
INSTALLATION SPACE
Inside/Out Stage
49 Eagle St., North Adams
Performances: Free, Wednesday through Saturday, 6:15 p.m., unless noted.
49eaglestreet.com Saturday, June 15: The Installation Space and Elemental present a New Dance/Butoh peformance by Zack Fuller, 3 p.m. JACOB’S PILLOW
Wednesday, June 19: Kotchegna Dance Company. LENOX CONTRA DANCE Lenox Community Center,
SALEM ART WORKS 19 Cary Lane, Salem, N.Y. 518-854-7674, salemartworks.org Friday, June 14: Opening reception for Young & Studio Residents, at North Main Gallery. SANDISFIELD ARTS CENTER 5 Hammertown Road, Sandisfield 413-258-4100, sandisfieldartscenter.org
Through Oct. 31: “A Day in The Life: Norman Rockwell’s Stockbridge Studio,” explore Norman Rockwell’s original Stockbridge studio, reinstalled to look as it did in 1960, when the artist was working on his iconic “Golden Rule” painting.
June 1 - 30: Olwen Dowling, “The Past is Present,” oils, watercolors, monoprints. Exhibit on display during scheduled events and by appointment with the artist. An opening reception will be held on June 1, 2 to 4 p.m.
June 8 - Oct. 27: “Woodstock to the Moon: 1969 Illustrated.” Culled from the museum’s collection, and private and public collections around the country, this exhibition illuminates how Rockwell and other illustrators portrayed their times and reflected popular culture during the final year of a tumultuous decade.
SCULPTURENOW
June 8 - Oct. 27: “Norman Rockwell: Private Moments for the Masses,” a behind-the-scenes look at the autobiographical elements in Rock-
ART CENTER
On the grounds of The Mount, 2 Plunkett St., Lenox 413-358-3884, sculpturenow.org, edithwharton. org June 1 - Oct. 27: New exhibition of 31 large outdoor sculptures by nationally recognized artists, including acclaimed artist Albert Paley. SPENCERTOWN ACADEMY
LIVE MUSIC
BOMBINO “The sultan of shred” — The New York Times
Saturday, June 15, 8pm Sponsored by Hans and Kate Morris Fund for New Music
TICKETS: massmoca.org or 413.662.2111 | North Adams, Mass. MUSEUM HOURS (beginning June 15): Open every day 10am–6pm
BerkshiresWeek.com
413-662-2111, massmoca.org
persona with more intimate aspects of her most personal self. Cauleen Smith, “We Already Have What We Need,” colorful, light-infused video installations, conjure sci-fi-inspired visions of utopia, with a concern for our planet and its people. “Suffering From Realness,” examines the human condition through works in all media — some intimate and personal, some transglobal and plainly political. Joe Manning, “Looking at North Adams,” short texts illuminate views through the mill building windows across the museum bringing the city’s history to life. Building 6 features work by artists including James Turrell, Louise Bourgeois, Jenny Holzer, Laurie Anderson, Gunnar Schonbeck, and more.
Berkshires Week | Thursday, June 13, 2019
1843 W. Housatonic St., Pittsfield
11
Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week
65 Walker St., Lenox 413-528-4007, lenoxcontradance. org Saturday, June 15: Special Double Lenox Contradance and potluck, Pete’s Posse with Pete Sutherland fiddle/piano/banjo, Oliver Scanlon fiddle/mandolin/viola/feet, Tristan Henderson guitars/jaw harp/mandolin; calling by Will Mentor, dances taught, beginners welcome, $15/$7 whole event, 5 to11 p.m.; potluck (bring a dish), 7 to 8 p.m.; $12/$6 just evening dance, 8 to 11 p.m. Bring clean, soft-soled shoes.
FAIRS, FESTIVALS AND FAMILY FUN
Pfeiffer Arboretum Family Scavenger Hunt, 10:30 a.m. to noon, at the trailhead at 249 Long Pond Road, Great Barrington. Bring Dad for a scavenger hunt along the trail! Explore trees and other living things that thrive in the woodland and wetland ecosystems at the Pfeiffer Arboretum. Bring water and snack, and wear sturdy footwear. BUSHNELL-SAGE LIBRARY 48 Main St., Sheffield 413-229-7004, bushnellsagelibrary.org Thursday, June 13: Sing and Play, 10 a.m. Tuesdays in June: Lego club, 3:15 p.m.
BERKSHIRE MOUNTAINS FAERIE FESTIVAL
Wednesday, June 19: Chess club, 3:15 p.m.
Bowe Field,
DALTON CRA
371 Old Columbia St., Adams
400 Main St., Dalton
413-664-0197, berkshiremountainsfaeriefestival.com
413-684-2459, daltoncra.org
Saturday, June 15: Creative activities for kids and adults, such as storytelling with local authors, shows by the Robbins-Zust Family Marionettes, as well as a Faerie Village, merchants and artisans, live music and more, $10, $4 ages 6-12, ages 5 and under free, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Ongoing: Family Swim is offered several times throughout the week – schedule available at daltoncra. org. One member of the group needs a CRA general membership and all must wear swim caps.
100 Main St., Lee
413-458-2303, clarkart.edu
leelibrary.org
Saturday, June 15: Being in the Body Film Series, in conjunction with the exhibition “Renoir: The Body, The Senses,” “Being John Malkovich,” $8, 2 p.m., at Images Cinema, 50 Spring St., Williamstown.
Mondays: Babies and Books, 10:30 a.m. Thursdays: Brain Builders, weekly playgroup for families with young children from ages birth to 5, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, June 15: Storytime with the Kiwanis Club of Lee, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.
36 Linden St., Pittsfield 413-236-8888, barringtonstageco.org/mrfinns
BERKSHIRE MUSIC SCHOOL
NORTH ADAMS PUBLIC LIBRARY
Sunday, June 16: Musical Theatre Conservatory Cabaret, “You Could Drive a Person Crazy: Songs of Obsession,” $20, 9:30 p.m.
30 Wendell Ave., Pittsfield
74 Church St., North Adams naplibrary.com
Tuesday, June 18: Afterschool Storytime and Craft, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.
39 South St., Pittsfield
413-528-2403
413-443-7171, berkshiremuseum. org
Ramsdell Library, 1087 Main St.,
Tuesdays, June 4 - 25: Storytime with goats, $6 child, $3 member child, adults free, 10 to 11 a.m.
Tuesdays: WeeMuse Littlest Learners. Children ages 6 to 18 months engage in stories, songs and creative movement every week in this interactive gallery program designed specifically for our youngest museum visitors, 10:30 a.m.
413-274-3738, gblibraries.org
105 Wahconah St., Pittsfield. 413-445-7867, pittsfieldsuns.com June 15, 17, 19: Home games. STEEPLECATS BASEBALL
Saturday, June 15: Out of this World Family Activity for kids in grades PreK-3, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Mason Library.
St., North Adams
BerkshiresWeek.com
1843 W. Housatonic St., Pittsfield
bnrc.org
Thursday, June 13: Farm Friends for children ages 2-5 and their caregivers, meet a farm animal, enjoy a story and make a craft, with admission, 10:30 a.m.
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Sunday, June 16: Father’s Day
LEE LIBRARY
BERKSHIRE NATURAL RESOURCES COUNCIL
PITTSFIELD SUNS
Fridays through June 28: Baby & Me for children under 18 months, 10:15 to 11 a.m., Mason.
Sundays: Discovery Tank Program. Meet the residents of the aquarium’s Discovery Tank and learn about tide pool life in this guided, hands-on gallery program for all ages, 1 p.m.
413-443-0188, hancockshakervillage.org
berkshiremusicschool.org
Monday, June 17: Youth ages 3 to 12 can sign up for NAPL’s Summer Reading Program.
413-200-7262, thetrustees.org
HANCOCK SHAKER VILLAGE
413-442-1411,
Wednesdays: Preschool Story Time, ages 3-6, 10:30 a.m.
Route 9, Windsor
Tuesdays through June 25: Brain Builders! Play 7 Learn, for children up to 5, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., Mason.
Taft Recital Hall
Tuesdays: Toddler Story Time, ages 3 and under, 10:30 a.m.
Great Barrington
Saturdays: Chow Time in the Aquarium. Help prepare delicious and nutritious meals for the creatures in the aquarium, including the turtles, fish and the blue-tongue skink, 12:30 p.m.
June 14 - 16: 8th Annual Berkshire Gateway Jazz Weekend, Samirah Evans and Wanda Houston, $30, 7:30 p.m. Friday. Diego Figueiredo and Ken Peplowski with Chiara Izzi on vocals, $30, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Lee Congregational Church Meeting House, 25 Park Place, Lee.
Saturdays in June: Discovery Table, 2 to 4 p.m.
BERKSHIRE MUSEUM
Mondays through June 17: Read & Wag Reading Dogs, for school age children, 3:30 to 4:15 p.m., Mason.
berkshiregatewayjazz.org
McAuley Road, North Adams
NOTCHVIEW RESERVATION
Fridays: WeeMuse Adventures. Led by a museum educator, children 18 months to 3 years old explore the museum with their caregivers and learn through songs, stories, scavenger hunts, play time and more, 11 a.m.
Mr. Finn’s Cabaret,
berkshiregatewaypreservation. org,
at the Sydelle and Lee Blatt Performing Arts Center
Mason Library, 231 Main St.,
Thursday, June 13: Hola Amigos Bilingual Playgroup for ages 2 and up, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., Mason.
BARRINGTON STAGE COMPANY
413-243-3589,
NATURAL BRIDGE STATE PARK
GREAT BARRINGTON LIBRARIES
Housatonic
MUSIC
BERKSHIRE GATEWAY PRESERVATION
Joe Wolfe Field, 310 State 413-398-4060, steeplecats.org Saturday, June 15: SteepleCats v. Vermont, $3-7, 6:30 p.m. Monday, June 17: SteepleCats v. Vineyard, $3-7, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 19: SteepleCats v. Vermont, $3-7, 6:30 p.m.
FILM ADAMS FREE LIBRARY 92 Park St., Adams 413-743-8345, adamslibraryma. org Thursday, June 13: Watch the movie “Me Before You,” (PG13), 6 p.m. CLARK ART INSTITUTE 225 South St., Williamstown
Get half-off on same day tickets to select Berkshire performances!
AVAILABLE JUNE 18 - SEPT. 1, 2019 PARTICIPATING VENUES Barrington Stage Company Berkshire Theatre Group Capitol Steps at Cranwell Resort Chester Theatre Company Mac-Haydn Theatre Shakespeare & Company Tanglewood Theater Barn
OPEN HOURS: Tuesday–Sunday: Noon–4:30 pm (Closed Monday) Patrons seeking information about daily performance availability and general 1/2 TIX information should call the 1/2 TIX Hotline at 413-743-1339 or visit
www.half-tix.com (updated daily by 11:00 am)
THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: Barrington Stage Company, 30 Union St., Pittsfield Lenox Chamber Visitors Center, 4 Housatonic St., Lenox Triplex Cinema, 70 Railroad St., Great Barrington Restrictions: Tickets are sold on a first-come, first-served basis. There is an additional $4.00 handling charge per ticket. All transactions are cash only with no exceptions. Tickets are subject to availability. Participants are subject to change. All sales are final. No refunds.
MUSIC IN COMMON
Thursday, June 13: Recital for Adults Only, free, 5:30 p.m.
413-248-6070, musicincommon. org
GREAT BARRINGTON BANDSTAND
Friday, June 14: Music In Common Community MeetUp: Songwriting Workshop with Marisa Massery, open to all high school- and collegeaged youth, free, 6 p.m., Roots Teen Center, 434 Eagle St., North Adams.
Behind Town Hall, Main Street, Great Barrington. Friday, June 14: Sandy & Sandy, 5:30 to 7:15 p.m. Saturday, June 15: Jack Bertelli Quintet, featuring students from Monument Mountain Regional High School, 5:30 to 7:15 p.m.
ST. LUKE’S CHURCH
Great Barrington
ST. PAUL’S CHURCH
413-528-1955, guthriecenter.org
29 Main St., Stockbridge
Thursdays: Hootenanny night, $5, $3 members, music begins at 7 p.m.
Friday, June 14: Free concert by Oakes & Smith, 7:30 p.m.
Troubadour Series
TAMARACK HOLLOW NATURE AND CULTURAL CENTER
Friday, June 14: John Flynn, $25, $20 members. Saturday, June 15: Krishna Guthrie Band, $20, $15 members. HANCOCK SHAKER VILLAGE 1843 W. Housatonic St., Pittsfield 413-443-0188, Hancockshakervillage.org Saturday, June 15: 2nd annual Northeast Fiddlers’ Convention, a traditionally inspired old-time and bluegrass music gathering. Participants of all levels are invited to jam, learn, compete, eat, dance and celebrate in an atmosphere of participation and appreciation, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., $25-$75. Sunday, June 16: 2nd annual Northeast Fiddlers’ Convention, family-friendly, traditionally-inspired old-time and bluegrass music gathering, $35, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. MASSACHUSETTS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 375 Church St., North Adams 413-662-5227, mcla.edu
June 17 - 21: Workshop in Advanced Violin Repair.
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tamarackhollownatureandculturalcenter.org/ 14
Mondays: West African & Caribbean drum and song classes with Aimee Gelinas, $10, 6 p.m. beginner, 7 p.m. advanced, at the Lichtenstein Center for the Arts, 28 Renne Ave., Pittsfield. Drop-in welcome and drums provided. No class June 24.
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TANGLEWOOD
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Boston Symphony Orchestra, 297 West St., Lenox 888-266-1200, bso.org Saturday, June 15: Popular Artist Series, “Live From Here” with Chris Thile, $21-$74, 5:45 p.m., Koussevitzky Music Shed. Sunday, June 16: Brian Wilson Presents Pet Sounds, $13-$109, 2:30 p.m., Koussevitzky Music Shed. TANNERY POND CONCERTS 110 Darrow Road, New Lebanon, N.Y. 888-820-1696, tannery-pond-concerts.myshopify.com Saturday, June 15: The Naumburg Trio, $30-$39, 8 p.m. WINDSOR LAKE CONCERTS Intersection of Bradley Street and Kemp Avenue, North Adams.
1040 Mass MoCA Way,
June 5 - Aug. 28: Free concerts every Wednesday at 6:30 p.m., cancelled for rain. Kayaking, canoeing, swimming, and fishing are all allowed at the lake.
Saturday, June 15: Bombino, desert blues guitar master, $22-$48, 8 p.m.
2
Windsor
413-664-6180
413-662-2111, massmoca.org
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1515-16 Savoy Hollow Road,
MASS MOCA North Adams
1
Wednesday, June 19: Trio Candela.
OUr mArKeTS
5 LEE Sat. 10am–2pm 5/25/19–10/12/19
10 SHEFFIELD Fri. 3pm–6pm 5/24/19–10/11/19
6 MONTEREY Thurs. 4pm–6pm 5/30/19–8/29/19
2 DOWNTOWN PITTSFIELD Sat. 9am–1pm 5/11/19–10/12/19 Indoor 2nd Saturdays, Nov–April
11 WEST STOCKBRIDGE Thu. 3pm–7pm 5/23/19–10/3/19
7 NEW LEBANON Sun. 10am–2pm 6/2/19–10/27/19 Indoor 3rd Sundays, Nov–May
12 WILLIAMSTOWN Sat. 9am–1pm 5/18/19–10/12/19
3 GREAT BARRINGTON Sat. 9am–1pm 5/11/19–10/26/19
8 NORTH ADAMS Sat. 9am–1pm 6/8/19–10/19/19
BERKSHIRE GROWN HOLIDAY MARKETS
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1 BERKSHIRE AREA Wed. & Sat. 8am–2pm 5/4/19–11/23/19 Saturday only in Nov.
HANCOCK Sun. 10am–3pm 6/16/19–10/13/19
OTIS Sat. 9am–1pm 5/25/19–10/12/19
Visit the Market Manager’s table for details about nutrition assistance and benefit match programs, which vary at individual markets.
13 Williamstown 11/24 & 12/15, 2019 14 Great Barrington 11/23 & 12/14, 2019
BerkshiresWeek.com
June 10 - 14: Violin workshop, tonal improvements, to include proper graduation of top and back plates, fitting bass bar and neck height adjustment etc., and bushing of peg holes.
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North Main Street, Lanesborough
2 Van Deusenville Road,
Doors open at 6 p.m., shows start at 8 p.m.
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Old Stone Church, Sunday, June 16: Gospel Gang & Messengers, free-will offerings, 4 p.m.
GUTHRIE CENTER
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Berkshires Week | Thursday, June 13, 2019
stockbridgesinfonia.org
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BARRINGTON STAGE COMPANY St. Germain Stage 36 Linden St., Pittsfield 413-236-8888, barringtonstageco.org Sunday, June 16: “Lest We Forget: The Importance of Black History of America” with Stacey Rose, 1 p.m., St. Germain Stage. BERKSHIRE NATURAL RESOURCES COUNCIL
Oct. 27, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Guided tours depart at 11 a.m., noon, 1 and 2 p.m. Open touring from 10 to 11 a.m. and 3 to 5 p.m. Grounds-only pass available. Thursday, June 13: Nejaime’s wine seminar, 5:30 to 7 p.m., Studio Piazza at Chesterwood. Seating is limited. Registration is required through Nejaime’s Wine Cellar: 413-298-3454 and 413-637-2221, nejaimeswine.com. GREAT BARRINGTON HISTORICAL SOCIETY AND MUSEUM 817 S. Main St., Great Barrington
413-499-0596
413-591-8702, info@gbhistory.org
bnrc.org
Weekends, June through September: “Businesses Exhibit” free, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Sunday, June 16: Father’s Day Pfeiffer Arboretum Family Scavenger Hunt, 10:30 a.m. to noon, at the trailhead at 249 Long Pond Road, Great Barrington. Bring Dad for a scavenger hunt along the trail! Explore trees and other living things that thrive in the woodland and wetland ecosystems at the Pfeiffer Arboretum. Bring water and snack and wear sturdy footwear. BIDWELL HOUSE MUSEUM 100 Art School Road, Monterey 413-528-6888, bidwellhousemuseum.org Saturday, June 15: History Talk, “Coming to Terms with Colonial America: Another Look at Natives and Other Early Americans” with James Merrell, $15, $10 members, 10:30 a.m., at Tyringham Union Church, Main Road, Tyringham. THE BOOKSTORE AND GET LIT WINE BAR 11 Housatonic St., Lenox 413-637-3390, bookstoreinlenox.com Thursday, June 13: Carolyn Brancato, “The Circus Pig and the Kaiser: A Novel Based on a Strange but True Event,” 5:30 p.m. Friday, June 14: Howard Faerstein, “Googootz and Other Poems,” 5:30 p.m. CHATHAM BOOKSTORE 27 Main St., Chatham, N.Y.
BerkshiresWeek.com
chathambookstore.com Saturday, June 15: Adelia Moore discusses her book, “Being the Grownup: Love, Limits, and the Natural Authority of Parenthood,” 5 to 7 p.m.
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Hours: Open daily May 25 through
CHESTERWOOD 4 Williamsville Road, Stockbridge 413-298-3579, chesterwood.org
GREAT BARRINGTON LAND CONSERVANCY River Walk, Cottage Street to Bridge Street, Great Barrington Lake Mansfield, Lake Mansfield Road, Great Barrington 414-528-4061, gbland.org Thursdays, June 6 - 27: River Walk Volunteer Workday, a weekly opportunity for community members to contribute to the care of the trail, free, 3 p.m to 5 p.m. Registration suggested: river@gbriverwalk.org. MASSACHUSETTS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 375 Church St., North Adams 413-662-5227, mcla.edu June 11 - 14: MCLA presents a conference on diversity, equity and inclusion with presenters from across the United States, as well as globally, share their expertise and experiences from varied perspectives on race matters in higher education. MASS AUDUBON 472 West Mountain Road, Lenox massaudubon.org/pleasantvalley
Registration required. Information: massaudubon.org/programs. Wednesdays, June 12 - Sept. 4: Ghost Tours, take a guided tour of the most haunted parts of the estate, $24, $20 ages 12-18, 7:30 p.m. NATURAL BRIDGE STATE PARK McAuley Road, North Adams Wednesdays in June: Nice n’ Easy Walk, 10 to 11 a.m. Saturdays in June: Natural Bridge History Tour, 10 a.m. and noon. Sundays in June: Natural Bridge History Tour, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Building the Bridge, noon. NAUMKEAG The Trustees of Reservations 5 Prospect Hill Road, Stockbridge 413-298-8138, 413-298-3239 ext. 3013,
413-298-4100, nrm.org Friday, June 14: Annual United States Citizenship Naturalization Ceremony, in partnership with Berkshire Immigrant Center and The Literacy Network, 10 a.m. to noon. Seating is limited to new citizens and their families. Sponsored by Berkshire Bank. June 15 and 18: “Rockwell on Baseball,” curator of education and baseball enthusiast Tom Daly explores Norman Rockwell’s depictions of America’s favorite pastime, $25, $15 members, 1 p.m. Reservations required. Sunday, June 16: “Father’s Day: Fatherhood Illustrated,” enjoy a look at Norman Rockwell’s work that relates to fatherhood and the work of the artist’s three sons, with admission, 2 p.m.
Sunday, June 16: Moonlight Canoe Trip, $35, 8 to 10:30 p.m.
NOTCHVIEW RESERVATION
THE MOUNT
413-200-7262, thetrustees.org
Edith Wharton’s Home
Saturday, June 15: NCC Tour of the Hilltowns, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Register: nohobikeclub.org/events/nccevents/ncc-tour-of-the-hilltowns.
2 Plunkett St., Lenox 413-551-5111 edithwharton.org Sundays, June 16 - Aug. 25: Backstairs Tours, learn about the daily routines of the men and women who ran The Mount, $23, $7 members, 10:30 a.m. Tuesdays through July: Guided bird walks, free, 8 to 10 a.m.
Route 9, Windsor
SPENCERTOWN ACADEMY ART CENTER 790 NY-203, Spencertown, N.Y.
tamarackhollownatureandculturalcenter.org Sunday, June 16: Mass Audubon at Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary, Father’s Day Floodplain Forest Canoe trip, Mill River Easthampton, 9 a.m. to noon. Register: massaudubon.org. Wednesday, July 17: Mass Audubon at Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary, Full Thunder Moon & Beaver Natural History and Ecology Canoe trip on Arcadia’s Mill River & the Conn. River Oxbow in Easthampton, 7 to 10 p.m. Register: massaudubon.org. TEMPLE ANSHE AMUNIM 26 Broad St., Pittsfield
TAMARACK HOLLOW NATURE AND CULTURAL CENTER
Through Oct. 14: The Naumkeag Experience, $20, free members, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 9 Glendale Road, Stockbridge
Windsor
Saturday, June 15: Hidden Gardens, “Artful Landscapes” self-guided tour to some of the most dazzling private gardens in the region, $35 in advance, $40 day of, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Garden Market on the Green, 20-plus vendors of plants, home and garden furnishings, birdhouses, antiques, garden books and expert garden advice, free admission with a portion of all market sales benefiting the academy, 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
thetrustees.org
NORMAN ROCKWELL MUSEUM
1515-16 Savoy Hollow Road,
Saturday, June 15: 15th annual Hidden Gardens Breakfast Lecture, “Bringing Cut Flowers into Your Garden and Home,” by Jenny Elliot of Tiny Hearts Farm, $20 at the door, $15 in advance (including a light continental breakfast), 9 a.m.
Annette Miller | Photo by Daniel Rader
Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week
READINGS, WALKS AND TALKS
413-442-5910, ansheamunim.org
THE WAVERLY GALLERY by Kenneth Lonergan Directed byTina Packer
“Outstanding... A powerful story” – Broadway World
THRU JULY 14
TWELFTH
NIGHT
byWilliam Shakespeare Directed by Allyn Burrows
JULY 2 - AUGUST 4 PREVIEWS July 2 - 5 Save $10!
THE CHILDREN by Lucy Kirkwood
Directed by James Warwick
“An astonishment! Bristling with chills and suspense” –The NewYorkTimes
JULY 18 – AUGUST 18
518-392-3693, spencertownacademy.org Friday, June 14: The Twilight in the Garden Cocktail Party.
413.637.3353 | SHAKESPEARE.ORG
413-236-8888,
BERKSHIRE THEATRE GROUP
barringtonstageco.org
Colonial Theatre, 111 South St.,
MAC-HAYDN THEATRE
June 14 - 30: “America v. 2.1: The Sad Demise & Eventual Extinction of The American Negro,” by Stacey Rose, directed by Logan Vaughn. A provocative, funny and dark look at Black Americans in post-apocalyptic America. Word premiere, Bonnie and Terry Burman New Play Award Grant Prize Winner. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, matinee Sundays and June 22, 27, 29 at 3 p.m., no evening show June 30. Sold out June 20. Talkback June 15. St. Germain Stage. $15-$50.
Pittsfield
1925 NY-203, Chatham, N.Y.
413-997-4444, berkshiretheatregroup.org
518-392-9292, machaydntheatre. org
Fitzpatrick Main Stage,
Performances: Thursdays at 2 and 8 p.m., Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 4 and 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 and 7 p.m., and Wednesdays at 2 p.m., unless noted.
BARRINGTON STAGE COMPANY
104 Walker St., Lenox
Boyd-Quinson Mainstage
413-637-3206, gildedage.org
30 Union St., Pittsfield
Tuesday, June 18: Tea & Talk, “Egyptomania,” with egyptologist Robert Brier, $28 members/advance reservation, $32 day of, 4 p.m.
St. Germain Stage
413-232-5055 weststockbrigdehistory.org Friday, June 15: Jack Horner, paleontologist, former curator at Museum of the Rockies and technical adviser to “Jurassic Park,” presents “Coloring Dinosaurs, Inside and Out,” $20 donation, 6:30 p.m. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT HOMESTEAD 207 Bryant Road, Cummington thetrustees.org Saturday, June 15: William Cullen Bryant: Poet, Editor & Conservationist, $10, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. WILLIAMSTOWN RURAL LANDS FOUNDATION 671 Cold Spring Road, Williamstown 413-458-2494, wrlf.org Saturday June 15: Free guided hike, up to Stony Ledge via Haley Farm Trail and down via Hopper Trail, 9 a.m., meet at parking lot at end of Hopper Road, Williamstown.
THEATER
June 14 - 16: “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” The Musical, performed by the Sandisfield Players, directed by Jessie Howard and Ben Luxon, $5 children/$20 adults, 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday.
36 Linden St., Pittsfield
VENTFORT HALL
9 Main St., West Stockbridge
413-258-4100, sandisfieldartscenter.org
June 19 - July 13: “Outside Mullingar,” from the Pulitzer, Tony and Oscar award-winning author of “Doubt” and “Moonstruck,” John Patrick Shanley, directed by Karen Allen. With the years slipping away, middle-aged farmers Anthony and Rosemary will need to overcome a bitter land feud, family rivalries and their own romantic fears to find happiness. Set in rural Ireland, this tender-hearted story reminds us it’s never too late to take a chance on love. Preview: $47; Tickets: $56. Unicorn Theatre.
Saturdays, June 1 - Aug. 30: Torah Plus: Shabbat Morning Study, 9:30 a.m.
WEST STOCKBRIDGE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
and leave his life in tatters. Tickets: $56. Unicorn Theatre.
directed by Joe Calarco. A childless baker and his wife endeavor to lift their family curse by journeying into the woods where they encounter Rapunzel and her mother, Cinderella, Jack (of Beanstalk fame), Little Red Riding Hood and other classic fairy tale characters. Their stories become entangled in unexpected ways – revealing what happens after “happily ever after.” Performances: Tuesday and Wednesday at 7 p.m., Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m., Wednesday and Friday at 2 p.m., and Sunday at 5 p.m. BoydQuinson Mainstage. $15-$75.
Cape Cod, “Breakwater” is the story of Bobbi Herring, a combustible, 28-year-old taxi driver struggling to overcome the deep wounds of her past and solve her life’s biggest question. And then JFK suddenly appears in the backseat of her cab. $25/$30. Showtimes and tickets online, previews June 13 and 14.
June 19 - July 13: “Into the Woods,” music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by James Lapine,
83 East Main St., Stockbridge Unicorn Theatre, 6 East St., Stockbridge May 24 - June 15: “The Goat or, Who is Sylvia,” by Edward Albee, directed by Eric Hill. When Martin, a successful architect with a loving family, confides to his best friend that he is also in love with a goat named Sylvia, he sets in motion events that will destroy his family
June 6 - 16: “Curtains,” from the writers of “Chicago” and “Cabaret,” this Kander and Ebb whodunnit is a laugh riot with an incredible score to boot. $15-$39.50. SANDISFIELD ARTS CENTER 5 Hammertown Road, Sandisfield
SHAKESPEARE & COMPANY 70 Kemble St., Lenox 413-637-3353 For performance times, visit shakespeare.org. May 23 - July 14: “The Waverly Gallery,” by Kenneth Lonergan, directed by Tina Packer. Once a vibrant lawyer, Greenwich Village activist and family matriarch, Gladys Green has run a charming boutique art gallery on Waverly Place for decades, but now stands to lose its tenancy, as her world shrinks through loss of memory and hearing. Gladys’ family struggles to cope with her fading faculties in this Pulitzer Prize finalist for drama. As told from her grandson’s perspective, this powerful story sheds a lasting and humorous light on how our familial roles get inevitably refashioned over time, and quietly challenges us to examine how we look after each other. Elayne P. Bernstein Theatre.
Berkshires Week | Thursday, June 13, 2019
Thursdays, June through August: Rabbi Liz Hirsh leads guided meditation and light yoga for all ages and abilities, no prior experience or athletic clothing necessary, free, 1:15 p.m.
THE BERKSHIRES LARGEST ESTATE JEWELRY OUTLET Great buys on Vintage and fine jewelry with semi precious stones and diamonds!
ARROWHEAD 780 Holmes Road, Pittsfield 413-442-1793, berkshirehistory.org
We have over 3,000 Pieces of Sterling Jewelry Most of it Sold by Weight! We Buy & Sell Gold & Silver, Collector & Bullion Coins & Ingots.
BARRINGTON PUBLIC THEATER
Berkshire Hills Coins & Estate Jewelry
Bard College at Simon’s Rock’s Daniel Arts Center 84 Alford Road, Great Barrington barringtonpublictheater.org June 13 - 23: “Breakwater,” by artistic director Jim Frangione, directed by Kelly Galvin. Set in 1990
Senior Owned, Senior Friendly
222 Elm Street, Pittsfield • (413) 499-1400 Outside Pittsfield • 1-800-298-7064 www.berkshirehillscoins.com HOURS Mon. - Fri. 9:30am - 5:30pm • Sat. 9:30am - 4pm After hours please call & leave message
JUNE 19 19-JULY JULY 13 “Anything can happen in the woods...” Don’t miss this beloved
TONY AWARDWINNING MUSICAL! BARRINGTONSTAGECO.ORG
BerkshiresWeek.com
June 17 - 19: Maryann Sherman’s play, “Mr. Noble Melancholy,” starring John Trainor as Nathaniel Hawthorne, $20, $15 members, 7 p.m.
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Thursday, June 13, 2019 | Berkshires Week BerkshiresWeek.com 16
BOX OFFICE NOW OPEN! SEE IT HERE FIRST!
CALL 413.458.3253 OR VISIT WTFESTIVAL.ORG