&
Arts Culture
Season Guide
750+ PERFORMANCES, FESTIVALS, FAIRS + EXHIBITIONS
Graduating Artists with a Debt of Gratitude
The Bishop The Evolution of Our Museum of Science & Nature scenesarasota.com
SEPTEMBER 2019 $3.95 U.S.
The Magic & The Music Returns
Sarasota Orchestra’s New Season
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CONTENTS features
39 BECOMING THE BISHOP
39
Renaming Our Museum of Science & Nature By Ryan G. Van Cleave
46 THE MAGIC OF MUSIC The Sarasota Orchestra’s 2019 – 2020 Season By Ryan G. Van Cleave 54 FROM CONSIGNMENT TO CONSERVATORY Arts Graduates Owe The Exchange a Debt of Gratitude By Sylvia Whitman
36
46
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
62 THE ART OF DISCOVERY Art and Antiques Expert Andrew Ford Finds Chinese Treasures By Gus Mollasis 82 2019 – 2020 ARTS AND CULTURE GUIDE
ON THE COVER Photo of classical violinist Sarah Chang provided by Sarasota Orchestra.
Click to View Video Tour of Residences
Whatever your joy, this is the place.
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CONTENTS departments
SOCIAL SCENE
18 THE LIST September Events Calendar PARTY PICS
24 GAIA Stone Gallery Grand Opening
INSIDER 26 THE FIND Artistic, elegant home décor
121 LAUGHING MATTERS
ON THE TOWN 71 SCENES FROM AN INTERVIEW Riselle Bain: Faithfully Traveling the Rivers of Life By Gus Mollasis
126
79 EDUCATION MATTERS Education Soars at
the Circus Arts Conservatory By Ryan G. Van Cleave
The One with Cheese,
ART & CULTURE
or 13 Ways of Looking at Limberger
112 BEST SEATS
By Ryan G. Van Cleave
PHILANTHROPY 31 Gulf Coast Community Foundation: 25 Years & Going Strong By Ryan G. Van Cleave
Performing Arts Calendar
114 GET INSPIRED
Cultural happenings brought to you by the Arts & Cultural Alliance of Sarasota County
117 LITERARY SCENE Ryan reviews three rewarding end-ofsummer reads By Ryan G. Van Cleave
Be Informed Be Entertained Be SCENE scenesarasota.com
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
Click to View Featured Models
from the executive editor
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WE MAY WANT TO PRETEND ALL IS GOOD IN OUR LIFE AND OUR WORLD, but the truth is we are experiencing some difficult and unsettling times. No matter where you stand on things, we all share the pain and sorrow for the people who paid the ultimate price of the recent mass shootings that have rocked our nation. Couldn’t it have been any one of us? Now I certainly have no expertise in anything I am writing about here, I can just share what’s in my thoughts. The perpetrators almost always are isolationists. From what we learn, they seem to be consumed by social media, the dark web and certain violent video games resulting in far less interaction with people, especially their parents. They show a real disconnect with society and lack of empathy toward their fellow man. Today’s isolationist behavior by many people can’t be healthy. We’ve all seen it. Just look at tables in a restaurant of families with younger children. Many of them aren’t talking. The kids are on their cell phones texting someone who may be five feet away and worse yet, the parents are also on their cell phones answering messages. For the sake of our kids, please put away the phones, communicate with your kids, share thoughts and ideas, find out what’s going on in their lives, show them you care, and let them feel valued and loved. What emotions are felt when you’re answering a text? What eyes are you looking into to see their pain or their joy? What are you solving when you shout loudly and call someone a bad name because they share a different belief? I can’t help but feel that the art of communication, debate and discussion are becoming a lost art. But enough pain. Let’s turn to happier subjects. Fortunately for us, visual and performing arts are alive and well and thriving in Sarasota! As we are about to start another exciting season, I hope you’ll peruse our season arts guide contained in this issue. Circle the ones you want to attend and buy your tickets early. Love the theater? Asolo Rep shines with three musicals this season, starting with The Sound of Music. Sarasota Scene proudly sponsors two Asolo Rep productions this season—Murder on the Orient Express and Knoxville. Florida Studio Theatre has an exciting lineup of world-class productions. The Players opens its Wilde Broadway Series with Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Manatee Performing Arts Center entertains with several great productions including Grey Gardens, The Buddy Holly Story and a new musical of It’s A Wonderful Life. Plus check out some of our other smaller theater schedules in our season guide. Are you one who marvels at the strength and artistry of dance? The Sarasota Ballet once again wows with an incredible lineup this season that includes several company premieres, plus the beautiful Romeo & Juliet and the jaw dropping costumes designed by David Bintley for The Spider’s Feast.
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
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from the executive editor Who doesn’t love our Sarasota Orchestra? This year promises to be thrilling, as SO features several guest conductors while they begin their search for a new music director. There are many internationally-known conductors and musicians in this season’s lineup. Check out SO’s Masterworks, Pops, Great Escapes, and Chamber Soirées in the performing arts section of the arts guide. On this month’s cover, we feature one of the most celebrated violinists of our time, the incredible Sarah Chang. She brings her emotional depth to Dvořák’s Violin Concerto starting on January 30, 2020. A protective father. A lecherous Duke. A naïve girl discovers love is not always true. And this is just Sarasota Opera’s season opener, Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi. Don’t you just love the stories? And speaking of love, Sarasota Opera’s season is all about love—Love is Dangerous (Rigoletto), Love Conquers Evil (Brundibar), Love is Fragile (La boheme), Love is Forever (Romeo & Juliet), Love is Intoxicating (The Elixir of Love), and Love Hurts (La Wally – a new production).
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There’s tons of festivals and fairs, new museum exhibitions not to be missed and so much more. Sorry space won’t allow me to call out more in this letter, so be sure to look over our season guide in this issue and attend as many as you can. And most of all, bring your kids along! Teach them the beauty of our world, of our art, and of our lives. Engage them. Inspire them. Educate them. Just like the arts do for us. Until next month!
Want to submit some comments or questions? We’d love to hear from you at julie@scenesarasota.com.
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
“Her gifts are at a level so removed from the rest of us that all we can do is feel the appropriate awe and then wonder on the mysteries of nature.”
–The New York Times on violinist Sarah Chang, featured on the cover of this issue.
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Locally Owned and Operated Since 1957 Vol. 62 No. 9
Publisher H John Knowles Morton’s Gourmet Market, circa 1970s.
Executive Editor Julie A. Milton Account Executive Alysia De Maio Art Director Darcy Kelly-Laviolette Marketing & Digital Content Jordan Kelly-Laviolette Distribution Mike Straffin
Ted & Pauline Morton, pictured here with son Eddie, opened their independent grocery in 1969.
Four generations of Mortons have contributed to the store’s success.
Thank You Sarasota!
We are grateful to all our customers for allowing us to serve them over the past five decades. It is truly an honor to reach this milestone, and we couldn’t have done it without you! Stop by our store for delicious prepared meals, gourmet goodies, and custom meats and seafood. Enjoy a sweet treat from our bakery or pick up some fine wine or fresh produce. We hope to see you soon!
Contributing Writers Sue Cullen Jacqueline Miller Gus Mollasis Ryan G. Van Cleave Rick Dakan Sylvia Whitman Contributing & Social Photographer Nancy Guth Contributing Photographers Jordan Kelly-Laviolette Kelly Kearns
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
H John Knowles LLC, dba SCENE Magazine publishes 12 issues a year. Address editorial, advertising and circulation correspondence to the above address. Sufficient return postage and self-addressed, stamped envelope must accompany all manuscripts, artwork and photographs submitted if they are to be returned or acknowledged. Publisher assumes no responsibility for care of return of unsolicited materials. Subscription price: $12.95 per year, $19.95 for two years. All contents copyrighted. Reproduction without permission is prohibited.
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social SCENE
THE LIST PARTY PICS
scenesarasota.com
The LIST
SEPTEMBER 2019 EVENTS CALENDAR Things start getting “Red Hot” in September when Suncoast Blood Bank holds its casino night fundraiser on the 21st. The sounds of music go underground at The Ringling, while it stays “Main Street” in Lakewood Ranch. Learn more about and help fund important Alzheimer’s research at Roskamp Institute’s Grey Matters Symposium. Taste delicious samplings from area restaurants while helping Sarasota Youth Opera. And we’re just getting warmed-up—wait until next month!
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
September 5 » Ringling Underground Museum of Art Courtyard 8:00 p.m. $15 | ringling.org
6 » Lakewood Ranch Music on Main 6:00 p.m. LWR Main St. Free; food and beverage available for purchase lakewoodranch.com
7 – 28 » $7 Saturdays Mote Marine Aquarium Florida residents receive $7 admission Mote Aquarium every Saturday in September $7 | mote.org
THE FABRIC OF INDIA ON VIEW JUL 7 – OCT 13 Through a stunning range of historical dress, carefully preserved fabrics, and cutting-edge fashion, discover how Indian textiles have been interwoven with religion, politics, and global trade for centuries.
Exhibition organized by the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Support for this exhibition was generously provided by the Arthur F. and Ulla R. Searing Endowment, William G. and Marie Selby Foundation Endowment, Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Ringling Museum Endowment, and The John and Mable RinglingMuseum of Art Foundation. Paid for in part by Sarasota County Tourist Development Tax Revenues. Gujarati Embroidery (detail), 1680–1700. Cotton embroidered with silk, 78 3/8 × 70 1/2 in. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
INFORMATION + TICKETS
ringling.org or 941.359.5700
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7 – 29 » Selby Gardens 39th Annual Juried Photographic Exhibition Photographic exhibition inspired by the scenery of Selby Gardens Free admission w/Garden entry selby.org
8 » ALSO Youth’s Fall Festival Brunch Hyatt Regency Sarasota 12:00 p.m. Featuring Olympic Figure Skater Randy Gardner VIP (11:00): $150; Brunch: $100 alsoyouth.org
13 » Intertape Polymer Group Leadership Breakfast Lee Wetherington Boys & Girls Club 7:30 a.m. Honoring Jaime DiDomenico, Cool Today President, and Dr. Rachel Shelley, Booker High School Principal $50 | bgcsarasota.com
13 – 15 » Sarasota Bradenton Fall Home Show Robarts Arena 10:00 a.m. Free | homeshowflorida.com
17 » DJ Rekha presents the Global Desi Bass Experience The Regency Courtyard 7:00 p.m. $15 | ringling.org
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19 » East Meets West Regional Business Expo Robarts Arena 4:30 p.m. $5 – 10 eastmeetswestexpo.com
21 » A Day for Kids Gene Matthews Boys & Girls Club 10:00 a.m. Free | bgcsarasota.com
21 » A Taste of Downtown Sarasota Opera House 1:00 p.m. Benefits the Sarasota Youth Opera $75 | sarasotaopera.org
21 » Girls Inc. Totally Tailgate 2019 Michael’s On East 6:30 p.m. Indoor tailgate party with food and drinks, classic games, live music, and raffles Tickets $125 | girlsincsrq.org
21 » Sertoma Kids Speakeasy and Casino Night Secret location disclosed with ticket purchase 7:00 p.m. $100 | sertomakids.org
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
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21 » Centerstone Life;Story 5k+10k Run/Walk
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Nathan Benderson Park Depression Awareness & Suicide Prevention 7:00 a.m. $11 – 35 | centerstone.org
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27 - 28 » William R. Mote Memorial Snook Shindig Mote’s WAVE Center Fishing: 7:00 p.m. Sept. 27– noon Sept. 28 $20 – 50 | mote.org
28 » The Humane Society of Sarasota County 15th Annual Golf Tournament Laurel Oak Country Club 7:30 a.m. $175 – 600 | hssc.org/golftournament
SARASOTA SCENE
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sponsored events
» Suncoast Blood Bank 8th Annual Red Hot Event Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall 6:30 p.m. $150 | redhottickets.org
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» Roskamp Institute Grey Matters Symposium Ritz Carlton 11:00 a.m. $50 | roskampinstitute.org
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OCT 20 | Sarasota Opera Curtain Raiser
Thank You for Meet Our Design Voting for Us Professionals
Michael’s On The Bay 6:00 p.m. $195 | sarasotaopera.org
Over 100 years combined experience!
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
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V IS IT S C EN ES A R A S O TA . C O M for the latest social scene party pics. To submit your event for consideration, please send information to scenemagazine@scenesarasota.com
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
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This article brought to you by: Lutheran Services of Florida. Kathleen J. Houseweart Director Sarasota Guardianship Program, 941-358-6330.
This article brought to you by: Lutheran Services of Florida. Kathleen J. Houseweart Director Sarasota Guardianship Program, 941-358-6330.
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insider
1
Blu Home
The FIND ART FOR YOUR HOME
Charlotte's Grace
3
Helmuth Stone Gallery
2
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S A R A S O TA S C E N E | AUG UST 2 0 1 9
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insider
Galleria Silecchia
Malbi Decor
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Sarasota Collections
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Rugs As Art
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insider 1. NOUVEL SMALL PENDANT LIGHTING Bronze and antique brass finishes create a minimal take on a retro design by designer Kelly Wearstler. Blu Home $2,175 | shopbluhome.com
2. SAPPHO WITH A HARP BY JEAN JACQUES (JAMES) PRADIER Bronze sculpture on a marble base with a height of 17.5 inches. Inspired by Archaic Greek poet Sappho. Helmuth Stone Gallery $3,700 | helmuthstone.com
3. DAPHNE SCULPTURE BY MICHAEL ARAM Inspired by Greek mythology, the sculpture is a limited edition of 136, hand crafted and one of a kind. Charlotte’s Grace $3,800 | charlottes-grace.com
4. VANITY BY NATHANIEL KAZ
SARASOTA CONCERT ASSOCIATION 75 years of musical greatness!
Experience our 2020 Great Performers Series Jan 15 | Van Wezel
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra Riccardo Muti, conductor Feb 12 | Van Wezel
The Knights SARASOTA CONCERT ASSOCIATION
Gil Shaham, violin Feb 25 | Riverview PAC
Pacifica Quartet Orion Weiss, piano March 12 | Van Wezel
Musicians from Marlboro March 30 | Riverview PAC Tickets sold exclusively via SCA box office
941.225.6500
www.scasarasota.org 28
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
Riccardo Muti • CSO Zell Music Director
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
5. DECORATIVE CERAMIC ELEPHANTS Italian handcrafted and hand-painted decorative ceramic elephant obelisks sold as a pair. Malbi Décor $625 | malbidecor.com
Behzod Abduraimov, piano Jan 29 | Van Wezel
Uniquely carved Portuguese rose marble scuplture, created in 1977 and released as one of 20 original works by renowned artist Nathaniel Kaz for sale through Galleria Silecchia. Galleria Silecchia $85,000 | galleriasilecchia.com
6. KISSING COUPLE WITH BIKE FIGURINE Sculpture with bronze and copper finish measuring 14.25 x 3.25 x 11.5 inches. Rugs As Art $79 | rugsasart.com
7. THE BASILISA COLLECTION BENCH Three-seater bench made with kiln-dried mahogany and rattan; has five different weaves used to represent the different regions of the Filipino archipelago. The Sarasota Collection $1,250 | sarasotacollection.com
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CEO Mark Pritchett
GULF COAST COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
&
years going strong
By Ryan G. Van Cleave | Photo by Nancy Guth Gulf Coast Community Foundation was created in 1995 thanks to the proceeds from the sale of The Venice Hospital—a community hospital founded over 40 years earlier by local citizens. Now, nearly 25 years later, Gulf Coast has emerged as a top-of-mind philanthropic home for hundreds of families, individuals, businesses, and organizations that have created their own charitable funds there to support important causes in our region and beyond. Kirstin Fulkerson—now Senior Vice President for Philanthropy—has been with Gulf Coast for the majority of that time. Having been an undergraduate English major, this wasn’t necessarily the career she expected. “As
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The late Dorothy Iversen endowed a scholarship fund at Gulf Coast that continues to support students each year
The Homeless Children and Families initiative to stabilize homeless families in crisis and help them secure permanent homes
Partnering with local nonprofits to address hunger and homelessness
philanthropy a child, I certainly didn’t say I wanted to work in philanthropy when I grew up,” she explains. “I figured I’d work at Gulf Coast for a year and then go to law school. But 16 years later, I’ve had so many opportunities here—and so much fun—that it’s hard to imagine doing anything else!” In her work with area donors, she’s had the chance to assist many generous people who plan their legacy through Gulf Coast. “The hardest part of my job is when a donor I’ve worked closely with passes away,” she says. “One woman in particular, Dorothy Iversen, a petite lady who always had a huge smile and a funny joke to make me laugh, named Gulf Coast as beneficiary of her entire estate. When she passed away several years later, I made certain her fund was set up exactly how she wanted, and I called her nonprofits to tell them that her endowment fund would be sending them a (large) check every year, forever, in her name. We have hundreds of donors, just like her, who I have had the privilege to work with over the years.” Current President and CEO Mark Pritchett also didn’t expect his career to bring him to philanthropy. When he was recruited in 2008 by thenPresident Teri A. Hansen to head up the foundation’s grantmaking, his first thought was to decline. Yet the idea of seeing the fruits of hard work— something one rarely experiences when working at a statewide level, as Pritchett so often did through the Collins Center up in Tallahassee—held great appeal. After considerable reflection and consideration, he made the move and hasn’t looked back. When asked how he developed such a keen commitment to philanthropy, Pritchett says, “I’ve had a lot of mentors over the years, and they’ve always encouraged me to give back.” Then he shared how he worked with Big Brothers Big Sisters of America while in
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philanthropy STEMsmart college. His little brother, an eight-year-old named Chucky, still keeps in touch today, more than four decades later. “I remember taking him to McDonald’s and playing basketball with him, but he remembers so much more of the things we spoke about,” says Pritchett. “It’s incredible to see how I was able to guide him a bit, and ultimately change his life for the better.” Jon Thaxton, Gulf Coast’s Senior Vice President for Community Investment, has his own memorable story about his start with the organization: “When I first came to Gulf Coast, being a self-described amateur etymologist, I looked up the word ‘philanthropy.’ The story goes that Zeus criticized Prometheus for wanting to educate, protect, and clean human beings. Zeus suggests ‘you’re just a philanthropist,’ which was almost like a criticism of the behavior Prometheus was displaying. It comes from combining two Greek words: phil – ’loving’; and anthropos – ‘mankind.’ Literally, philanthropy means a love of mankind. A philanthropist is a human being who loves other human beings. The misconception is that philanthropists are wealthy people who write big checks to lots of causes. What I learned at Gulf Coast Community Foundation is that the act of caring and of showing love to another human being is philanthropy. We’re all capable of philanthropy in our own ways.” The true impact of Gulf Coast Community Foundation’s philanthropy over more than two decades is hard to summarize. The foundation has been a leader and catalyst in so many things: Being one of the early voices of support to ensure the Legacy Trail was expanded to Sarasota and North Port. Developing the STEMsmart initiative to transform middle-school math and science education in Sarasota County Schools. Creating a systemic, long-term solution to improve and better coordinate services for homeless families in our area.
Career Edge
STEMsmart
Pritchett also points to the CareerEdge workforce development initiative that Gulf Coast helped launch and grow, as
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philanthropy
Artistic Director Joseph Caulkins OCTOBER 18, 19, 26
FEBRUARY 15 & 16
American Roots: The Gospel Experience
Haydn’s Creation
NOVEMBER 4
MARCH 2020
Perfect Pitch
Tomorrow’s Voices Tonight
DECEMBER 1
MARCH 20-22
Winter Dreams DECEMBER 20 & 21
Cirque des Voix® – A Decade of Wonder
JANUARY 11 & 12
Tomorrow’s Voices Today
A Very Merry Holiday Pops American Roots: Grassical
APRIL 2020
Purchase your tickets today!
KeyChorale.org • 941.921.4845
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well as Invest in Incredible, or I3, which strengthens the board governance and operations of area nonprofits. “Without our donors and our nonprofit partners, we simply couldn’t accomplish what we do,” he says. “I3 is such a valuable community investment because it helps those nonprofit partners become stronger and more effective in what they do. The impact is exponential.” It’s clear that Gulf Coast Community Foundation is a special group to be part of. As Thaxton puts it: “Gulf Coast is a team of people, a team of philanthropists, who are dedicated to their work. It’s that dedication, and that altruistic motive, that really defines the organization and is absolutely key to our success. There’s a need to understand what we do as a job and a business. But what really makes it successful is the caring attitude—the philanthropy.” Pritchett echoes that value. “It’s a blessing to be part of this community, where so many are generous and want to give back,” he says. “The message I try to get across is that the real impact comes from a combination of emotion plus brains—the heart and the head. That’s the difference between charity and philanthropy. Charity is nice and it makes people feel good. Philanthropy is ongoing and purposeful—it’s what really moves the needle. That’s what Gulf Coast Community Foundation does.” And that’s what Gulf Coast plans to do for the next 25 years—and beyond.
GU L F C O A S T C O M M U N IT Y F O U N D ATI O N I S M A R K IN G IT S 2 5 T H YEA R O F O P ERATI O N F R O M N O W T O S EP T EM B ER 2 02 0 . F O R M O R E IN F O R M AT IO N
on the Foundation, visit GulfCoastCF.org or call 941.486.4600.
§
W ine Dinner COURSE ONE
Black Opal Caviar Roederer Estate Brut
Thursday, October 17 at 6 p.m. An Exclusive Dining Experience at
COURSE TWO
French Scallops L’Orange Paired with Flowers Vineyards & Winery, Rose, Sonoma Coast, 2016 COURSE THREE
Fresh Grouper Topped with Jumbo Crab Meat Paired with Nickel & Nickel Stiling Vineyard, Chardonnay, Russian River Valley, 2016 COURSE FOUR
Filet de Boeuf Wellington Ducasse Paired with Far Niente, Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, 2017 COURSE FIVE
White Chocolate Souffle Paired with Dolce, Liquid Gold, Napa Valley, 2012
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REGISTER ONLINE AT JOSHPROVIDES.ORG RSVP by October 2nd SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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Experience musical genius, PASSION, and DEVOTION In this unprecedented concert season, nine guest conductors arrive at the podium for our Masterworks and Discover Beethoven concert series, and ten electrifying young soloists share magnificent musical gifts in their interpretations of masterpieces from Beethoven, Mozart, Dvořák, Brahms, and beyond. SARAH CHANG, “Chang Plays Dvořák” soloist
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BEETHOVEN'S
“Robust and electrifying...” - The New York Times
FIFTH
Sept 28, 29
Sat.: 7:30 pm, Sun. 2:30 pm Sarasota Opera House
MARCELO LEHNINGER Music Director, Grand Rapids Symphony Drew Petersen, piano
Flex
BARTÓK BEETHOVEN BERLIOZ BRAHMS BRUCH COPLAND DEBUSSY DVOŘÁK ELGAR MAHLER MOZART PROKOVIEV R. STRAUSS RESPIGHI ROSSINI VIVALDI WALTON + MORE
pass
Celebrating the th
250
anniversary of Ludwig van Beethoven.
CREATE YOUR SEASON EXPERIENCE. DISCOUNTED PRICING. PREFERRED SEATING. FREE TICKET EXCHANGES.
2019 2020
SEASON
941-953.3434 SarasotaOrchestra.org SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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0 0 S A R A S O TA S C E N E | S E P T E M B E R 2019 SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
P ri s ci lla the ma n do sto ee nat Ma ker Par ilit hab
Re
Becoming The Bishop
at bit Ha on ati
Renaming Our Science & Nature Museum By Ryan G. Van Cleave
Riverine exhibition
S E P T E M B E R 2019 | S A R A S O TA S C E N E | SEPTEMBER SEPTEMBER 2019 2019 | SARASOTA SARASOTA SCENE SCENE
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When Brynne Anne Besio began work as CEO of the South Florida Museum in 2007, she received a robust Strategic Plan that identified, among other things, the need for an eventual name change—one more in line with “who the Museum is” as well as one that more effectively communicated its offerings to visitors, donors, and the community. “We all recognized that our name wasn’t necessarily building us an audience,” Brynne Anne says. In 2016, the search for a name change began in earnest, starting with a deliberate, thoughtful process that included hiring a research firm to help identify the right new name. They also partnered with Pentagram, the world’s largest independently-owned design studio, to create a logo that would complement that new name. This year, that goal of rebranding the South Florida Museum has finally become a reality. As of April 10, 2019, the Museum became The Bishop Museum of Science and Nature. Emphasizing those last few words seems key, given that it’s the only natural history museum on the entire gulf coast, and it’s accurate to who they are and what they’ve already been doing for years. Adding in the name “Bishop” also makes
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sense because it honors the ongoing generosity of the Bishop family, whose leadership, support, and commitment to the Museum have been consistent for a long, long time. As someone who’s been a Museum member in recent years, I’ll add my two cents. I approve. I always wondered why something called the “South Florida Museum” wasn’t in, say, Naples, Fort Lauderdale or Miami. Anecdotally and through data derived from exit surveys, Brynne Anne and others always knew that people liked the experiences the Museum offered. Now, like me, people are equally pleased by the new name. “It’s a wakeup call to what Bradenton has to offer,” Brynne Anne reports. “People are taking another look at us.” Remi Gonzalez, the Museum’s Director of Communication and Brand, adds that “the name really captures who we already are. That’s why it’s been such a positive change.” The cool, Escher-like logo, too, is impressive. It’s an impossible shape, meaning it has no beginning and end, which reminds viewers of the museum’s commitment to constant growth and improvement.
Bishop Planetarium
The updated name isn’t all that’s new this year. In addition to their constantly-changing lineup of exhibitions—witness “Giants, Dragons & Unicorns,” which runs September 21 through January 5, and traces the natural and cultural roots of some of the world’s most enduring mythic creatures—the Mosaic Backyard Universe (MBU) permanent exhibition will open this fall. Thanks to an early leadership gift from longtime Museum partner The Mosaic Company Foundation, this will be a showstopping experience that engages two- to eight-year-olds. This purpose-built space that took more than four years to plan is specifically designed for young children to explore, experience, and discover both science and nature through the lens of a “typical” Florida backyard. Why not let a backyard be the setting for kids to explore the world around them, learning to ask and answer their own questions? “It’s such a good introduction to them for what’s in the rest of The Bishop,” explains Brynne Anne. If kids get excited by the turtles in the MBU’s freshwater pool, they start to wrap their mind around the ideas of animals living in the water. That leads them to seeing actual manatees in the Parker Terror Bird SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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Manatee Rehabilitation Habitat. If kids are smitten by Doug the Smilodon, they start thinking about fossils and bones, which gets them interested in the many fossilbased exhibits in the rest of the Museum. If kids like the solar system model in the MBU, The Planetarium theater—the only one of its kind on Florida’s Gulf Coast—is just a short walk away. “It’s all based on inquiry-based learning,” says Brynne Anne. “The kids encounter things that interest them, and they start asking questions. These new exhibits help kids uncover answers and get them thinking about lives beyond their own.” Right now, one of The Bishop’s biggest partners is the Manatee County School district, and they’re already providing programing for those students in a variety of ways. Brynne Anne hopes to expand on those relationships and especially find ways to connect with underserved kids who might not even have a book of their own at home. “Kids have more success when the entire family is engaged. The MBU helps parents and kids have fun and learn together.” With the addition of the MBU, The Bishop anticipates a general attendance increase of at least 25%. “We’re hoping for 1/3 as many kids, too,” Brynne Anne notes. “Especially in terms of K-2. That’s a whole new audience for us and it’s one we’re very excited to be working with.” This past year, about 25,000 kids participated in one or more of The Bishop’s educational events. This year, they’d like to double that. Having the new MBU open for business in October will surely help move them toward achieving that lofty goal. So, when the weather’s too hot (or rainy) or you plan another trip to the Riverwalk, keep The Bishop in mind. Stop back in and see what everyone’s talking about. You’ll be glad you did. For more information on The Bishop Museum of Science and Nature, please visit www.bishopscience.org or call 941.746.4131.
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
nat Ma r e k Par
Par ker Ma nat ee
Meg a
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Each one of us has the potential to impact a person, a cause, a community. For nearly 40 years, the Community
90 Funded Performances 800 Unlocked Imaginations 1600 Standing Ovations
Foundation of Sarasota County has matched donors to causes, creating lasting impact. You can be the one to make a difference.
cfsarasota.org
SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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THE CIRCUS ARTS CONSERVATORY
CIRCUS presents
2019-2020
SAILOR CIRCUS ACADEMY HIGH FLYING HOLIDAYS 2019 Fri, Dec 27 - Mon, Dec 30 America’s longest running youth circus presents amazingly talented student performers in this highly anticipated annual holiday show. In the Sailor Circus Arena
CIRCUS ARTS GALA Fri, Jan 31 Dress to thrill at this annual fundraiser and experience the unexpected at this mystical celebration of all that is circus. Under the Ulla Searing Big Top at Nathan Benderson Park 44
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
CIRCUS SARASOTA 2020 Fri, Feb 7 - Sun, Mar 1 Don’t miss this international cast of circus artists in thrilling performances that will leave you breathless! Under the Ulla Searing Big Top
CIRQUE DES VOIX™ Fri, Mar 20 - Sun, Mar 22 The CAC teams up with the Key Chorale to present an exhilaratingly unique show that combines live singing & music with professional circus artists. Under the Ulla Searing Big Top at Nathan Benderson Park
SAILOR CIRCUS ACADEMY 71ST ANNUAL SPRING SHOW Thu, Apr 9 - Sat, Apr 11 & Thu, Apr 16 - Sun, Apr 19 Sailor Circus Academy students flip, fly and soar in an inspiring performance that will leave you awestruck! In the Sailor Circus Arena
TICKETS: CircusArts.org • 941.355.9805 on sale Monday, November 4
SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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Dan Jordan 46
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
The Magicof
Music THE SARASOTA ORCHESTRA’S 2019-2020 SEASON
BY RYAN G. VAN CLEAVE After a six-year run of memorable music events, Anu Tali, the Music Director of the Sarasota Orchestra, has left to focus on her international career and do more guest conducting. As the ongoing search for a replacement continues, the 2019-2020 season will commence on November 8th with a series of guest conductors and plenty of guest artists, such as world-renowned violinist Sarah Chang and pianist Jeremy Denk and Shai Wosner. To get a better sense of what’s to come, here’s a Q&A with Sarasota Orchestra’s concertmaster, Dan Jordan, who gives us a musician’s perspective on the exciting new season.
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David Danzmayr
Marcelo Lehninger
As a musician, which concert from the upcoming season are you most excited about? It’s hard to pick only one concert in a season of so many “must see” events. What I’m most excited about is our entire roster of guest conductors. This group is a dream for us to play with in a single season, and I expect it to be a special treat for our audiences. I’d also highlight that this season marks the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth, so naturally we’ll be playing a variety of interesting musical selections by him in honor of this milestone. You’re talking about the two special programs in his honor: the Discover Beethoven Series, and a special mid-season concert that includes a performance of the entire Symphony No.3. Those do look terrific. But tell us—what are some of the challenges/benefits of working with so many guest conductors in a single season? While we do have nine guest conductors coming for our Masterworks and Discover Beethoven series, I’ll also point out that we have far more than that if you include our Pops and Great Escapes series. The first thing that comes to mind is that the entire organization has to be on the top of its game, as these world-class artists are having their first experiences with our orchestra and organization. This can make for some amazing music making! But it can be tricky to get to know someone that quickly, so the weeks are intense, demanding, and exhausting—yet also exhilarating.
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Sarah Chang
Teddy Abrams
Keith Lockhart by Winslow Townson
Jacomo Bairos by Terry Johnston
What’s the process of choosing a guest conductor? We have a nine-person search committee that has been working for the last 18 months on our process of hiring a new music director. This committee is made up of Sarasota Orchestra Board members, musicians, and staff. In the case of the nine guest conductors on our Masterworks and Discover Beethoven series, the idea was to find conductors capable of putting on an incredible concert, whether or not they decide to be candidates for the position.
Joshua Roman by Hayley Young
It’s a pivotal time for our organization as we try to move forward on building our own facility, and the conductors on our roster for this coming season all demonstrate the level of artistic excellence worthy of a new, acoustically brilliant concert hall.
Samantha Bennett by Kabir Cardenas
Let’s talk a bit more about the musical selections. You’ve got lots of classics onboard for the season—Mozart, Debussy, Beethoven, Vivaldi, etc. (I’m especially looking forward to the Titans of Two Centuries evening on October 10th, featuring Prokofiev’s Sonata in C Major for Two Violins, Op. 56, and Beethoven’s Septet in e-flat Major, Op. 20.) What are some of the newer pieces that audiences should really be looking forward to? Variety is the name of the game this season. Yes, our bread and butter is still the classics, and every concert will likely feature a piece or two that are recognizable. I also think it’s part of our mission to challenge audiences and expand their horizons, but always in an
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accessible way. So almost every concert has at least one piece on it that I’ve never played before, which is quite a feat at my age!
As concertmaster, it’s been exciting and rewarding for me to be part of the incredible growth these last 20 years. Now I can’t wait to see what comes next!
For those who’ve never attended a Sarasota Orchestra concert, why should this be the season that they give it a shot? Someone could always come to any of our concerts purely to enjoy the music. We have a young, vibrant orchestra that can beautifully play all genres of repertoire. Yet I think the most exciting part of this season comes from being part of something special as we experience outstanding guest conductors during a transitional period in our Orchestra’s evolution. That’s a rare treat.
Anything else about the upcoming season that Sarasota Scene readers should know about? Although I’ve focused here on the guest conductors, we also have a wonderful roster of internationally recognized soloists, of varying ages and backgrounds.
In addition to being the Sarasota Orchestra’s concertmaster, Dan, you’re also the Assistant Principal 2nd violinist of the Sante Fe Opera orchestra, and you’ve been part of other groups before in Miami Beach, Kuala Lumpur, and elsewhere. What makes the Sarasota Orchestra stand out in your mind? Although Sarasota is a small town and we’re technically a “regional orchestra,” what has been built here is truly remarkable. Audience members come up to me all the time who can’t believe the quality of the music making. That said, we’re at a crossroads as we look to advance artistically and build our own Music Center with perfect acoustics where we can control our own schedule. As an example, we often don’t even get to rehearse in the halls we’re to perform in! 50
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In terms of this season’s programming, my personal favorite is our Chamber Series—a repertoire chosen by our musicians who then get to move to the front of the stage and really showcase what they can do individually. I’m also quite excited that Jeffrey Kahane has been engaged by the Sarasota Orchestra to be our “Artistic Advisor” during our period of transition as we search for a new music director. He’ll lead a concert in February of Beethoven’s 3rd “Eroica” Symphony that should be one of our season highlights. One final thing—I’d be remiss if I didn’t thank Anu Tali for her six years of leadership that have brought us to where we are today. We’ll miss her, but I couldn’t be more excited for the future! Thanks so much, Dan. We look forward to hearing you and your colleagues bring more wonderful music to life this coming season. For more information on the Sarasota Orchestra, please visit www.sarasotaorchestra.org or call 941.953.3434.
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World Class Theatre M A D E
2019-20 season
The Sound of Music Nov. 13 - Dec. 28 Agatha Christie’s
Murder on the Orient Express Jan. 8 - Mar. 8
The Lifespan of a Fact Jan. 22 - Mar. 19
Into the Breeches! Feb. 12 - Mar. 21
The Great Leap Mar. 18 - Apr. 11
Knoxville Apr. 3 - 25
Hood: a Robin Hood Musical Adventure May 7 - 31
Snow White Jun. 11 - 28
800.361.8388 asolorep.org 52
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S A R A S O T A
Recognized as one of the premier professional theatres in America and one of the largest in the southeastern United States, Asolo Repertory Theatre welcomes you to its 61st season. One of the few theatres in the nation that performs in true rotating repertory, Asolo Rep annually invites brilliant artists from around the country to take on big ideas and produce theatre of the highest artistic caliber. The 2019-20 season features three musicals including one world premiere, contemporary hits and fresh interpretations of beloved classics. The season kicks off with one of the world’s best-loved musicals, THE SOUND OF MUSIC. Overflowing with some of the most iconic music of all time, this fresh interpretation of Rogers and Hammerstein’s classic plays through the holidays.
THE BREECHES! It’s World War II, and with all men at war, the future of Sarasota’s playhouse is in jeopardy. When the wives rally together to make sure that the show does go on, their resilience brings out the best of art and community.
From January through March, Asolo Rep presents three shows in repertory: With a locomotive full of suspects and an alibi for each one, MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS is the perfect mystery. This new adaptation by farce master Ken Ludwig takes you on a suspenseful, highly hilarious thrill ride. Next up is the acclaimed Broadway hit THE LIFESPAN OF A FACT. When a young fact-checker at a New York magazine takes on an essay by a famous author, his research spurs a showdown between “truth” and “accuracy.” Next, a fresh new comedy adapted specially for Sarasota audiences – INTO
In April, Asolo Rep presents the world premiere musical KNOXVILLE, by the Tony® award-winning creators of RAGTIME. With a sweeping score blending folk, bluegrass and ballads, this beautifully crafted story about family, faith and love is a must-see event. In May, Asolo Rep presents another show-stopping new musical: HOOD: A ROBIN HOOD MUSICAL ADVENTURE. With thrilling swordfights, spirited heroes and dastardly villains, this much-loved tale gets an exhilarating new 21st Century twist that’s bound for the world’s stages. THE GREAT LEAP will be presented in the Cook Theatre in
Subscriptions are on sale now! Single Tickets go on sale for SUBSCRIBERS AND DONORS
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April. Smart, feisty and hilarious, this new play uses the game of basketball as a unique lens on history as it combines events between San Francisco in 1989, and Beijing, China in 1971. In June, we present one of the UK’s most popular and innovative theatre companies with their new adaptation of SNOW WHITE, a magical, modern fairy tale experience perfect for young and old.
NOV. 13 - DEC. 28 Maddie Shea Baldwin plays Maria in The Sound of Music. Photo by John Revisky.
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from
Consignmentto Conservatory Thanks to The Exchange, Students in the Arts Graduate with a Debt of Gratitude BY SYLVIA WHITMAN
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Savvy shoppers find deals at The Exchange (formerly the Woman’s Exchange), the sprawling consignment store at 539 and 521 S. Orange Avenue in Sarasota. Its gently used gems range from silk scarves to silver serving bowls, Chippendale chairs to singular sculptures. But the canniest of customers browse with a sense of greater purpose than mere treasure hunting. By buying the wares, they are also buying into The Exchange’s vision: to touch the heart and stimulate the creative mind of every adult and child in Sarasota and Manatee Counties, through its financial support of a large and artistically diverse group of organizations, as well as students who aspire to be the world’s next generation of cultural influence. The Exchange’s grants to local arts organizations date back to its founding in 1962 by four local women who raised money for the Florida West Coast
“When somebody puts their money where their mouth is and says Symphony. Testimonials pepper The Exchange’s website. Less remarked upon are the scholarships for individual students, which run about $1,0003,000 per academic year. “They made my schooling possible,” says up-andcoming opera singer Adelaide Boedecker, a Sarasota native now based in Atlanta. Exchange scholarships from 2008-2013 contributed to the quilt of financial aid that enabled her to earn a bachelor of music degree in vocal performance at the University of Florida and a master’s at Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY—debt free. “That was a huge blessing.”
they believe in you, then you think maybe you’re not crazy for wanting this dream,” — Adelaide Boedecker Adelaide Boedecker
The scholarship committee members “were giving monetarily, but even more importantly, they were backing me up,” says Boedecker. Although her soprano stood out in the Church of the Redeemer choir and the Sarasota Youth Opera, she recognized that she was “a big fish in a small pond.” The endorsement implied by an Exchange scholarship assuaged some of her self-doubt. “When somebody puts their money where their mouth is and says they believe in you, then you think maybe you’re not crazy for wanting this dream,” says Boedecker, a Pine View School alum. Even after four years at UF, the hometown cheering squad represented by The Exchange scholarship continued to matter. “I never thought I was going to make it into the Eastman School of Music,” she adds. “I know that my tenacity was largely due to the fact that those people believed in me.”
Bit Risner
Jazz trumpeter Bit Risner felt The Exchange’s wind at her back at an even younger age. Homeschooled, she dual-enrolled at Booker Middle School as a 10-year-old to play in the jazz ensemble. “I was tiny, maybe 50 pounds,” she says. The much bigger boys in the group treated her like a little sister. They started a band, playing at the Sarasota Farmers’ Market and in front of Whole Foods. Soon the group evolved into Jazz Juvenocracy, with a regular gig at the Irish Rover in Gulf Gate. “That’s where The Exchange found us,” says Risner. With Exchange grants in 2010 and 2011, Jazz Juvenocracy made its show “even cooler.” They partnered with Fuzion Dance Artists and “hired a lighting guy.” As the teenagers tailored their arrangements, the music became “way more intricate,” Risner says. Many adults supported Jazz Juvenocracy with their time and money, but The Exchange was instrumental in making
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Karen Koblenz. Photo by Nancy Guth it possible for the group to accept an invitation to the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland and the North Sea Jazz Festival in the Netherlands. “If it wasn’t for The Exchange, we wouldn’t have been able to do those incredible shows,” says Risner. With a jazz scholarship from the University of North Florida, Risner didn’t apply for individual support from The Exchange. However, four years of Exchange scholarships helped Jazz Juvenocracy bassist Reed Tucker through Mercer University, after which he landed a full-ride Kovner Fellowship at Julliard. Over the decades, The Exchange has disbursed more than $8 million to local nonprofits and high school and college students pursuing higher education in the arts. The Exchange’s executive director and CEO Karen Koblenz points out that organizational grants and individual scholarships complement each other. Youth programs sponsored by the Sarasota Orchestra and Sarasota Opera, for example, help “students gain the confidence to go on to Berklee College of Music and Julliard.” The 2019 cohort of awardees includes 20 organizations, 13 undergraduates, and 9 high school students. “Our grants empower the creative visionaries of today,” says Koblenz. “Our scholarships empower the creative leaders of tomorrow. It’s really two sides of the same coin.” Booker High School, with its heralded Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) program, enjoys disproportionate representation among scholarship recipients. Recent graduate Sydney Catalfino, for instance, will study
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“Our grants empower the creative visionaries of today. Our scholarships empower the creative leaders of tomorrow. It’s really two sides of the same coin.” — Karen Koblenz, The Exchange CEO
Claudia-Lynn Rightmire. Photo by Sorcha Augustine animation with the help of her Exchange scholarship. As a VPA senior, she wrote the script for Into the Storm (2019), a documentary about Booker’s stupendous 1966-67 basketball team and the community action that prevented the school from closing for good. Catalfino and VPA classmates Charlotte Corporan (music), Taylor Reister (musical theater), and Sydney Anne Robinson (musical theater) join an illustrious roster of Exchange-supported Booker alums in the arts. One of the most recognized is actor Charlie Barnett—of Chicago Fire and Russian Doll fame—whose Exchange scholarships boosted him through Julliard’s drama program. Another Booker grad, Claudia-Lynn Rightmire, benefited from four years of aid as she studied dance and performance at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island, a college she could not afford. “Dance has always been my passion,” says Claudia-Lynn. “The Exchange found value in that passion far beyond what I ever could have hoped for and I found my future because of that support. I have now performed in England, Australia, and around the U.S. with confidence, knowing that I belonged. I have taught in schools throughout Australia, at The Sarasota Ballet, Booker High School, Sarasota Contemporary Dance Company, and so many other, sharing my passion
and creating open spaces for dialogue, movement, and change. I am now going to New York City hoping to help young artists feel like they belong, just like those at The Exchange did for me.” Boedecker, for one, has a sense of belonging to a Sarasota arts community in diaspora. “We’re all out there doing amazing things,” she says of The Exchange scholars. “Jazz, costume design, so many arts.” Jon Sams, for instance, shoots beauty and portrait photographs in LA. “We have people all over the country.” The Exchange has also supported the launch of game artists and animators. A scholarship gave a hand-up to Syrian-born Jamil Lahham, who majored in computer animation at Ringling College of Art and Design and whose animation and directing credits include Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (2009), as well as the 2011 Academy Award winning short, The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore. Lahham and fellow Ringling grad/Exchange scholarship recipient Scott McWhinnie overlapped at Moonbot Studios before McWhinnie left for Blue Sky Studios, where he has animated Ice Age: Collision Course (2016) and Ferdinand (2017), among other movies. And Evan Lovejoy, spurred on by The Exchange and armed with a BFA from USF, now creates art
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for mobile games with Tripledot Studios, based in London. “To go to any kind of art school is wildly expensive,” says Koblenz. A scholarship helps students grow beyond local opportunities—but once launched, they often come back, for good or for a visit. Last March, for instance, Boedecker made her one-night debut as damsel-under-lock-andkey Pamina in Mozart’s The Magic Flute at the Sarasota Opera House. After studying, teaching, and performing in England and Australia, Rightmire has returned to her hometown as a member of the Sarasota Contemporary Dance Company. She serves now as part-time faculty with The Sarasota Ballet and as an adjunct instructor at her alma mater Booker. “Sharing their gifts, they impact the community and the world as a whole,” Koblenz says. Hometown support has a lingering effect. The “cloud of witnesses” sustains Boedecker to this day, through a performing career she describes as “a job of nos and couple of yeses.” (More than just a couple. Boedecker has sung as a resident artist with the Pittsburgh Opera and as an apprentice with the Santa Fe Opera; the San Francisco Chronicle described her as a “vivid Stella—emotionally transparent and beguiling of tone” in the Merola Opera’s production of A Streetcar Named Desire.) She and her husband, bass-baritone Calvin Griffin, are resumé building, flying out from their Atlanta hub for short stints with different companies as their singing and acting mature. (Opera voices “need a little more time in the oven,” Boedecker explains.) The backing of The Exchange and Sarasota artists “has made me work harder,” she says. “I need to make good on that gift that has been given to me.” And whenever she visits Sarasota, she shops at The Exchange, knowing the money will support other artists. Her grandmother gave her some beautiful plates, and Boedecker found a match in the store to complete the set. “It’s a small way of paying it forward,” she says.
GREAT MINDS GATHER HERE. For nearly 60 years, New College alumni have been making a big impact on the world and their communities. The richness and diversity of their careers affirms the tangible value of a liberal arts degree from New College of Florida, which is committed to preparing intellectually curious students for lives of great achievement.
Jennifer Maglio Senior Appellate Attorney Jennifer Maglio is one of many New College alums who went on to law school. She is a great example of someone who turned her commitment to an ideal into a productive practice. Jennifer began her studies in natural sciences, but soon gravitated to environmental law. She got her start with the Sarasota County Attorney’s office handling land use cases, and later switched to commercial litigation. Today, she handles complex litigation for the law firm of Maglio Christopher and Toale, P.A. New College Foundation (941)487-4800 | ncf.edu/inspire
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GRAZIANO, RETROSPECTIVE
In a State of Weightlessness
FSU CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
25 – 27 October 2019
Ricardo Graziano’s SHOSTAKOVICH SUITE Ricardo Graziano’s EN LAS CALLES DE MURCIA Ricardo Graziano’s IN A STATE OF WEIGHTLESSNESS
SYMPHONIC TALES SARASOTA OPERA HOUSE
22 – 23 November 2019
George Balanchine’s THEME AND VARIATIONS Sir Kenneth MacMillan’s LAS HERMANAS George Balanchine’s WESTERN SYMPHONY
JOHN RINGLING’S CIRCUS NUTCRACKER VAN WEZEL PERFORMING ARTS HALL
20 – 21 December 2019
Theme and Variations
Run away to the Circus with a splendidly Sarasota take on this traditional holiday tale, choreographed by Matthew Hart. The only Nutcracker in Sarasota with a live orchestra!
REDEFINED MOVEMENT
FSU CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
31 January – 3 February 2020
Sir Frederick Ashton’s LES RENDEZVOUS Paul Taylor’s BRANDENBURGS Dominic Walsh’s I NAPOLETANI
PAUL TAYLOR DANCE COMPANY
FSU CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
28 February – 1 March 2020
“One of the most exciting, innovative, and delightful dance companies in the entire world.” - The New York Times
Dante Sonata
ROMEO & JULIET
VAN WEZEL PERFORMING ARTS HALL
27 – 28 March 2020
Witness Shakespeare’s iconic romantic tragedy through the lens of Sir Frederick Ashton’s musicality and charm.
BEYOND WORDS SARASOTA OPERA HOUSE
24 – 25 April 2020
Jerome Robbins’ IN THE NIGHT Sir Frederick Ashton’s DANTE SONATA David Bintley’s THE SPIDER’S FEAST
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941.359.0099 | www.SarasotaBallet.org Tickets start at $30 | Subscriptions start at $100 60
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
2019 - 2020
season “miraculous” The Washington Post
“Marvels of poetry” The New York Times
“intensity and beauty” The Boston Globe “trailblazing company” Broadway World
Victoria Hulland and Ricardo Graziano in Sir Frederick Ashton’s Les Rendezvous | Photography | SARASOTA SCENE SEPTEMBERFrank 2019Atura
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THE ART OF DISCOVERY BY GUS MOLLASIS
Art and antique aficionado Andrew Ford loves to hunt for treasure. Just like the explorers of old, his head and instincts guide him around the globe to find treasures of great beauty and value. And when you consider his life, it makes total sense. Ford is originally from Marion, outside of New Bedford, Massachusetts on the shores of where the great whaling fortunes were made. Shores where, as a boy, he played with Carlos Melville, great-great-grandson of author Herman Melville. And like Captain Ahab from the Melville classic Moby Dick, Ford is always seeking his white whale. The hunt for the good stuff excites him. Ford’s eye for treasures is a gift, something he cultivates not only with insatiable curiosity, but by continuously educating himself on anything do with fine art and antiques. His expertise on the history and value of the treasures that he finds or that come through the door of his business have helped him earn the trust of his clients, forge great relationships, and a lasting, successful business. Plus, there’s so much history just in his family. He has relatives who fought in the American Revolution and lost family members on the Titanic. He also knows a thing or two about beauty. Ford is married to the beautiful and statuesque Lathrop Ford, a self-taught artist who specializes in children’s portraits. The two form quite a pair and can be seen together at their eclectic fine art and antiques gallery, Sarasota Trading Company (522 S Pineapple Ave/941.953.7776),
where treasures from around the world are beautifully displayed in the heart of Downtown Sarasota. You’ll also find the Fords together at their Sarasota Estate Auction every month on a Sunday afternoon auctioning off many of the treasures that people have entrusted to them. If you’re fortunate enough to be on the road with them, whether it be an antique show in The Hamptons, an art show in South Beach or a trip to the Orient, this powerful pair are always in pursuit of the good things in life. In his business, Ford receives a lot of calls from around the world. Sometimes the call is not special, but oftentimes it is. When his phone rings, anticipation builds. Could it be his white whale? Not long ago, when his cell phone rang, he couldn’t help but smile. “Of course, I’m interested. Sure, it’s worth a trip. I’ll fly up and take a look.” Would it be a fishing expedition? Maybe. But this call came from a trusted source, someone he knew for many years. It was time for the mild-mannered Ford to go on the hunt for his white whale of a treasure.
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You’ll never know by his demeanor if he’s excited or not. It’s the negotiator in him—a skill that, in his business, is as important as his eye for the good stuff. Some call it the art of the deal. For others, it’s something they feel in their gut. Ford is no different. He lives on his wits. He knows when to pull the trigger and when to pass. Sure he’s had his share of regrets and missed opportunities. With a smile, he’ll tell you that’s all part of the game. The recent phone call was no game. It was serious business. On the other end of the call was an opportunity. A huge opportunity. A huge estate. White whale huge. The find was on land, in Richmond, Virginia, and had the promise all seasoned treasure hunters dream about. And while his journey wasn’t as big as the spice routes that encouraged the discovery of new lands, he remembers it was with “spices in mind” that Christopher Columbus set out in 1492 and ended up discovering America. You just never know. The excitement of opportunity began as Ford boarded the plane for Richmond. The “spices in his mind” were turning. He couldn’t wait to see what he would soon see. A RICHMOND ESTATE “As I pulled in, it was exactly the kind of setting I anticipated. Long, arching driveway culminating with this big, beautiful home. Now it’s looking more real to me,” says Ford. “The minute the doors were opened, I realized the enormity of the collection which contained hundreds of Chinese sculptures, most sitting in unopened boxes in the front entrance, the hallway and the 64
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big living area. It was a grand-style home with two staircases. The collection was just what he told me it was.” Ford quickly knew this was a great opportunity, realizing that these works of art had never been explored and that no one had gone through them. The home contained what every antiques explorer seeks, an undiscovered territory filled with treasure. Expecting to spend three or four hours looking through the collection, he was done searching in about an hour. There were over 600 boxes. He had planned to go through 30 of them but stopped way before opening even 30 boxes. He had already made up his mind. Somehow, he had to own this collection. “I didn’t want to look too ambitious, so I didn’t go into every box,” says Ford. “You do your very best to give them the impression that you want to do business, but you don’t have to.” One of the boxes Ford examined was a collection from the Hoi An Hoard, a Vietnamese salvage company that he
immediately recognized. History had documented that during the 15th century, a trading vessel with porcelain vanished without a trace off the Hoi An coast of Vietnam in the South China Sea. Some 500 years later, with the wreck in their harbor, the Vietnamese salvage effort began. First funded by private money, they eventually partnered with the Vietnamese government realizing they’d have to legally lift up these treasures and the government could protect it as a wreck site. “Over 100,000 pieces came from this area,” says Ford. “They were cataloged and sold through Butterfield’s auction in San Francisco, but it was only 20% of the collection. The Vietnamese government
the Hoi An Hoard. It turned out that wasn’t the case, but there were fabulous pieces, endless amounts of bronze statues and sculptures. Even after Ford went through a few more boxes, no deal was made at the house. Both Ford and the broker headed to the airport for their respective flights. Both wondered if their deal was history.
kept the best pieces for its museums to build their own tourism as people clamored to see these porcelain collections.” The collection in Richmond consisted of some of these finds that were bought through auctions. They were all stickered and identified as part of the Hoi An Hoard. Trying to ascertain the value of this collection is something that Ford makes a living doing, yet these were uncharted waters. “Remember, I never met the gentleman who owned this collection,” says Ford. “I was dealing with a third-party broker, who had appraised the collection and was working for the family to sell the
collection. With his appraisal done, his goal was finding perspective buyers and perspective auctioneers.”
FATE LENDS A HAND Ford was on his way to Sarasota with no deal, no art and no antiques.
Ford was both — a potential buyer and auctioneer.
“I knew the estate was open to me coming in as an auctioneer or purchasing the whole collection. One way or another they wanted to empty out this 16,000 square foot home which had been in probate for over a decade with Uncle Sam.”
THE POKER PLAYER The broker asked Ford what he thought. He paused and put on his best poker face. “It’s certainly an impressive and large collection, however a lot of this is decorative. There are some early pieces here, but the majority of it is what we call Republic period pieces.” The Republic pieces (1912-1949) were from the Republic of China after the Ching Dynasty. “Honorific pieces,” says Ford, “that have come into fashion today. Thirty years ago it had little value. Beautiful porcelains but not collected like today. Early Chinese antiquities are gone now. There aren’t many Ming Dynasty porcelains out there. All collectors can get now are late Ching and early Republic pieces. Today those pieces have gone through the roof.” So, when Ford saw the Hoi An Hoard pieces, he knew he had to get the collection. He envisioned all of these boxes being from
You don’t have to know Ford long to know what he was thinking on his journey to the airport. How could he make this deal? A rainstorm intervened and canceled both Ford’s and the broker’s flight. They would have an extra two hours in the airport looking at each other. Face to face. Sitting in those airport chairs that aren’t that comfortable and don’t move. Both men were no doubt wondering who would make the first move. “We started chatting and I told him that I didn’t know if auctioning would be the best way to handle this collection,” says Ford. “I told him that if I was going to be able to purchase the collection, I didn’t want to be responsible for the transfer of SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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these goods, and that if they could get them to my auction house then we could do business.” “Realizing the expense and to avoid all the unknowns, he looked at me and said, ‘I could also bring the family an offer, if you had one in mind.’ I told him I would give him an offer the following week knowing that if I lowballed him, he would dismiss me and move on the someone else.” Ford wondered if the broker, since he had appraised the collection, was an insurance appraiser or a fair market appraiser. Just by looking at all the stacked boxes of the collection, he knew the broker hadn’t looked though much of the collection. Much was unknown. But Ford did know that parts of the collection included some beautiful French pieces purchased at Sotheby’s that were not included with the Chinese collection. The broker hinted that, should they do business, Ford must make an offer on the French pieces and the Oriental rugs as well. “Now I’m realizing I have to make a strong offer,” says Ford. “I knew it had been appraised in the ballpark of $400,000.” Forever the passionate pragmatist, Ford thought about it, but not for too long. He knew that the flight delay placing both of them at the airport was indeed a fateful one. But it was also an opportunity that he didn’t want to miss.
The broker also told him that they had other auction houses and private buyers who were coming to view the collection over the next month or two. Ford knew the broker was “working him”, but Ford also believed him. He knew if he wanted the collection that he had to do something over the next week or two. He would eventually make him an offer that the family couldn’t refuse and one that he could live with as well. “My number was south of the ballpark, but where I was comfortable.” Who could have ever predicted that Ford would come to an airport to land his white whale—the biggest collection he’s ever been a part of? “It starts with the gut. A little bit of intuition. Knowledge to know this is an opportunity. I try not to look back on a decision. When I find that opportunity I have to do something and I do it,” says Ford. “While I wasn’t afraid of the investment, I was more concerned with the execution of physically acquiring the collection through a lot of man hours and logistics. I knew it would dominate my life and has done so for more than a year now. But, in a good way!” With a deal secured, Ford headed on the road with his team to collect their white whale.
“It starts with the gut. A little bit of intuition. Knowledge to know this is an opportunity. I try not to look back on a decision. When I find that opportunity I have to do something and I do it,”
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“You learn a lot through osmosis and packing all these items. By the time we got back to Sarasota, I knew what we had and was excited about the collection, as was my entire team.” Since acquiring the collection, Ford has sold pieces to collectors, institutions and museums, as well as to overseas buyers in over 20 countries. “An Asian environment has been created at Sarasota Trading that everyone who comes in enjoys. It’s also given me depth in a new area that is particularly interesting in today’s art world,” says Ford. It took the family who originally owned the collection more than 30 years to gather. There are many spiritual type pieces within this collection—like Buddhas, Quan Yins and Bodhisattvas. Ford says, “Every home should feature at least one Buddha, Bodhisattva or Quan Yin. It’s very important in Chinese culture, both spiritually and symbolically, representing gods of longevity and gods of fortune.” Fortune. Luck. Ford doesn’t count on them. “There’s no hour glass telling you when something is finally going to sell and when you’re going to get your profit. With some paintings I’ve bought, it’s taken years. With this collection, I knew there were going to be a few objects that were going to turn the tables for me in a positive direction.” What appeals to Ford most about the business? “Meeting new people. Moving finds from one estate and finding them a home in another estate. Then hearing back from those same people who are now so appreciative and inspired to collect other things. It’s all part of getting people interested in collecting. That’s my passion.” “To me everything I look at in the antiques world is an opportunity that involves cost analysis. Would I rather have the 100-dollar bill, or would I rather have the Asian tea cup? You weigh that—where you want to put your money. How long it’s going to take you to get in and out and what the journey’s going to be.” No matter who the treasure-seeking explorer, or the direction they’re heading – East to West or North to South – in Sarasota, the route for Asian treasures points in one direction and to one place – Sarasota Trading. There you’ll find a very knowledgeable and proud explorer and his crew who can provide you with a map to all the Asian treasures you’re looking for.
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50 years on the podium
An Interview with Victor DeRenzi by Lana Mullen
so at least I had an idea about how they went. My clearest memory about my debut was that my legs were shaking a lot, and I didn’t know how they were going to stop. What I learned about performing of any kind is that if you concentrate on what you’re doing, nerves and problems go away. LM: You have known that you wanted to be a conductor since you were 13 years old, having attended performances from a very young age. How did you know that this is what you wanted to do so early?
“The job of an artist is to take the material left by the composer and, by knowing and understanding its historical context, create a performance that moves the audience” LM: This year you’re celebrating your 50th anniversary as a conductor. Tell us about your first time conducting. VDR: I made my debut conducting Lucia di Lammermoor on June 30th, 1969, with an opera company in New York City—the Ruffino Opera. I went on to conduct 58 performances of 16 different operas in 10 months with that company. As I remember it, one performance was worse than the other. But, I did have the chance to conduct a lot of music and work with a lot of people. I had just turned 20 and was in college and still studying. Many of the operas I did were familiar to me from my years of opera going: Tosca, La bohème, La traviata, Rigoletto,
VDR: Once I heard my first opera, La forza del destino, I knew I wanted to be involved in opera. I realized how much I loved theater and music, and I would do anything that would keep me involved in opera. I knew I couldn’t be a singer because my voice was as bad then as it is now. So, I thought if I were a conductor it would be like being a singer but singing every role, not just one.
compels it to be involved in what is happeing onstage. We must present the material in a non-judgmental way that makes people understand their society and be a better part of it. Ultimately the audience’s participation makes a performance what it is. We can’t just perform to the air. The audience of a given day, the community, makes the performance unique and special.
“I love the arts and especially opera. I believe in its power to make the world a better place.” LM: What do you consider your greatest achievement?
VDR: Certainly that I’m even still conducting after fifty years is a fairly big achievement. The Verdi Cycle is a very important part of my career and my life. But, most of all, Sarasota Opera is what I am about as a musician. It reflects LM: What were some of your dreams and ammy aesthetic and how I think opera should be bitions when you started out in 1969, and how performed. I am also proud of the many peohave you met or surpassed them? ple who have been a part of the company and have kept a part of Sarasota Opera with them, VDR: When I started conducting, I wanted even if they are no longer involved in music. my life to be about making music and not just listening to other people make the music, and LM: What’s your favorite part about your job? I have certainly achieved that. Most young conductors dream about running the biggest VDR: It’s a combination of three things. I enjoy opera houses and orchestras in the world and studying and research, but that’s only meaningI did too, at first. But I realized my talents were ful to me if I can rehearse and work with the going to take me in another direction. I liked the performers. After that I need to share that work idea of having a festival company. I wanted to with the audience in a performance. In my work create a community of performers and opera I can take those three things that I love doing goers. and bring them together. LM: What do you believe is the most important LM: What do you think is the most important aspect of a performance? personal attribute that you bring to the job? VDR: The job of an artist is to take the mateVDR: I love the arts and especially opera. I rial left by the composer and, by knowing and believe in its power to make the world a better understanding its historical context, create a place. performance that moves the audience and
LM: What has been the best thing that’s happened to you over this fifty-year period of time? VDR: Meeting my wife. Or were you asking about music? Actually, music connects all the things I love. I met my wife through opera, our daughter met her husband through opera, and we all work in the arts. Conducting opera has allowed me to explore my interests in history, language, and sociology. I’ve also met many interesting people over the years. LM: Are there any special goals, hopes or dreams that are yet on your horizon? VDR: There are operas that I haven’t yet conducted that I would like to do, and there are operas that I’ve conducted that I’d like to conduct again. I have notes for books that I want to write about performance, learning music, interpretation, and, of course, Verdi. I am looking forward to working on that project. I would like to do more of the Italian operas written after Verdi, such as La Wally that we are doing this season. For Sarasota Opera I’d like to see our endowment increased to support the company. LM: Number of performances have you conducted over the fifty years? VDR: I would guess close to 1,000. LM: How many productions have you been responsible for at Sarasota Opera? VDR: Since I’ve been here, I’ve overseen 184 productions of 123 different operas. This season I will be conducting my 800th performance for Sarasota Opera. Sarasota Opera’s 61th season begins in November with Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto. The Winter Opera Festival will run February 8 through March 22, 2020, and will feature Puccini’s La bohème, Gounod’s Romeo & Juliet, Donizetti’s The Elixir of Love and Catalani’s rarely performed opera, La Wally. Visit SarasotaOpera.org for information on concerts, talks and special events. Individual tickets and subscriptions are currently on sale by phone, online or in person. Sarasota Opera House 61 N. Pineapple Avenue, Sarasota Box Office: (941) 328-1300 SarasotaOpera.org
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SCENES FROM AN INTERVIEW
RISELLE BAIN
Faithfully Traveling the Rivers of Life
A
BY GUS MOLLASIS
S A HOLLYWOOD CHILD ACTOR, Riselle Bain first hitched her ride not to a star but to a river—the Nile River to be exact.
That’s when young Babette Bain was cast as Little Miriam in The Ten Commandments. Yes, that Ten Commandments. The one starring Charlton Heston as Moses and directed by Cecil B. DeMille. While her first acting role didn’t have a lot of lines, it was important to the story. Crucial in fact. In her small part as Little Miriam, Babette Bain played a big part in the future Israelite leader’s life. As his sister, she’s responsible for seeing that Moses floats in his basket safely down the river to freedom. Without Moses’s successful river journey, there is no deliverance of the people of Israel through the Red Sea. Today Little Miriam is all grown up and goes by Riselle Bain and not Babette. She lives near the water in Sarasota. Still, she remembers her part in this perennial 1956 Hollywood classic, still shown multiple times during every Easter and Passover garnering big ratings during these celebratory seasons.
In her brief yet important scene, Bain flawlessly delivers her line before delivering Moses to the people. Her mother, Yochabel, played by Martha Scott, says, “God of Abraham, take my child into Thy hands that he may live to Thy service.” Little Miriam bowed her head and prayed silently while Yochabel prayed verbally – and then Miriam says, “But, mother, we have not even given him a name.” Her mother assures her, “God will give him a name,” before gently and carefully pushing the basket towards the Egyptian palace and the Nile River with one final instruction, “Follow it, Miriam. Watch it from the reeds. See where the Lord will lead him.” Almost whispering, to keep quiet from being overheard by any Egyptians, Little Miriam obeys answering, “Yes Mother,” as she looks and watches her unnamed little brother’s arc being discovered by Bithiah. On this day she would make a name for herself. So much so that even Cecil B. DeMille himself noticed and would forever remember her.
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Riselle Bain in The Ten Commandments
Years later, Riselle remembers that time well. She reads a passage called “Work Towards a Career” from her treasured journal titled “Tots to Teens” from a time when she auditioned for Paramount Studios. Her words preserved in her journal almost like commandments. “I was auditioning for a film called Poppa’s Delicate Condition starring Fred Astaire in which I would play his young daughter. I went before the studio heads. I had done small parts in pictures since I was six. As my singing and dancing developed, I became known to several people in the movie industry. When I was eight and half, I was called by Paramount’s talent scout to sing “Birth of The Blues” with no accompaniment, but they still seemed to be impressed.”
About to sign a contract with Paramount Pictures
After further impressing them with her varied talents, the studio heads told her they’d get back to her and not to feel badly if she wasn’t chosen because “a lot of people with talent are overlooked.”
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Babette was very glad that ordeal was over. When she got home, the phone rang, and a nervous Babette answered. “It was Paramount Studios saying that I was going to be signed for a term contract.” “Lucky to get the contract, unlucky in getting the part. The film they had me in mind for to play Fred Astaire’s daughter was shelved because Mr. Astaire had a conflict in his schedule,” she recalls. While that part didn’t happen, she did her best to prepare by attending school at the studio for six months.
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“During that time I became friendly with the late Cecil B. DeMille, who always stopped to say hello to me in the commissary each day. He never passed me up and even sometimes lifted me and kissed me and called me his “Little Miriam.” Babette Bain was born in Los Angeles. Her father was working in the movie industry after his prize fighting career ended, while her mom was a homemaker and a bookkeeper. “My father probably gave me his talent and his strength. My mother gave me her goodness. By kindness and goodness, I mean someone who would not hurt other people.” Talent, strength and goodness—they are attributes that sum up Bain, a diminutive yet powerful force of nature—that have helped her run smoothly, strongly and effortlessly through her life—just like a great river. No matter the tides. Bain has wondered if her becoming a cantor was a calling, considering that both her Jewish parents were not practicing nor religious. Today Cantor Riselle Bain is part of the Jewish clergy through Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, the American Conference of Cantors, is founding member of the Bay Area Cantorial Association (BACA), and is a member of the SarasotaManatee Rabbinical Association. Since June 2015, Cantor Bain has served as the spiritual leader for Temple Israel of Highlands County. “When I was young girl, I didn’t go to Sunday school,” says Bain. That wasn’t a part of my upbringing. I would read things on our history. I had a little children’s bible. If it was Passover or Hanukah, if my parents were not going to do it, I was the one who would do a little something myself in the kitchen.” She even had a club. “My club was between me and God. I would write out my thoughts to God, who was in my club and my fellow club member.” 74
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Whenever she would go to a friend’s bar or bat mitzva she would sit in the sanctuary and start crying pretending she was davening. “So, when people ask me if it’s a calling, I wonder about that. Just as I wonder about being chosen to play Little Miriam. That was kind of when the seed was planted.” The show business seed was planted by her mother who had registered her with one of the local Hollywood agents. “I auditioned at Paramount Studios with a lot of other little girls. Anassociate producer named Henry Wilcoxon came in, looked at me and said, “Little girl, put the sweater over your head.’ So, I put the sweater over my head. That’s when he let all the other little girls go.” “He took me by the hand and took me to the sound stage where they were filming The Ten Commandments. He brought Cecil B. DeMille over to me and Mr. DeMille asked me if I knew a poem. I said, yes. I recited the poem “Daffodils”. And in that beautiful and iconic voice of his, he said, ‘You got the part.’” Not intimidated by the set, the part or even the great man who has a lifetime Achievement Award named after him, Bain describes herself as being precocious as a child. “If there was anything they wanted me to do, I would do it.” Sure of herself, focused and confident. That certainly describes her when she auditioned to sing at the Moulin Rouge in Hollywood for the proprietor and alleged mobster Frank Sennes. “When I went to audition for him, I was singing, and he started talking to someone. I said, ‘I’m singing, and you need to listen to me.’” Whatever the part and in whatever part of her life that she was playing, the tiny Bain packed a talented and powerful punch—for a film, a song or a dance number—reminiscent of her famous father, boxer Abie Bain.
on on the the town town
For the acclaimed 1962 boxing film Requiem for a Heavyweight, Anthony Quinn told the press he modeled his character, Mountain Rivera, after Bain by copying his same rough voice and mannerisms. Bain had a small role in the film and worked as a technical advisor so much so that Anthony Quinn lived with Abie Bain while making that film. Now that’s dedication. Abie Bain played no small role in his young daughter’s life, leaving and making an impression on her that she will always remember. “My father thought I was the greatest thing that ever happened and would push me in front of everyone.” It’s the kind of thing that gave the young actress confidence when she stepped into her ring and into a pool of water on the set of The Ten Commandments. “They were filming two sections. One where I’m following the basket down the river and they had a screen behind me with the river and bulrushes. Then another where I’m in this giant den of water with bulrushes. And Cecil B. DeMille would be directing me, ‘Now turn around and wave bye to your mother.’ And then when I got to where Bithiah was he wanted me to have different reactions showing how I was worried, concerned and I didn’t know what was going to happen and happiness when I saw her pick up the baby. He was directing me through that whole time and while he’s directing me he’s very stern.” Abie Bain Looking back Bain remembers, “He must have liked what I did. When I was under contract we would go to lunch every day at the commissary and he would come over and introduce me to everyone. He was a different person. On the set he was all business. He was very nice to me. I remember meeting Mitzi Gaynor, John Derek, Debra Paget, Rhonda SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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school with Richard Dreyfuss. We did Anne Frank together in an acting class in which I played Anne Frank.”
Guest starring on Shower of Stars Fleming, Ursula Andress and Pier Angeli all at lunch.” While Bain’s time shooting The Ten Commandments lasted a mere few weeks, the impression the film made upon her lasted a lifetime. “I led a very different life from kids who grow up normally.” Little Miriam remembers when that epic film opened in Hollywood and she was at the premiere. “It was a big deal. The lights. The curtain was amazing. Cecil B. DeMille was there. My mom and dad are there with me and they are happy. I loved it when my little moment on screen came on. I love it every year I see it.” With The Ten Commandments under her belt, her parents thought there would be a lot more to come with all the singing and dancing lessons that she had taken. Bain did get bit parts in The Silver Chalice and The Egyptian and was an extra in Judy Garland’s A Star is Born, while also playing a part in Artists and Models with Dean Martin. “Dean Martin was so nice. In fact, I went to school with Dean Martin’s daughter Deana. “I went to school with a lot of kids who were in the business—Groucho Marx’s daughter, Carl Reiner’s son Rob, and Oscar Levant’s daughter who was darling. I also went to
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Bain danced with Bob Hope in the film Beau James, strangely playing a bi-racial child in a career that hasn’t been short on showing a wide range. “They were looking for a girl to do a challenge dance with Bob Hope in this film where he’s campaigning and goes to Harlem. They couldn’t find anybody, knew me and that I was studying with Nick Castle, who was one of the most prolific tap dancers.” Bain sang a duet with Rosemary Clooney on a show called Shower of Stars that featured Bob Hope and Marge and Gower Champion. She landed parts in Broken Arrow playing a Native American girl and also performed on the popular Ben Casey Show. She also got to dance to the “Swanee” number with Judy Garland on the set of A Star is Born. “Judy Garland was so nice and warm. She liked my dad. My father actually introduced me to her at a wonderful Italian restaurant in Beverly Hills,” recalls Bain. “Liza Minelli came on the set of A Star is Born that day. Years later in New York while I was taking my exams for the cantorate, I went back to the school where I took dancing classes. Liza was there taking lessons from the same teacher. I said to her, “You may not remember this. Years ago, I was one of the kids in that Swanee number and you came on the set that day.’ Liza excitedly replied, ‘Oh my-gosh, I remember, I remember.’ She was as sweet as she could be.” The same can be said about Bain. There is a sweetness that invites both stranger and friend alike into her world.
With Bob Denver in Play It Again, Sam In a career that has twisted and turned, it hasn’t always been easy, yet it’s been a life that has flowed easily enough because the person at its center is grounded, possessing faith that has always carried her down the river. A world where she has played the title role of Eva Peron in the first national tour of Evita, worked with showbiz greats such Bert Lahr, Buster Keaton, Paul Newman, and Bob Denver in motion pictures, television, and theater. Those days represent many good memories. Now further down the river in her life, Bain is a combination of the collective talents that she was blessed with and that she’s cultivated along the way. A passion still burns in her to perform and she still performs today. But it’s different. “For years I went back and studied so that I could get my credentials to be a cantor, so while I am still singing and dancing, I’m not doing it in a theatrical way. What I call it is devekut.”
Record jacket for Harbor Light “In devekut your whole focus is not on doing things. You focus on what the prayer means. You try to connect to the divine source. In a sense I don’t think of it as performing, I think of it as connecting with your own drop of what the divine is within you, while also reaching up.” Today Cantor Riselle Bain still fondly remembers the little girl in her, who played Little Miriam and helped Moses find a way home. “The creative arts are spiritual. If you are doing something and the actor is really connected to the person and what that person is going through, it is a kind of a divine connection to a soul. You put your whole self into it.” She’s certainly has done that playing both parts she was meant to play, guiding people safely down their spiritual rivers both on the screen and down the stream of life, serving people and giving them what they need. Just ask Cecil B. DeMille and the Man upstairs!
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on the town
Education MATTERS By Ryan G. Van Cleave
EDUCATION SOARS AT THE CIRCUS ARTS CONSERVATORY When my oldest daughter was three, she admitted that trapeze artists were super cool, thanks to her countless hours of watching the stop-motion musical comedy show, JoJo’s Circus, I’m guessing. But we lived in small-town South Carolina, so that interest eventually gave way to other kid dreams because, honestly, what could we do about it? Had we lived in Sarasota back then, things might’ve gone differently because of the Circus Arts Conservatory (CAC). Their mission says it all: “to engage and educate students using unique and innovative learning programs; to measurably improve the quality of life for individuals in care facilities; and to advance the extraordinary legacy and heritage of the circus.” To be clear—they offer classes for kids of all ages focusing on circus arts like aerial silks and the trapeze. “I’ve flown a four-year-old boy and, just last year, an eightyfour-year-old woman,” says Head Training programs coach, Andres Leon, an alumnus of CAC’s Sailor Circus (1996-2003). “In general, I tell people that anyone from five to seventy-five can participate, though it all depends a bit on their physical ability and their willingness to give it a try.” He so fondly remembers his own time with the Sailor Circus that after going to school for nursing and learning how to be a teacher, he thought there’d be no better place to utilize those teaching skills than here at The CAC. “My experiences in the circus taught me so many things about myself,” he explains. For one thing, confidence, which is a necessary component of any part of the circus arts. A second takeaway for him was being able to trust your peers. Jennifer Mitchell, CAC’s Executive VP, explains that Leon’s experiences aren’t uncommon. Using circus arts does fit well into any self-improvement or fitness regimen. “Some give it a try because it’s a thrill or it’s on their bucket list. Others try it because they’ve heard from friends how much fun working out can be.” There’s been an explosion of interest in the circus arts as a vital part of physical training lately. Much of that surge in popularity began with the start of Cirque du Soleil. But when the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus shut down,
people worried that the end of that long-running organization signaled doom for all things circus. “Not so,” says Mitchell. Exactly the opposite happened. “That new space allowed the rest of us to bubble up into a grassroots movement that’s grown throughout the world.” She’s exactly right. Today, it’s not at all unusual to find circus arts in afterschool programs and public recreation classes, as well as combined with other activities such as yoga, even in places without the undeniable circus heritage like we enjoy here. Leon adds that even Club Med has circus arts activities, it’s become such a normalized activity. “But we intend to be in the forefront of it all,” Leon says. “We’ve got this state-of-the-art facility and the teachers to deliver the best instruction in the safest way.” Indeed, one of the concerns I’d have as a parent is safety. But Leon says participants are always hooked up to a safety device. When flying, they have safety lines and nets underneath. He adds that while some of the equipment has been the same for generations—like the basic pulley block, where today’s blocks are essentially the same as those from decades ago—the rigging is always being updated every five to ten years to increase safety. They also use technology like computers and
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video to help in training, like they do in other sports, like golf, football, and baseball. About getting so high up in the big top or trying out a new activity, Leon admits, “There still can be some fear, but that’s a good thing. Figuring out how to overcome that is exciting and useful—it’s not your everyday run-of-the-mill thing. It keeps you on your toes.” He also says participants must cushion their ego because “it’s the trapeze, not checkers.” It takes serious physical work before you get good at it. Until then, you’re likely going to fall a few times, albeit into a net. And while wearing safety harnesses. Right now, the year-round classes include flying trapeze (ages 6 to adult, with beginner, intermediate, and advanced levels), aerial silks (all ages, all levels), and a kid-oriented circus sampler (ages 3-5 and 6-10). Mitchell points out that because of their state-ofthe-art renovated facility, they want to expand their offerings to include such classes as acrobatic trampoline, aerial yoga, hand balancing, juggling, and other circus arts activities. The demand and interest already exists, after all. Just ask my daughter, who’s now fourteen and still smiles when she hears the word “circus.” “Everything in the circus has a correlation to strength and flexibility since we’re animating the body,” says Mitchell. “We have regulars who come to work on the trapeze, not to one day perform, but simply as part of their regular fitness routine. We also see groups who want to come in and try it together, like families or coworkers.”
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The CAC is committed to making a difference through education. Teaching the circus arts through these classes is just one way. They also supplement K-12 teaching through engaged learning by sending circus-artists into area classrooms to demonstrate the principles of science, engineering, art, math, technology, communication, and theater—through using circus arts and themes. Additionally, their Circus Arts in Healthcare program helps improve the quality of life for those in care facilities by sending artists there to use comedy, magic, and music to energize people who truly need it most. “One of the things that make Sarasota special is that, unlike so many other beachside Gulf cities,” says Mitchell, “we have this amazing legacy and tradition of the circus. The Circus Arts Conservatory is committed to recapturing the majesty of the circus and help keep that unique legacy alive. Having a strong and exciting education program is part of how we make that happen.” With a pitch like that, I can envision a time where not only will my daughter come try out the circus arts in that amazing new space, but I just might join her, too.
F O R M O R E IN F O R M AT IO N
about the Circus Arts Conservatory, please visit circusarts.org or call 941.355.9335.
SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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PERFORMING ARTS
MUSEUMS/VISUAL ARTS
HISTORY, SCIENCE & EDUCATION
ARTS COMMUNITIES & ORGANIZATIONS FESTIVALS & FAIRS
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BROUGHTTO TOYOU YOUBYBYSARASOTA SARASOTA SCENE MAGAZINE BROUGHT SCENE MAGAZINE AND THE ARTS & CULTURE ALLIANCE OF SARASOTA COUNTY
AND THE ARTS & CULTURAL ALLIANCE
FOR SEPTEMBER EXHIBITIONS AND PERFORMANCES, VISIT GET INSPIRED AND BEST SEATS.
OF SARASOTA COUNTY
“Miracles of Emotion” by Kasia Bruniany ARTS & CULTURE GUIDE SPONSORS | COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF SARASOTA COUNTY · GOLD & DIAMOND SOURCE · INFINITI OF SARASOTA · MAULDIN & JENKINS · MORTON’S MARKET · RINGLING COLLEGE OF ART + DESIGN · STATE COLLEGE OF FLORIDA FOUNDATION · THE RINGLING SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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PERFORMING ARTS Artist Series Concerts of Sarasota 1226 N Tamiami Trail, Ste 300 Sarasota, FL 34236 941.306.1200 artistseriesconcerts.org Performances at various venues. Romance on the Flute October 13 – 14, 2019 Zlatomir Fung, Cello / Young Concert Artists International November 2 – 3, 2019 Chopin Mini Delights November 17 – 18, 2019 Piano Grand IV: The Holiday Edition! December 8, 2019 Harmony for the Holidays with Duchess December 21 – 22, 2019 Xavier Foley, Double Bass / Young Concert Artists International January 12, 2020 High Flying Sopranos January 30, 2020 ¡MARIACHI Y MÁS! February 4, 2020 Lin Ye, Piano / Artists Series Concerts National Competition Winner February 15 – 16, 2020 Great Americans February 27, 2020 Russian Renaissance March 7 – 8, 2020 Palm Court Treasures March 19, 2020 BOYGIRLBOYGIRL March 24, 2020 Soo Ben Lee, Violin / Young Concert Artists International April 4 – 5, 2020 Siren Song: Sounds of Spring April 12 – 13, 2020 Dick Hyman and The Florida Jazz Masters May 6, 2020 Cuarteto Tanguero May 23 – 24, 2020 The Glenn Miller Sound June 14, 2020
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
5555 N Tamiami Trail
The Chorus & Orchestra of Anna Maria Island
Sarasota, FL 34243
PO Box 1213
941.351.8000
Holmes Beach, FL 34218
asolorep.org
941.795.2370
The Sound of Music
amicco.org
November 16 – December 28, 2019
7th Annual Symphony on the Sand
Murder on the Orient Express
November 9, 2019
January 10 – March 8, 2020
A Glorious Hallelujah!
The Lifespan of a Fact
December 8, 2019
January 24 – March 19, 2020
Fourteenth Annual Young Artists
Into the Breeches
Solo Competition
February 14 – March 21, 2020
January 18, 2020
The Great Leap
Symphony OFF the Sand
March 20 – April 12, 2020
February 16, 2020
Asolo Repertory Theatre
Knoxville April 10 – 25, 2020
The Circus Arts Conservatory
Hood: A Robin Hood
2075 Bahia Vista St
Musical Adventure
Sarasota, FL 34239
May 15 – 31, 2020
941.355.9805
Snow White
circusarts.org
June 12 – 28, 2020
Sailor Circus Holiday Show December 27 – 30, 2019
Belle Canto
Windjammers Performance
8148 36th S E
January 19, 2019
Sarasota, FL 34243
Circus Sarasota 2020
941.400.2152
February 7 – March 1, 2020
bellecanto.org
Cirque des Voix®
Great Sounds of Cinema
March 20 – 22, 2019
October 27, 2019
Sailor Circus Spring Performances
With Love, The Belles
April 9 – 11 & April 16 – 19, 2020
February 13, 2020
Summer Circus Spectacular 2019
Phenomenal Women
June – August, 2020
March 29, 2020
Diversity: The Voices of Sarasota Choral Artists of Sarasota
PO Box 2453
PO Box 52987
Sarasota, FL 34230
Sarasota, FL 34232
888.550-6279
941.387.6046
diversitysarasota.org
choralartistssarasota.org One World, Many Voices
ensemblenewSRQ
November 16, 2019
PO Box 15372
Sounds of the Season
Sarasota, FL 34277
December 22, 2019
ensrq.org
Celebrating Sondheim
Peculiar Dreams
January 18, 2020
October 20 – 21, 2019
Carmina Burana in Motion
Fire and Light
February 22, 2020
January 20, 2020
Listen to the Earth
Enter the Vortex
April 19, 2020
March 23, 2020
American Fanfare
Digital Trees
July 4, 2020
April 13 & 14, 2020
The First Brass of Sarasota
Romeo & Juliet by William Shakespeare
The Island Players
4565 Northlake Dr
April 8 – 25, 2020
10009 Gulf Dr
Sarasota, FL 34232
Dog Days Theatre
Anna Maria, FL 34216
941.928.0296
July 7 – August 23, 2020
941.778.5755
thefirstbrass.org
theislandplayers.org
Visit website for performances.
Glenridge Performing Arts Center
Florida Studio Theatre
7333 Scotland Way
Ripcord
1241 N Palm Ave
Sarasota, FL 34238
January 9 – 26, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34236
941.552.5325
Leading Ladies
941.366.9000
theglenridge.com
March 5 – 22, 2020
floridastudiotheatre.org
Relatively Speaking November 7 – 17, 2019
Death by Design
Mainstage
Guitar Sarasota
Bright Star (FL Premiere)
Mini-Concert & Lecture Series
November 6, 2019 – January 3, 2020
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Jazz Club of Sarasota
Handle With Care
2256 Bahia Vista St
330 S Pineapple Ave, Ste. 111
December 11, 2019 – March 8, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34239
Sarasota, FL 34236
American Son
941.260.3306
941.366.1552
January 22 – March 22, 2020
guitarsarasota.org
jazzclubsarasota.com
The Legend of Georgia McBride
International Concert Series
See website for locations.
April 1 – May 29, 2020
Riverview Performing Arts Center
40th Annual Sarasota Jazz Festival
1 Ram Way, Sarasota, FL 34231
March 8 – 14, 2020
April 30 – May 10, 2020
Cabaret
Raphael Feuillatre – France
That’s Amore
January 11, 2020
Jazz at Two
September 25, 2019 – February 2, 2020
Sergio & Odair Assad – Brazil
Al Hixon Jazz Jam
Outlaws and Angels
February 8, 2020
October 11, 2019
November 20, 2019 – March 29, 2020
Irina Kulikova – Russia
Eddie Tobin & Friends
Light My Fire
March 7, 2020
October 18, 2019
February 5 – June 14, 2020
Zoran Dukic – Croatia
Billy Marcus Trio
April 11, 2020
October 25, 2019 Bob Miner Quartet
Children’s Theatre Pinocchio
Mini-Concert & Lecture Series
November 1, 2019
October 12 – November 2, 2019
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Melanie Massell and Company
Deck the Halls: A Holly Jolly Holiday
2256 Bahia Vista St
November 8, 2019
November 30 – December 28, 2019
Sarasota, FL 34239
Steve Martinucci Quartet
Tomás and the Library Lady
Galestro-Smith Duo
November 22, 2019
January 11 – February 22, 2020
November 18, 2019
Joe Bruno’s Dixieland Hotdogs
The Star That Could Not Twinkle
Evan Taucher
November 29, 2019
and Other Winning Plays
December 16, 2019
Synia Carroll Jazz
March 28 – April 18, 2020
Paulina Roughton
December 6, 2019
January 20, 2020
Dick Hamilton Westcoast Sextet
FSU/Asolo Conservatory for Actor Training
Roger Hudson
December 13, 2019
February 17, 2020
Mark Moultrup Quintet
5555 N. Tamiami Trail
Robby Gibson
December 20, 2019
Sarasota, FL 34243
March 16, 2020
Jazz Club 2019 Scholarship Recipients
asolorep.org/conservatory
Community Youth
December 27, 2019
Antigone by Sophocles
Classical Guitar Showcase
Rodney Rojas New Profiles in Jazz
October 30 – November 17, 2019
April 20, 2020
January 3, 2020
Gruesome Playground Injuries
James Suggs Quartet
by Rajiv Joseph
January 10, 2020
January 1 – 19, 2020
Bill Buchman’s Art of Jazz
Dead Man’s Cell Phone by Sarah Ruhl
January 17, 2020
February 19 – March 8, 2020
Mary Radamacher with Eddie Tobin January 24, 2020 SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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Danny Sinoff Music January 31, 2020 Sarasota Jazz Project February 7, 2020 Al Hixon’s Underheard Herd February 14, 2020 Kitt Moran and Mike Moran Trio February 21, 2020 Fred Johnson and Michael Ross Quartet February 28, 2020 Skip Conkling’s Dixie Mix March 6, 2020 Jerry Eckert Trio March 20, 2020 Lorri Hafer and Mike Hafer Trio March 27, 2020 Brian Post Ocean’s 11 Band April 3, 2020 Tom Ellison Quartet April 17, 2020
Key Chorale 1233C S. Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34239 941.921.4845 keychorale.org American Roots: The Gospel Experience Collaboration with Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe October 18, 19, 26, 2019 Winter Dreams Collaboration with The Sarasota Ballet Studio Company & Trainees December 1, 2019 A Very Merry Holiday Pops with The Venice Symphony December 20 – 21, 2019 American Roots: Grassical Featuring the DePue Brothers Band January 11 – 12, 2020 Haydn’s Creation Featuring Mary Wilson February 15 – 16, 2020 Cirque des Voix – A Decade of Wonder Collaboration with the Circus Arts Conservatory March 20 – 22, 2020 Tomorrow’s Voices Today: High School Choral Festival April, 2020
La Musica International Chamber Music Festival
Christmas Concert
PO Box 5442
Winter Concert
Sarasota, FL 34277
February 15, 2020
941.366.8450 ext. 7
Spring Concert
lamusicafestival.org
April 4, 2020
December 7, 2019
Open Rehearsals Opera House Concert Series
Manatee Performing Arts Center
April 2 – 13, 2020
502 3rd Ave W
March 31 – April 13, 2020
Bradenton, FL 34205
Lemon Bay Playhouse
941.749.1111
96 W Dearborn St
manateeperformingartscenter.com
Englewood, FL 34223
Broadway Series
941.475.6756
Buddy—The Buddy Holly Story
lemonbayplayhouse.com
October 24 – November 10, 2019
Lying in State,
It’s a Wonderful Life
Comedy by David C. Hyer
December 5 – December 22, 2019
October 16 – November 3, 2019
Roald Dahl’s Matilda, The Musical
Chuck Gillespie “The Tuxedo Men!”
January 16 – Feburary 2, 2020
November 16, 2019
Damn Yankees
It’s A Wonderful Life,
February 20 – March 8, 2020
Dramedy by Joe Landry
You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown
November 26 – 27,
April 2 – 19, 2020
November 29 – December 15, 2019
Titanic
Paisley Craze “Flower Power!
May 7 – 24, 2020
The Music That Changed The World” January 4, 2020
Studio Series
Comedy Festival “Laugh Out
Tuesday’s With Morrie
Loud Experience”
October 10 – 27, 2019
January 11, February 15, April 18, 2020
Every Christmas Story Ever Told
Bus Stop, Comedy by William Inge
(and Then Some!)
January 15 – February 9, 2020
December 5 – 22, 2019
Marcy Downey “Legends of
Goat Song Revel
Laughter and Song”
February 6 – 23, 2020
February 22, 2020
Doubt, A Parable
Lend Me A Tenor,
March 19 – April 5, 2020
Comedy by Ken Ludwig March 4 – 29, 2020
McCurdy’s Comedy Theatre
Alana Opie “Patsy Cline Live”
1923 Ringling Blvd
April 4, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34236
The Prisoner of Second Avenue,
941.925.FUNY (3869)
Comedy by Neil Simon
McCurdysComedy.com
April 22 – May 10, 2020
Ron Feingold
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike,
October 2 – 6, 2019
Comedy by Christopher Durang
Norm Stulz
June 3 – 21, 2020
October 9 –13, 2019 Music Monday- With Divine AF
Manatee Community Concert Band
October 14, 2019
941.363.1237
October 16 – 20, 2019
manateeconcertband.com
The Great Love Debate
Fall Concert
October 21, 2019
November 9, 2019
Kick The Bucket List- Novotny+Carfi
Carmen Ciricillo
October 23 – 27, 2019 86
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
Al Ernst
Images: Featuring new works by New
A Little Night Music
October 30 – November 2, 2019
College students, Kim Anderson,
February 23, 2020
Danny Bevins
Mark Dancigers and Grand Electric
My Favorite Things
November 6 – 7, 2019
November 16, 2019
March 29, 2020
Orny Adams
Jen Shyu: Nine Doors
November 8 –10, 2019
January 18, 2020
Jodi White
Living and Dead: The Gettysburg Project
OASIS — Opera for Animals: Singing is Saving
November 13 –17, 2019
February 15 – 16, 2020
8437 Tuttle Ave #333
Shawn Wayans
JACK Quartet
Sarasota, FL 34243
November 22 – 23, 2019
April 4, 2020
941.351.1007
Patrick Garrity
operaforanimals.org Visit website for performances.
Dennis Blair
North Port Performing Arts Association
December 4 – 8, 2019
6400 W Price Blvd
LA Hardy
North Port, FL 34291
Perlman Music Program/ Suncoast
December 11 – 15, 2019
941.426.8479
941.955.4942
Brett Leake
nppaa.net
perlmanmusicprogramsuncoast.org
November 27, 29 , 30, December 1, 2019
December 18 – 22, 2019
Juilliard String Quartet
North Port Concert Band
December 2, 2019
December 20 – 21, 2019 Rahn Hortman
northportconcertband.org
Sarasota Winter Residency
December 26 – 29, 2019
Lest We Forget
December 19, 2019 – January 4, 2020
New Years Eve with Basile
November 7, 2019
Super Strings
December 31, 2019
A Holiday Journey
December 28, 2019
December 15, 2019
Student Recital
Moving Ethos Dance
See You at the Movies
January 2, 2020
1768 Briar Creek Ln
January 23, 2020
Celebration Concert
Sarasota, FL 34235
Broadway Bound
January 4, 2020
941.312.1693
February 20, 2020
movingethos.org
Music – The Language of Love
Visit website for performances.
March 26, 2020
The Players Centre for Performing Arts
Something New/Something Old
838 N Tamiami Trail
April 26, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34236
Bermuda Mavericks
Musica Sacra of Sarasota
Perlman Music Program
941.365.2494
PO Box 50581 Sarasota, FL 34232
North Port Chorale
theplayers.org
941.405.7322
6400 West Price Blvd
Broadway Season
musicasacrasarasota.org
North Port, FL 34291
Joseph and the Amazing
John Rutter Christmas Scrapbook
thenorthportchorale.org
Technicolor Dreamcoat
November 24, 2019
The Most Wonderful Time
September 18 – October 6, 2019
Mozart Requiem
December 6, 2019
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
February 9, 2020
Happily Ever After
October 19, 2019
Ernest Bloch Avodath Hakodesh
February 15, 2020
Rain Date: October 20, 2019
(Sacred Service)
That’s Entertainment
The Fantasticks
March 29, 2020
April 18, 2020
October 23 – November 10, 2019
New Music New College
North Port Symphony
December 4 – 22 , 2019
New College of Florida
northportsymphony.com
A Calyp-Soul Christmas with John Patti
Caples Fine Arts Complex
Wands, Wizards and More
December 13, 2019
5800 Bayshore Rd
November 10, 2019
Sister Act
Sarasota, FL 34243
Sounds of the Season
January 15 – February 2, 2020
941.487.4888
December 8, 2019
Songs Across America with Jimmy Mazz
newmusicnewcollege.org
Dreams of Love
January 24, 2020
Yarn/Wire
January 26, 2020
Head Over Heels
Hello, Dolly!
October 5, 2019
February 19 – March 8, 2020 SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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838 N. TAMIAMI TRAIL SARASOTA, FL 34236
88
theplayers.org
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
Anything Goes
Rise Above Performing Arts
Sarasota Choral Society
March 25 – April 11, 2020
PO Box 51837
5317 Fruitville Rd #147
Pioneers of Rock ‘n Soul
Sarasota, FL 34232
Sarasota, FL 34232
with Billy Buchanan
941.702.4747
sarasotachoralsociety.org
March 27, 2020
riseabovearts.com
Visit website for performances.
Could It Be Magic with Brian Gurl
Glory Days (The Musical)
April 3, 2020
November 1 – 3, 2019
Sarasota Chorus of the Keys
West Side Story
P.O. Box 51751
Backstage at The Players Series
January 3 – 12, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34232
The Underpants
Bring It On
chorusofthekeys.org
October 10 – 20, 2019
April 23 – 26, 2020
Sarasota Chorus of the Keys
Lipschtick
Annual Show of Barbershop Harmony February 22, 2020
12 Angry Jurors
SaraSolo Productions, Inc. (Gotta Van)
February 6 – 16, 2020
PO Box 3102
Sarasota Concert Association
Rabbit Hole
Sarasota, FL 34230
PO Box 1714
March 12 – 22, 2020
941.400.2036
Sarasota, FL 34230
sarasolo.org
941.225.6500
The Pops Orchestra
“Flying Solo” Performance Showcase
scasarasota.org
PO Box 1622
January 25 – 26, 2020
Great Performers Series
Sarasota, FL 34230
SaraSolo Winter Festival
Behzod Abduraimov, Piano
941.926.POPS (7677)
February 3 – 10, 2020
January 15, 2020
thepopsorchestra.org
SaraSolo Spring Festival
The Orpheus Chamber Orchestr a
Simon and Garfunkel: Homeward Bound
May 4 – 11, 2020
January 29, 2020
November 10 – 11, 2019
SaraSolo Fall Festival
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
A Christmas Carol — The Concert
November 9 – 16, 2020
February 12, 2020
November 14 – 16, 2019
December 15 – 16, 2019
The Knights and Gil Shaham, Violin
Simply Streisand: Barbra Streisand Tribute
The Sarasota Ballet
February 25, 2020
February 8 – 10 , 2020
5555 N Tamiami Trail
The Pacifica Quartet and
Celebrating the Stars and Stripes
Sarasota, FL 34243
Orion Weiss, Piano
February 17, 2020
941.359.0099
March 12, 2020
The Choice is Yours
sarasotaballet.org
Musicians from Marlboro
March 29 – 31, 2020
Graziano, Retrospective
March 30, 2020
(Program 1)
Ring Sarasota
October 25 – 27, 2019
Music Matinees
P.O. Box 2113
Symphonic Tales
Music Matinee: Francisca Mendoza, Violin
Sarasota, FL 34276
(Program 2)
and Aza Torshkoeva, Piano
ringsarasota.org
November 22 – 23, 2019
December 11, 2019
Christmas Concerts
John Ringling’s Circus Nutcracker
Music Matinee: Russell Andrade, Tenor,
December 7 – 8, 2019
(Program 3)
and Lee Dougherty Ross, Piano
Ring Sarasota 10th Anniversary Celebration
December 20 – 21, 2019
January 22, 2020
February 23 & March 8, 22, 29, 2020
Redefined Movement
Music Matinee: Harry Miedema
(Program 4)
and The Blue Heron Sextet
The Ringling
January 31 – February 3, 2020
February 11, 2020
5401 Bay Shore Rd
The Sarasota Ballet Presents
Music Matinee:
Sarasota, FL 34243
Paul Taylor Dance Company
Sarasota Opera Studio Artists
941.359.5700
(Program 5)
March 18, 2020
ringling.org
February 28 – March 1, 2020
Music Matinee: Angela Galestro, Flute,
For a list of performances, visit
Romeo and Juliet
and Jonathan Smith, Guitar
Museums and Visual Arts section.
(Program 6)
April 15, 2020
March 27 – 28, 2020 Beyond Words (Program 7) April 24 – 25, 2020
SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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Sarasota Concert Band
Sarasota Folk Club
The John Goodman Performance
5317 Fruitville Rd #192
941.371.1433
and Lecture Series
Sarasota, FL 34232
Fogertyville
Music from the Inside Out:
941.650.1177
525 Kumquat Ct
A Documentary about the
sarasotaconcertband.org
Sarasota, FL 34236
Philadelphia Orchestra, Phyllis Lowitt
Visit website for performances.
941.377.9256
December 4, 2019
sarasotafolk.org
The Orfeo Trio: Julie Bees, Piano;
Sarasota Contemporary Dance Company
Mike Worrall
Evgeny Zvonnikov, Violinist;
October 28, 2019
Leonid Shukaev, Cellist
1400 Blvd of the Arts, Ste 300
The Dunn Deal
January 8, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34236
November 25, 2019
The Evolution of Opera:
sarasotacontemporarydance.org
Holiday of Song with 2PM
Joy McIntyre, Professor Emerita of Voice,
Voices – Rising Choreographers
December 16, 2019
Boston University
October 10 – 13, 2019
Mara Levine
January 15, 2020
In Studio Performance Series
January 27, 2020
Puccini’s “La Bohème”: Joy McIntyre
with Eliza Ladd
Greg O’Haver
January 22, 2020
November 1 – 2, 2019
February 24, 2020
Suncoast Scholarship Competition
SCD + Reverend Barry & The Funk
Brian Smalley
Winners: Ethan Horn, Jack Gallahan,
December 5 – 8, 2019
March 30, 2020
Marco Jimenez
In Studio Performance Series with Adele
Grant Peeples
January 2, 2020
January 17 – 18, 2020
April 27, 2020
Gayle Martin, Piano
Dance Makers
February 5, 2020 Donizetti’s “The Elixir of Love”:
February 22 – 23, 2020
Sarasota International Folk Dancers (Sarasota Grapeviners)
In Studio Performance Series
803 N Tamiami Trail
February 12, 2020
with Erin & Brian
Sarasota, FL 34236
Gounod’s “Romeo et Juliette”:
March 13 – 14, 2020
941.923.3302
Joy McIntyre
Evolving/Revolving
ifdsarasota.webs.com
February 19, 2020
April 30 – May 3, 2020
Visit website for performances.
Sarasota Cuban Ballet School
Sarasota Jewish Chorale
Michelle Giglio, soprano;
941.355.8011
Gail Berenson, piano
501 N Beneva Rd, Ste 700
SarasotaJewishChorale.org
March 4, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34232
Songs of Peace and Joy
Catalani’s “La Wally”: Joy McIntyre
srqcubanballet.com
Temple Beth Sholom
March 11, 2020
Selby Gardens Orchid
March 29, 2020
“Live from the Archive”
January 30 – February 2, 2020 Carmina Burna In Motion
Evening Performance
Sarah Arneson, Professor Emerita of Voice, Boston University
Natalie Barber Jazz Quartet February 26, 2020
March 18, 2020 Janáček’s “Jenůfa”: Joy McIntyre
November 6, 2019
Sarasota Music Archive
The Nutcracker,
Selby Public Library, Geldbart Auditorium
March 25, 2020
featuring The Venice Symphony
1331 First St
John Goodman Memorial Concert
December 14 – 15, 2019
Sarasota, FL 34236
April 7, 2020
Springtime Triple Bill
941.861.1168
March 29, 2020
sarasotamusicarchive.org
Opera Talk Series
End of Year Show
The Art of Playing the Piano Series
Verdi’s “Rigoletto”
May 9, 2020
Tom Pizzi (Piano) and Friends
October 30, 2019
Summer Intensive Showcase
October 16, 2019
Puccini’s “Madame Butterfly”
& On-Stage Performance
Peter BarenBregge Quartet
November 6, 2019
July 25, 2020
November 6, 2019
Puccini’s “Tosca”
90
SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
April 8, 2020
Sarasota Music Club
Studio Understudies Concert
“La Boheme” Presenter –
PO Box 19613
March 13, 2020
Carlos Vicente
Sarasota, FL 34276
Apprentice Concert
January 6, 2020
941.925.3602
March 20, 2020
“Romeo & Juliet” Presenter –
sarasotamusicclub.org
2020 Artists Choice Concert
George Hemcher
The Bay Arts Trio: Zarzycka/Frank/Villa,
March 15, 2020
January 13,2020 “The Elixir of Love” Presenter –
Violin, Piano, Cello October 11, 2019
Winter Opera
Rosanne Martorella
Diana Vytel, Soprano + Cabaret Singer
La bohème
January 20, 2020
November 1, 2019
February 8, 11, 13, 16, 19, 25, 29, 2020
“La Wally” Presenter –
Belle Canto Women’s Ensemble
March 3, 6, 11, 14, 19, 21, 2020
Ben Jewell-Plocher
December 6, 2019
Romeo & Juliet
January 27, 2020
Haig Yaghoobian, Piano
February 15, 18, 20, 23, 28, 2020
January 10, 2020
March 4, 8, 14, 20, 2020
Sarasota Orchestra
Monica Conesa, Soprano,
The Elixir of Love
709 N Tamiami Trail
with Lee Dougherty Ross, Piano
February 22, 26
Sarasota, FL 34236
February 14, 2020
March 1, 5, 13, 17, 21, 2020
941.953.4252
Jane Hoffman & Donald Bryn,
La Wally
sarasotaorchestra.org
Flute & Piano
March 7, 10, 12, 15, 18, 22, 2020
Masterworks Classical Romance
March 13, 2020 Suncoast Music Scholarships Luncheon
Understanding Opera
November 8 –10, 2019
May 2, 2020
Things Change
Roman Festivals
October 17, 2019
December 6 – 8, 2019
Sarasota Musica Viva
Ensembles in Opera
Mozart and Mahler
P.O. Box 1244
October 24, 2019
January 17 – 20, 2020
Osprey, FL 34229
Walt Whitman at the Opera
941.870.9885
October 31, 2019
January 30 – February 2, 2020
sarasotamusicaviva.org
At the Opera with Richard & Greg
Sounds of Nobility
Visit website for performances.
November 7, 2019
February 21 – 23, 2020
Sarasota Opera
Sarasota Opera Guild
March 12 – 15, 2020
61 North Pineapple Avenue
941.374.2914
American Impressions
Sarasota, FL 34236
facebook.com/sarasotaoperaguild
April 3 – 5, 2020
941.328.1300
Social & Singers
sarasotaopera.org
Sarasota Opera House
Great Escapes
Opera House Tours
October 15, 2019
Salute to Arthur Fiedler
November 4 & 11, 2019
January 21 & February 18, 2020
October 16, 2019
Chang Plays Dvořák
Beethoven and Bartók
Sounds of the Season
February 17 & 24, 2020 Performances/Lectures
December 11 – 15, 2019
Brundibár:
European Grooves
Fall Opera
The Making of a Successful Youth Opera
January 8 –12, 2020
Rigoletto
October 16, 2019
Space and Beyond
November 1 – 17, 2019
Culinary Trip Around The World
January 22 – 26, 2020
At Sarasota Opera
Heart and Soul
Youth Opera
January 9, 2020
February 12 – 16, 2020
Brundibar
“Food & Opera” By Rosanne Martorella
Latin Beats
November 15 – 16 , 2019
And May Bsisu
March 18 – 21, 2020
March 2, 9 & 16, 2020
February 20, 2020 POPS
Concerts At Noon Apprentice Concert
Prologues
Bugs Bunny at the Symphony II
November 8, 2019
“Rigoletto” Presenter –
January 3 – 4, 2020
Apprentice Concert
Rosanne Martorella
My Favorite Things
March 6, 2020
October 21, 2019
March 6 – 7, 2020
SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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American Playlist
Symphonic Band
Bill and the Belles
April 17 – 18, 2020
Music that Should Never
January 26, 2020
Outdoor Pops
Have Been Written
James Taylor Tribute: Fire & Rain
May 8 – 9, 2020
November 14, 2019
February 9, 2020
SCF Jazz
Linda Ronstadt Tribute: Love is a Rose
Chamber Soiree
Luck Be a Lady: Jazz Goes to Vegas
February 16, 2020
Titans of Two Centuries
November 21, 2019
Beach Boys Tribute: Good Vibrations
October 10, 2019
Fall Piano Studio Recital
March 22, 2020
Life Affirmed
December 2, 2019
October 13, 2019
SCF Bradenton Symphony Orchestra,
Suncoast Concert Band
Beethoven’s Ghost
SCF Choirs and Guitar Ensemble
12308 Lobelia Terrace
October 31, 2019
The Most Wonderful Night of The Year
Lakewood Ranch, FL 34202
Sarasota String Quartet
December 5, 2019
941.907.4123
January 5, 2020
Best of the Best
suncoastconcertband.org
Symphony to Serenade
SCF Music Student Artist Showcase
February 27 and March 1, 2020
January 23, 2020
Theatre Odyssey
Guiding Principals
Symphonic Band and Choirs
PO Box 1383
April 19, 2020
20/20 Vision
Sarasota, FL 34230
February 20, 2020
941.799.7224
Discoveries:
SCF Bradenton Symphony Orchestra
theatreodyssey.org
Discover Beethoven’s Seventh
To the Four
Glenridge Performing Arts Center
May 2 – 3, 2020
February 27, 2020
One Act Play Festival
Guitar Ensemble
October 31 – November 3, 2019
Special Events
Around the World in Eighty Minutes
Beethoven’s Eroica
March 19, 2020
Urbanite Theatre
February 6, 2020
SCF Jazz
1487 Second St
Thrill of a Lifetime
Happy 100th – A Tribute to
Sarasota, FL 34236
February 29, 2020
Dave Brubeck and Bird
941.321.1397
Sarasota Music Festival
March 21, 2020
urbanitetheatre.com
May 30, 2020 – June 20, 2020
Chamber Music Concert
Modern Works Festival
Up Close and Personal
Presented by Summer Dawn Wallace
State College of Florida
March 26, 2020
October 8 – 13, 2019
5840 26th St
Music Theatre Ensemble
The Thanksgiving Play
Bradenton, FL 34207
Broadway Showcase
November 8 – December 15, 2019
941.752.5252
April 13, 2020
Sender
scf.edu
SCF Bradenton Symphony Orchestra
January 10 – February 16, 2020
Neel Performing Arts Center
Boots, Banjos, and the South
The Feast
April 16, 2020
March 13– April 19, 2020
Music/Dance
Spring Piano Studio Recital
SCF Band, Choirs, Jazz and Guitar
April 20, 2020
Bienvenido’s to SCF Music
SCF Band, Choirs, Jazz and Guitar
Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall
Spanish Heritage Month Music
Sunset Serenade
777 N Tamiami Trail
Celebration
April 23, 2020
Sarasota, FL 34236
October 3, 2019
Graduation Recital
941.953.3368
SCF Bradenton Symphony Orchestra
April 27, 2020
vanwezel.org Once: The Musical
Am I Blue? October 10, 2019
Sundays at Neel
October 9, 2019
Music Theatre Ensemble
John Denver Tribute: Back Home Again
Neil Berg’s 50 Years Of Rock & Roll:
The Secret Garden
December 8, 2019
Part III
October 25 – 27, 2019
Diamonds: Let’s Rock Broadway
November 1, 2019
SCF Jazz and Guitar Ensemble
January 12, 2020
Roy Orbison & Buddy Holly –
October 31, 2019
The Rock ‘N’ Roll Dream Tour November 4, 2019
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
Dwight Yoakam
The Drifters,
The Choir of Man
November 16, 2019
The Platters & Cornell Gunter’s Coasters
March 17, 2020
Straight No Chaser: The Open Bar Tour
January 22, 2020
John Pizzarelli and Catherine Russell:
November 17, 2019
Steve Martin and Martin Short
A Tribute to Nat King Cole
Latin History for Morons
January 23, 2020
and Ladies of Song
November 19, 2019
Waitress
March 18, 2020
Cirque Dreams Holidaze
January 24 – 26, 2020
America
November 22 – 23, 2019
Louie Anderson and Rita Rudner
March 19, 2020
Collective Soul
January 28, 2020
Itzhak Perlman in Recital
November 26, 2019
Steve Solomon’s – My Mother’s Italian, My
March 21, 2020
Dave Koz and Friends Christmas
Father’s Jewish & I’m In Therapy –
An Intimate Evening with David Foster:
Tour 2019 Jonathan Butler, Melissa
Updated and Funnier Than Ever
Hitman Tour Featuring Special Guest
Manchester, Michael Lington,
February 3, 2020
Katharine Mcphee
with Special Guest Chris Walker
Bandstand
March 22, 2020
November 29, 2019
February 4 – 5, 2020
“Up, Up and Away”
Sebastian Maniscalco: You Bother Me
Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons
Starring Marilyn Mccoo and Billy Davis, Jr.
November 30, 2019
February 9, 2020
March 24, 2020
Celtic Angels Christmas
Stayin’ Alive
An Evening with Bruce Hornsby
December 1, 2019
February 10, 2020
March 29, 2020
Escape To Margaritaville
New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players:
The Pointer Sisters
December 2, 2019
The Pirates of Penzance
April 2, 2020
Tony Bennet: The “I Left My Heart” Tour
February 13, 2020
Jackie Evancho: The Debut
December 3, 2019
Academy of St Martin in the Fields –
April 3, 2020
Dance to the Holidays!
Joshua Bell
Terry Fator: It Starts Tonight
December 4, 2019
February 15, 2020
April 10, 2020
Under the Streetlamp:
Mandy Patinkin in Concert:
Reza – Edge of Illusion
Hip to the Holidays
Diaries with Adam Ben-David on Piano
April 11, 2020
December 12, 2019
February 16, 2020
Johnny Mathis –
Beautiful – The Carole King Musical
The Beach Boys
The Voice of Romance Tour
December 13 – 15, 2019
February 18, 2020
April 16, 2020
The Ten Tenors – Home for the Holidays
Neil Berg’s 111 Years of Broadway
An Evening with Chris Botti
December 22, 2019
February 19, 2020
April 19, 2020
A Christmas Carol
“Who Can Ask For Anything More” –
A Bronx Tale
December 23, 2019
An Evening with Michael Feinstein
April 21 – 22, 2020
Salute to Vienna New Year’s Concert
Singing Gershwin
Brian Culbertson
January 2, 2020
February 20, 2020
April 23, 2020
Il Divo
Les Misérables
Come From Away
January 5, 2020
February 26 – March 1, 2020
April 28 – May 3, 2020
The Book of Mormon
Russian National Ballet: Cinderella
One Night Of Queen
January 7 – 12, 2020
March 3, 2020
May 6, 2020
The Righteous Brothers –
Celtic Woman
The Bachelor Live On Stage
Bill Medley and Bucky Heard
March 4, 2020
May 7, 2020
January 13, 2020
Abba the Concert
We’ve Only Just Begun:
March 5, 2020
Venetian Harmony Chorus
Carpenters Remembered
Georgia On My Mind:
701 N Indiana Ave
January 14, 2020
Celebrating the Music Of Ray Charles
Englewood, FL 34223
The Naked Magicians
March 8, 2020
941.480.1480
January 16, 2020
The Color Purple
venetianharmony.com
The Greatest Love of All:
March 10, 2020
VHC Fashion Show
A Tribute to Whitney Houston
Paul Anka – Anka Sings Sinatra:
November 21, 2019
Starring Belinda Davids
Back by Popular Demand!
VHC Holiday Show
January 21, 2020
March 11, 2020
December 7, 2019
An American in Paris March 16, 2020
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The Venice Chorale
Broadway Boys
April 16, 2020
The Venice Performing Arts Center
January 24, 2020
Suncoast Duo Pianists
1 Indian Ave
Dick Hyman, Ken Peplowski,
Four-hand Piano Music
Venice, FL 34285
and Clairdee: Movie Music
December 6 – 7, 2019
941.484.8491
January 30, 2020
February 21 – 22, 2020
thevenicechorale.org
The Beatles vs The Stones:
April 3 – 4, 2020
Holiday Pops with Brass
The Greatest Show That Never Was
St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, Venice
December 8, 2019
February 1, 2020
Encore Chorus
We Shall Overcome
The Limeliters And The Brothers Four
Choral and Vocal Music
February 9, 2020
February 4, 2020
December 12, 2019
Jazz Divine
We Shall Overcome
March 19, 2020
April 20, 2020
February 9, 2020 A Charlie Chaplin Double Feature:
Venice Concert Band
The Venice Symphony
A Dog’s Life (1918) and The Kid (1921)
Venice Performing Arts Center
1 Indian Avenue Venice, FL 34285
February 11, 2020
1 Indian Ave
veniceconcertband.org
Peter Pan and Cinderella: On Ice
Venice, FL 34285
America the Beautiful
February 15, 2020
941.207.8822
November 4, 2019
Gershwin… With A TWIST!
thevenicesymphony.org
Holiday Treasures
February 16, 2020
Bohemian Beethoven
December 2, 2019
Zepparella
November 15 – 16, 2019
Carousel of Music
February 21, 2020
A Very Merry Holiday Pops
January 20, 2020
Carmina Burana In Motion
December 20 – 21, 2019
Are We There Yet?
February 22, 2020
Cosmic Convergence
February 24, 2020
The Edward Twins Impersonators
January 10 – 11, 2020
Yesterday and Today
March 5, 2020
Shaken Not Stirred:
March 23, 2020
Tribute to The Big Band Generation
The Music of James Bond
Spring Bouquet
March 8, 2020
February 7 – 8, 2020
April 27, 2020
Shen Yun
Romeo and Juliet
March 13, 2020
February 28 – 29, 2020
The Venice Institute for Performing Arts
Dancing Dream: A Tribute to Abba
Songs from the Screen
March 21, 2020
and Stage with Linda Eder
1 Indian Ave
A Mid Summer Night’s Dream and Ocean
March 27 – 28, 2020
Venice, FL 34285
March 29, 2020
The Movie Maestro:
941.218.3779
Jazz Divine
A Tribute to John Williams
veniceperformingartscenter.com
April 20, 2020
April 24 – 25, 2020
Cruising Steady
Good Vibrations
October 4, 2019
April 26, 2020
The Long Run
Venice Theatre 140 W Tampa Ave
October 12, 2019
Venice Musicale
Venice, FL 34285
The Everly Brothers Experience
PO Box 179
941.488.1115
November 8, 2019
2357 S Tamiami Trail #3
venicetheatre.org
Molly Hatchet
Venice, FL 34292
Born Yesterday
November 17, 2019
941.488.4902
Through October 6, 2019
Holiday Pops with Brass
venicemusicale.org
The Bikinis —
December 8, 2019
Monthly concerts October – April
A New Musical Beach Party
The Nutcracker
Venice Pubic Library Community Room
Through October 20, 2019
Co-presented with the
Soloists and Small Ensembles
Mamma Mia!
Sarasota Cuban Ballet School
Vocal and Instrumental
October 25 – December 1, 2019
December 14, 2019
October 17, 2019
Good People
Decades Rewind
November 21, 2019
November 1 – 17, 2019
December 31, 2019
January 16, 2020
Assisted Living the Musical®:
Cash, Killer, and the King
February 20, 2020
THE HOME for the Holidays
January 18, 2020
Scholarship Concert
November 29 – December 22, 2019 A Christmas Carol
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
TICKETS TICKETSAND ANDSUBSCRIPTIONS SUBSCRIPTIONS ON ONSALE SALENOW! NOW! Featuring thethe area premiere Featuring area premiere of Mamma Mia!, Guys andand of Mamma Mia!, Guys Dolls, Hamlet, Chicago andand Dolls, Hamlet, Chicago much more! much more!
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, 20182018 A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
20192019 -2020 Season 70 Years Tampa Ave.Ave. W. W. -2020 Season 70 Years Tampa | Celebrating | VeniceTheatre.org | 941.488.1115 | 140| 140 | Celebrating | VeniceTheatre.org | 941.488.1115 95
SARASOTA SCENE | AUGUST 2018
PremierSothebysRealty.com
December 13 – 21, 2019 Menopause The Musical (The Hilarious Celebration of Women and The Change) January 10 – February 2, 2020 Gulf View Drive
THE MICHELLE CRABTREE TEAM
January 10 – 26, 2020
Michelle is a third-generation local and broker associate since 1982. Michelle and her team are dedicated to serving your needs in Sarasota, Bradenton and Lakewood Ranch.
February 21 – March 22, 2020
Michelle Crabtree, Broker Associate 941.724.4663 Maggie Davenport, REALTOR ® 941.400.8757 Kathy Dietz, Licensed Assistant 941.320.7699 Michelle.Crabtree@PremierSIR.com CrabtreeHomes.com
Yard Sale: A Musical About Junk February 7 – March 8, 2020 Guys and Dolls Hamlet March 27 – April 19, 2020 Chicago April 17 – May 3, 2020 Blackbird May 1 – 17, 2020 Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical May 15 – 24, 2020
Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe 1646 10th Way
Each office is independently owned and operated.
Sarasota, FL 34236 941.366.1505 westcoastblacktheatre.org American Roots: The Gospel Experience with Key Chorale October 18, 19, 26, 2019 A Motown Christmas
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December 4 – 6, 18 – 20, 2019 Caroline, Or Change January 8 – February 16, 2020
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Flyin’ West June 3 – July 12, 2020
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Allstate has no financial responsibility to you for any home insurance policy you purchase and would not be responsible for any claims. Allstate does not make any representations or accept liability related to operations of home insurance companies, including, but not limited to, their financial conditions. Subject to terms, conditions and availability. © 2012 Allstate Insurance Co.
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
104381
3629 Webber Street, Suite A Sarasota georgedakkak@allstate.com
MUSEUMS & VISUAL ARTS Anna Maria Island Art League 5312 Holmes Blvd Holmes Beach, FL 34217 941.778.2099 islandartleague.org Women’s Wellness Weekend (Art Retreat) November 15 – 17, 2019 Springfest 2020 March 7 – 8, 2020
ArtCenter Manatee 209 9th St W Bradenton, FL 34205 941.746.2862 artcentermanatee.org Something Tasty Open Juried Show Kellogg & Searle Galleries Through October 4, 2019 Instructor’s Showcase Reid Hodges Gallery Through – October 4, 2019 Go Wild Open Juried Show All Galleries October 4 – November 8, 2019 Opening Reception: October 10 James Griffin, A Tapestry of Movement, Curated Show Kellogg Gallery November 12 – December 13, 2019 Ornament Extravaganza Searle Gallery November 12 – December 13, 2019 Giving Thanks Open Juried Show Reid Hodges Gallery November 12 – December 13, 2019 Opening Reception: November 14 A Walk In The Woods, Curated Exhibit Kellogg Gallery December 17, 2019 – January 10, 2020 Small But Mighty, Open Juried Show Searle & Reid Hodges Gallery December 17, 2019 – January 10, 2020 Opening Reception: December 19 Artists’ Guild of Anna Maria Island, Curated Exhibit Kellogg Gallery January 14 – February 7, 2020 ArtCenter Manatee Annual Member Exhibit Searle & Reid Hodges Galleries January 14 – February 7, 2020 Opening Reception: January 16
Three Modern Masters, Curated Exhibit Kellogg Gallery February 11 – March 13, 2020 Florida Suncoast Watercolor Society Searle & Reid Hodges Gallery February 11 – March 13, 2020 Opening Reception: February 13 Kathy Simon-McDonald, Watercolor Works Curated Exhibit Kellogg Gallery March 17 – April 10, 2020 Points Of View Open Juried Exhibit Searle & Reid Hodges Galleries March 17 – April 10, 2020 Opening Reception: March 19 7th Annual Manatee County School District K-12 Exhibit All Galleries April 14 – May 8, 2020 Opening Reception: April 16 100 Years Of Women, Open Juried Show (A tribute to the 100th anniversary of the Suffrage Movement) Kellogg & Reid Hodges Galleries May 12 – June 5, 2020 Sumi-e Society Sarasota Chapter 30th Anniversary Searle Gallery May 12 – June 5, 2020 Opening Reception: May 14
Victoria Mayol, Nan Brall, Bassmi Ibrahim May 28 – July 4, 2020 ACS Member’s Only, Juried Exhibition Gallery 4 May 28 – July 4, 2020 Open, All Media, National Juried Exhibition July 16 – August 22, 2020 SartQ, Mel Odom, George Cwirko Godycki September 3 – October 3, 2020 Open, Peer Juried Exhibition Gallery 4 September 3 – October 3, 2020
Art Center Sarasota
Englewood Art Center
707 N Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34236 941.365.2032 artsarasota.org Exhibitions Horace Imhotep, Susan Martin, Art Center Sarasota Instructors October 17 – November 30, 2019 Open Season: National Juried Exhibition December 12, 2019 – January 18, 2020 Kim Anderson, Ryan Buyssens, ASALH: Black Muse 2020 January 30 – March 7, 2020 POP-UP: John Pirman & Tom Stephens March 9 – 14, 2020 Javier Rodriguez, Philomena Marano, SERVERUS March 19 – April 18, 2020 Sarasota County Schools Spring Art Show April 20 – May 2, 2020 Booker VPA Senior Thesis Show May 6 – 15, 2020 Closing Reception: May 15 LGBTQ Harvey Milk Festival Artist Exhibit May 6 – 15, 2020
Ringling College of Continuing Studies 350 South McCall Road Englewood, FL 34223 ringling.edu/eac See website for exhibits. Florida Suncoast Watercolor Society Open Aqueous Show November 5 – December 6, 2019 Opening Reception: November 9, 2019
Artists’ Guild of Anna Maria Island 5414 Marina Dr Holmes Beach, FL 34217 941.778.6694 amiartistsguildgallery.com
Embracing Our Differences Outdoor Exhibit PO Box 2559 Sarasota, FL 34230 941.404.5710 embracingourdifferences.org Embracing Our Differences International Art Exhibit January 18 – April 5, 2020
Fine Arts Society of Sarasota PO Box 1432 Sarasota, FL 34230 941.330.0680 fineartsrq.com Art Collection Tours October 2019 – May 2020 Speaking of the Arts Inaugural Lecture with Marin Alsop November 13, 2019 Meet the Artist: Dean Mitchell December 3, 2019 Betty J. Johnson North Public Library
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Florida Maritime Museum 4415 119th St W Cortez, FL 34215 941.708.6120 floridamaritimemuseum.org Music on The Porch Second Saturday of each month Nautical Flea Market October 26, 2019 Maritime by Candlelight December 7, 2019 Permanent Collections The Blake Banks Ship Models Maritime Library Featured Exhibits Always Ready | U.S. Coast Guard in Florida Through December 31, 2019 Lectures History and Future Restoration of Manatee River Oyster Habitat October 23, 2019 The Oldest Shipwrecks of the Florida Keys November 13, 2019 “One fish, two fish, where’s that huge fish?” December 11, 2019
Florida Suncoast Watercolor Society (FSWS) 7215 11th Ave W Bradenton, FL 34209 941.792.0608 suncoastwatercolorsociety.com Open Aqueous Show Englewood Art Center November 5 – December 6, 2019 Opening Reception: November 9, 2019 Open Aqueous Show ArtCenter Manatee February 11 – March 13, 2020 Opening Reception: February 13, 2020 Transparent Show Punta Gorda Visual Arts Center March 27 – April 23, 2020 Opening Reception: April 2, 2020 Open Aqueous Show Ringling College of Art & Design May 5 – June 11, 2020 Opening Reception: May 15, 2020
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The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art (The Ringling) 5401 Bay Shore Rd Sarasota, FL 34243 941.359.5700 ringling.org Events Ringling Underground First Thursday Each Month: October 3, 2019 – April 2, 2020 Friends of the Ringling Legacy October 24, 2019 Friends of Art of Our Time October 24 – November 9, 2019 State of the Ringling with Coffee and Conversation Circle Member Event November 5, 2019 Friends of Asian Art November 9, 2019 Friends of the Library Events November 13, 2019 Holiday Splendor December 5, 2019 VIP Preview: Syd Solomon: Concealed and Revealed December 11, 2019 Deck the Halls at the Ca’ d’Zan December 12, 19, 26, 2019 & January 2, 2020 Exhibitions Hippos: A Truly Big Show! Through October 7, 2019 The Fabric of India Through October 13, 2019 Sun Xun: Time Spy Through February 16, 2020 Tour du Monde October 18, 2019 – January 13, 2020 Abstract Expressionism November 10, 2019 – August 1, 2021 Manuel Álvarez Bravo December 8, 2019 – March 1, 2020 Syd Solomon: Concealed and Revealed December 15, 2019 – April 26, 2020 Skyway 2020: A Contemporary Collaboration June 21, 2020 – October 4, 2020 On Screen Flamenco, Flamenco October 4, 2019 Landfill Harmonic November 22, 2019
Bolshoi Ballet: The Nutcracker December 20, 2019 National Theatre Live A Midsummers Night’s Dream October 25, 2019 Small Island November 8, 2019 Great Art on Screen Paradise Lost October 24, 2019 The Prado Museum: A Collection of Wonders November 21, 2019 Performances Nrityagram Dance Ensemble: Daśavatar̄ October 11 – 12, 2019 Casa Patas Flamenco: Raiz de 4 November 6 – 7, 2019 Gonzalo Rubalcaba November 15 – 16, 2019 Lagartijas Tiradas al Sol: Tijuana December 6 – 7, 2019 Son Luna y Jóvenes Zapateadores: ¡Vívelo! December 12 – 14, 2019 Yin Mei, Peony Dreams: On the Other Side of Sleep January 17 – 18, 2020 Aline Kuppenheim/Teatro y su Doble: Feos February 7 – 8, 2020 Drum Circle led by Inez Barlatier February 20, 2020 Inez Barlatier in Concert: Moun-Moon–Spotlight Florida! February 21 – 22, 2020 Dahlak Brathwaite: Spiritrials March 13 – 14, 2020 Companhia Urbana de Dança March 26 – 28, 2020 Miwa Matreyek: This World Made Itself & Infinitely Yours April 10 – 11, 2020 Artichoke Dance April 22, 2020 Spektral Quartet April 24 – 25, 2020 Luciano Rosso & Alfonso Barón: Un Poyo Rojo May 8 – 9, 2020
Programs ROAR! Through December 3, 2019 Family Saturdays Every Saturday through December 14, 2019 Stroller Tours Through December 17, 2019 Art and a Movie Through March 12, 2020 Homeschool Third Thursday Third Thursday of Each Month Through April 16, 2020 Gallery Walk & Talks Through May 27, 2020 Ringling Reflections Through June 14, 2020 Gallery Walk & Sign Select Thursdays October 10, 2019 – May 14, 2020 Masterclass with Nrityagram October 10, 2019 Conversation with Nrityagram Dance October 13, 2019 Viewpoint: A Splendid Sight in the Sunlight October 26, 2019 Masterclass with Casa Patas Flamenco Foundation November 4, 2019 Conversation: The Gutenberg Bible November 6, 2019 Conversation with the Executive Team November 13, 2019 Conversation with Chantal Bilodeau November 23, 2019 Conversation with Gabino Rodriguez December 4, 2019 Viewpoint Lecture: Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe December 7, 2019 Conversation with Jovenes Zapateadores December 12, 2019 Conversation with Yin Mei January 15, 2020 Viewpoint Lecture: Jewels from a Brush, Manuscript Paintings from India January 25, 2020 Conversation with the Marketing Department January 29, 2020 Conversation with Aline Kuppenheim February 5, 2020 Masterclass with Companhia Urbana de Danca March 26, 2020
Conversation with Lynn Neuman of Artichoke Dance April 22, 2020 Conversation with Luciano Rosso & Alfonso Barón May 6, 2020 Masterclass with Luciano Rosso & Alfonso Barón May 9, 2020
Light Chasers: Plein Air Painters of the Suncoast PO Box 17463 Sarasota, FL 34276 941.924.0818 lightchasersinc.com Paint Sarasota Paint Out January 16 – January 22, 2020 9th Annual Members Show and Feature Artist Show January 24, 2020 8th Annual Paint Sarasota Paint Out Show January 25, 2020 Annual Quick Draw Contest February 12, 2020
Marietta Museum of Art & Whimsy 2121 N Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34234 941.364.3399 whimsymuseum.org
North Port Art Center 5950 Sam Shapos Way North Port, FL 34287 941.423.6460 northportartcenter.com Best of the Best Invitational Show (Great Gallery Heist) October 5 – 25, 2019 Best of the Best/Champagne Reception October 18, 2019 Emerging Artist Exhibit October 25 – November, 2019 Emerging Artists Reception November 1, 2019 Urban or Rural Exhibit November 2, 2019 – January 3, 2020
Ringling College of Art + Design 2700 N Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34234 941.359.7563 School of Continuing Studies ringling.edu/scs Art Quilts & Fiber Collages Trunk Show November 14, 2019 Anyone’s Game: Ringling College Tabletop Game Conference February 7 – 9, 2020 Ringling College Galleries ringling.edu/galleries Annual Faculty Staff and CSSP Exhibitions Through October 4, 2019 Shawn Petterson and Morgan Jannsen Through October 4, 2019 Illustrations by Jack Davis October 18 – December 6, 2019 Opening Reception: October 18 Hugh Davies: Paintings October 18 – December 6, 2019 Opening Reception: October 18 Lucas Spivey, Role of the Curator October 18 – December 6, 2019 Opening Reception: October 18 Virginia Hoffman: Photographs October 18 – December 6, 2019 Opening Reception: October 18 Annual Glass Exhibition January 10 – March 30, 2020 Jessica Spring/Daredevil Type Exhibition January 10 – February 14, 2020 Opening Reception: January 17 2nd Annual Best of Ringling College Continuing Studies Juried Exhibition February 24 – March 30, 2020 Opening Reception: February 28 10th Annual Ligature Exhibition February 24 – March 14, 2020 Opening Reception: February 28 2020 Annual Student Best of Ringling Juried Exhibition April 10 – 24, 2020 Opening Reception: April 10 Annual Senior Thesis Exhibitions May 4 – 7, 2020 Opening Reception: May 5 Women Contemporary Artists May 15 – June 11, 2020 Opening Reception: May 15 Trustee Scholar Exhibition May 15 – June 11, 2020 Opening Reception: May 15
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Florida Watercolor Society May 15 – June 11, 2020 Opening Reception: May 15
Sarasota Museum of Art 1001 S Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34236 Ringling College Academic Center Auditorium 2363 Old Bradenton Rd Sarasota, FL 34234 941.309.7662 ringling.edu/museum
EXPAND your mind at The Bishop Museum of Science and Nature Blast off. Dive deep. Be curious. From a microscopic cell to a far away galaxy, we are all connected to each other, the cosmos, and the world around us. The South Florida Museum is now…
The Southern Atelier 7226 21st St E Sarasota, FL 34243 941.753.7755 thesouthernatelier.org Exhibitions & workshops offered year-round. Russian Academic Fundamentals – Basic Geometric Forms June 23 – 24, 2020 Russian Academic Fundamentals – Still Life with Organic and Non-organic Forms July 28 – 29, 2020
State College of Florida Fine Art Gallery 5840 26th St W Bradenton, FL 34207 941.752.5225 scf.edu/artgallery
The Fence Nathan Benderson Park 718.801.8099 fence.photoville.com/city/sarasota The Fence Photography Exhibition November 8, 2019 – February 8, 2020
Towles Court Art District
$1 off admission www.BishopScience.org 201 10th Street West Bradenton, FL 34205 *Up to four (4) admissions. Not valid with any other discounts or special offers. Expires 12/31/2019
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SARASOTA SCENE | SEPTEMBER 2019
1938 Adams Ln Sarasota, FL 34236 941.587.9851 towlescourt.com Towles Court Third Friday Art Walks Welcome Back October 19, 2019 Small Works November 16, 2019 Holiday Lights December 21, 2019 New Work from Towles Artists January 17, 2020
A Celebration of Old Florida History February 21, 2020 A Green Spring March 20, 2020 Music / Art on the Porch April 17, 2020 Fair Skies and Blue Waters: a Coastal Celebration May 15, 2020
Venice Art Center 390 Nokomis Ave Venice, FL 34285 941.485.7136 veniceartcenter.com Welcome Back to Paradise Through October 4, 2019 Fall Members Show October 11 – November 8, 2019 Cornucopia November 15 – December 6, 2019 Bling Thing Jewelry Show and Sale November 30, 2019 Venice Art Center Annual Tea December 13, 2019 Flashes of Brilliance December 14 – January 10, 2020 Untamed January 17 – February 7, 2020 Fine Arts Show and Sale February 15 – 16, 2020 Annual Art Auction February 19 – March 4, 2020 Spring Members Show March 13 – April 3, 2020 Imagine That April 10 – May 1, 2020 South Sarasota County School Show May 5 – 15, 2020 Color My World May 22 – June 19, 2020 To Be Determined June 26 – July 24, 2020 Less is More July 31 – August 21, 2020
Women Contemporary Artists 3619 Quail Hollow Place Bradenton, FL 34210 941.358.9159 womencontemporaryartists.com Women Contemporary Artists Spring Exhibit – 2020 May 15 – June 11, 2020
HISTORY, SCIENCE & EDUCATION Adult and Community Enrichment (ACE) — North Port 4445 Career Lane North Port, FL 34289 ace-sarasota.com
Adult and Community Enrichment (ACE) — Sarasota 4748 Beneva Rd Sarasota, FL 34233 ace-sarasota.com
Anna Maria Island Historical Society 402 Pine Ave Anna Maria, FL 34216 941.778.0492 amihs.org Museum January – April: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May – December: 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Closed Sundays and Mondays
Big Cat Habitat 7101 Palmer Blvd Sarasota, FL 34240 941.371.6377 bigcathabitat.org Yoga with Tigers Fourth Saturday of Every Month
The Bishop Museum of Science and Nature 201 10th St W Bradenton, FL 34205 941.746.4131 bishopscience.org IQuest Second Saturday every month think + drink (science) Second Wednesday every month Stelliferous Last Wednesday every month KidSpace Second & Fourth Saturdays of each month Lunch & Learn Second & Fourth Wednesdays of each month The Bash at The Bishop November 2, 2019 Giants, Dragons & Unicorns Through January 5, 2020
C.G. Jung Society of Sarasota PO Box 50611 Sarasota, FL 34232 941.952.8188 cgjungsarasota.org INsight Lecture & Workshop Series Divine Imagination and the Evolution of Consciousness November 15 – 16, 2019 Living Between Worlds: Finding Personal Resilience in Changing Times January 17, 2020 What is Depth Psychology and Why Does it Matter? January 18, 2020 Jungian Art Therapy: The Visual Inner Path Towards Wholeness February 14, 2020 An Intimate Encounter with Your “Spirit of the Depths” February 15, 2020 Intimations in the Night: The Soul’s Call to Return Home March 13 – 14, 2020 Dreams, Life, Death, and the Alchemical Wedding Between Worlds April 3 – 4, 2020 Free Film Salons Select Fridays and Tuesdays December 2019 – April 2020
Conservation Foundation of the Gulf Coast 400 Palmetto Ave Osprey, FL 34229 941.918.2100 conservationfoundation.com Conservation Community Book Club Third Thursday of Every Other Month
Crowley Museum & Nature Center 16405 Myakka Rd Sarasota, FL 34240 941.322.1000 crowleyfl.org Canning 101 September 8, 2019 Embroidery 101 September 14, 2019 2019 Swamp Spooktacular October 25 – 26, 2019 Starry Night 2019 November 23, 2019
Historical Society Of Sarasota County 1260 12th St Sarasota, FL 34236 941.364.9076 hsosc.com Conversations at The Crocker Crocker Memorial Church Welcome Back Reception and Discussion of Church Repairs October 22, 2019 Women Who Shaped Sarasota November 12, 2019 Members Holiday Party December 10, 2019 The Mennonite Community in Sarasota January 14, 2020 Follow Our Food: Judi Gallagher February 11, 2020 Why do They Call it That?? March 10, 2020 “The Old Gray Mayors” April 14, 2020 Annual Meeting and Elections – Pot Luck Luncheon May 9, 2020 Sunday Afternoon Socials Kate Holmes & The History of the Whitakers January 12, 2020 David Duncan & History of Railroads February 16, 2020 An Afternoon with Deborah Walk March 22, 2020 Sue Blue’s Historic Trolley Tours Downtown Historic Narrated Tour October 19, November 16, December 7, 2019 January 11 & 25, February 8 & 22, March 14 & 28, April 4, 2019 Special Events 35th Historical Le Barge Cruise narrated by John McCarthy November 3, 2019 Tour to The Ringling Circus Museum January 22, 2020 Sparkly Saturday February 8, 2020 Historic Tour of St. Petersburg February 18, 2020 Hero of History Award Luncheon March 18, 2020
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Historic Spanish Point 337 N Tamiami Trail Osprey, FL 34229 941.966.5214 historicspanishpoint.org Holidays at The Point December 6, 13 & 14, 2019 Starlight & Fire: A New Year’s Eve Celebration December 31, 2019 Fairy and Gnome House Festival February 29 & March 1, 2020 Transportation Through Time Festival April 5, 2020 Earth Day Celebration April 22, 2020
Manatee County Agricultural Museum 1015 6th St W Palmetto, FL 34221 941.721.2034 manateecountyagmuseum.com Events Halloween Social October 19, 2019 Palmetto’s Christmas in the Park December 7, 2019 Exhibits Bittersweet Harvest: The Bracero Program, 1942-1964 September – December 2019 Turpentine in Manatee Through February, 2020 Manatee Tomato Families TBA Core Exhibits Manatee County Agricultural Hall of Fame Citrus Vegetables & Fruits Livestock Horticulture Farm Shop & Garage Barn
Manatee Village Historical Park 1404 Manatee Ave E Bradenton, FL 34208 941.749.7165 manateevillage.org Tombstone Tours October 11, 12, 18, 19, 24, 2019
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Local Author Erwin Wunderlich November 14, 2019 Old Florida Christmas December 15, 2019 Experience Old Manatee: the Florida Stories Walking Tour and Angola’s Freedom Seekers March 14, 2020 Suffragette Teas August 21 – 22, 2020
Marie Selby Botanical Gardens 900 S Palm Ave Sarasota, FL 34236 941.366.5731 selby.org Garden Music Series October 13 & 20, November 3 & 10, 2019 Spooktacular October 27, 2019 Orchid Show 2019: Blossoms of Asia October 12 – December 1, 2019 Orchid Evening November 6, 2019 Lunch in the Gardens October 23, 2019 & April 29, 2020 Lights in Bloom December 14 – 23, 26 – 30, 2019 January 1, 2 & 4, 2020 New Year’s Eve December 31, 2019 Wine & Design Orchid Arrangements with Linda Demenico, Tiger Lily Flowers and Antiques October 23, 2019 Holiday Splendor, Tailored Twig December 2, 2019
Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium 1600 Ken Thompson Pkwy Sarasota, FL 34236 941.388.4441 mote.org Fish, Fun and Fright October 18, 2019 Breakfast with the Sharks November 30 & December 28, 2019 Farm to Filet January 19, 2020
Year-Round Exhibits The Teeth Beneath: The Wild World of Gators, Crocs and Caimans Shark Zone Creatures from the Reef Florida Bay Habitats Sea Turtles: Ancient Survivors Manatees Otters & Their Waters From the River to the Seas Oh Baby! Life Cycles of the Sea Exploration Gallery Fossil Creek
New College of Florida 5800 Bay Shore Rd Sarasota, FL 34243 941.487.4153 ncf.edu/new-topics-new-college Benefiting New College Foundation. New Topics Speaker Series TBA
Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Ringling College of Continuing Studies 1050 S Tuttle Ave, Bldg 1 Sarasota, FL 34237 olliatringlingcollege.org Fall Semester September 30 – November 22, 2019 Old Florida Captured in Oil: The Art of The Florida Highwaymen October 24, 2019 Einstein’s Circle Lecture: “What’s News? Says Who?” with Mary Braxton-Joseph October 30, 2019 4th Annual Boomer Conference with Marianne Oehse November 1, 2019 Einstein’s Circle Lecture: “Is Florida’s Criminal Justice System Broken?” with Derek Byrd November 13, 2019 Reinvention Convention November 15, 2019 Winter & Spring Semester January 13 – May 1, 2020 Grand Opening Celebration January 8, 2020 Listening to Women Series February 6, 13, 20, 27, March 5 & 12, 2020
Connections: Documentary Film Series The Eagle Huntress October 8, 2019 This is Home October 29, 2019 Living the Future’s Past November 19, 2019
Sarasota Garden Club
Powel Crosley Estate
Sarasota Institute of Lifetime Learning (SILL)
8374 N Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34243 941.722.3244 powelcrosleyestate.com
Ringling College of Art + Design 2700 N Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34234 941.351.5100 ringling.edu See Museums & Visual Arts for gallery exhibits.
Ringling College Library Association PO Box 814 Sarasota, FL 34230 rclassociation.org TOWN HALL: General John F. Kelly January 27, 2020 TOWN HALL: Rick Steves February 11, 2020 TOWN HALL: Ambassador Wendy Sherman February 17, 2020 TOWN HALL: Sam Quinones March 2, 2020 TOWN HALL: Lisa Genova March 23, 2020 TOWN HALL: Annie Leibovitz April 7, 2020
Sarasota Children’s Garden 1670 10th Way Sarasota, FL 34236 941.330.1711 sarasotachildrensgarden.com For full list of nature, gardening & art programs, please visit website. Dinos & Donuts September 28, 2019 Camp Children’s Garden with Sarasota Rocks October 6, 2019 Witch’s Tea October 12, 2019
1131 Blvd of the Arts Sarasota, FL 34236 941.955.0875 sarasotagardenclub.org GIP TOUR March 14, 2020
8499 S Tamiami Trail, Box 219 Sarasota, FL 34238 941.365.6404 sillsarasota.org
Sarasota Jungle Gardens 3701 Bay Shore Rd Sarasota, FL 34234 941.355.5305 sarasotajunglegardens.com Schedule of events available online.
SunCoast Alliance for Lifelong Learning (SCALL) PO Box 1072 Sarasota, FL 34236 suncoastlifelonglearning.org Lifelong Learning Expo 2020 February 5, 2020
Suncoast Science Center Faulhaber Fab Lab 4452 S Beneva Rd Sarasota, FL 34233 941.840.4394 suncoastscience.org For a list of camps, programs and events, please visit website.
Venice Heritage PO Box 1190 Venice, FL 34284 941.237.0478 veniceheritage.org Trolly Tours of Historic Venice October 5, 2019
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FESTIVALS & FAIRS OCTOBER 2019 Classic Car Show Lakewood Ranch Main St lwrcac.com/events October 2, November 6, December 4, 2019
Music on Main Lakewood Ranch Main St lwrcac.com/events October 4, November 1, December 6, 2019
Sarasota Gem-Jewelry-Bead Show Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota frankcoxproductions.com October 4 – 6, 2019
Downtown Sarasota Art & Craft Festival Main St, Sarasota artfestival.com October 5 – 6, 2019
Jagfest Concours d’Elegance St. Armands Circle Park starmandscircleassoc.com October 12, 2019
Hungarian Festival Sarasota County Fairgrounds hungarianfestivalsarasota.com October 12 – 13, 2019
Coin Show & Sale Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota frankcoxproductions.com October 17 – 19, 2019
Sarasota Oktoberfest Gulfstream Ave, Sarasota paragonartevents.com October 18 – 20, 2019
Sun Fiesta Centennial Park, Venice womenssertoma.com October 18 – 20, 2019
Bayfest Pine Ave, Anna Maria Island annamariaislandchamber.org October 19, 2019
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St. Armands Boat Show
Downtown Venice Art Festival
St. Armands Circle starmandscircleassoc.com October 19 – 20, 2019
Venice Ave, Downtown artfestival.com November 2 – 3, 2019
Sarasota Celtic Music Festival
The Fence – Sarasota
Motorworks Brewing, Bradenton celtoberfest.org October 19 – 20, 2019
Nathan Benderson Park fence.photoville.com/city/sarasota November 8, 2019 – February 8, 2020
Sleepy Hollow Experience
Sarasota Boat Expo
Sarasota Polo Club theplayers.org October 19 – 20, 2019
Sarasota County Fairgrounds sarasotaboatexpo.com November 8 – 10, 2019
Lakewood Ranch BooFest
Sarasota Architectural Foundation
Lakewood Ranch Main St lwrcac.com/events October 25, 2019
Suncoast International Dragon Boat Festival Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org October 26, 2019
UTC Sarasota Fine Art Fair With Craft Market Place 140 University Town Center Dr artfestival.com October 26 – 27, 2019
SarasotaMOD Weekend Multiple Venues sarasotamod.com November 8 – 10, 2019
Sarasota Medieval Fair Sarasota Fairgrounds/Ringling Woods sarasotamedievalfair.com November 9, 10, 16, 17, 23, 24, 30 & December 1, 2019
St. Armands Circle Art Festival St. Armands Circle, Sarasota artfestival.com November 9 – 10, 2019
Venice Children’s Halloween Parade
Suncoast Food & Wine Fest
Venice Main St visitvenicefl.org October 31, 2019
Premier Sports Campus at LWR suncoastfoodandwinefest.com November 9, 2019
Fright Night on St. Armands
Le Marche Bohemien
St. Armands Circle starmandscircleassoc.com October 31, 2019
Five Points Park, Sarasota November 9, 2019
NOVEMBER 2019 2019 Wild About Nature Festival Bay Preserve, Osprey conservationfoundation.com November 2, 2019
Ferraris on the Circle St. Armands Circle Park starmandscircleassoc.com November 2, 2019
Sarasota Fall Home Show Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota sarasotahomeandgardenshow.com November 2 – 3, 2019
Giving Hunger the Blues Sarasota Polo Grounds givinghungertheblues.org November 15 – 16, 2019
Bradenton-Sarasota Home + Holiday Show Bradenton Area Convention Center bradentonhomeandholidayshow.com November 15 – 17, 2019
2019 Chalk Festival Venice Airport Fairgrounds chalkfestival.org November 15 – 18, 2019
Siesta Key Crystal Classic Master Sand Sculpting Competition Ocean Blvd, Siesta Key siestakeycrystalclassic.com November 15 – 18, 2019
Fixx Fest Bradenton Motorsports Park fixxfest.com November 16, 2019
Siesta Beach Seafood & Music Festival
JANUARY 2020
Siesta Beach paragonartevents.com December 6 – 8, 2019
Toy Train, Collectible, Hobby Show/Sale
Sarasota Gem-JewelryBead Show Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota frankcoxproductions.com December 6 - 8, 2019
Sarasota Fall Fine Art Festival Gulfstream Ave, Sarasota paragonartevents.com November 16 – 17, 2019
Venice Christmas Boat Parade North & South Jetties visitvenicefl.org December 7, 2019
Fall Arts & Crafts Show @the Shops at North Port November 16 – 17, 2019
Englewood Fine Arts & Handmade Crafts Festival
Ponies Under The Palms Mustang Show
Olde Englewood Village oldeenglewood.com December 7 – 8, 2019
Main St, Lakewood Ranch lakewoodranch.com November 24, 2019 Siesta Key Village Annual Holiday Lighting siestakeyvillage.org November 30, 2019
DECEMBER 2019 The Jazz Holly Trolley Downtown Sarasota jazzclubsarasota.org December 4, 2019
Carriage Rides, Strolling Carolers, Santa Strolls Lakewood Ranch Main St lwrcac.com/events Every Thursday in December 2019
Bradenton Blues Festival Bradenton Riverwalk Pavilion bradentonbluesfestival.org December 6 – December 8, 2019
Holiday Night on St. Armands St. Armands Circle starmandscircleassoc.com December 6, 2019
Art & Design Show Sarasota Robarts Arena artanddesignshowsarasota.com December 6 – 8, 2019
Holidays Around the Ranch Lakewood Ranch Main St lwrcac.com/events December 13, 2019
Coquina Beach Seafood & Music Festival Anna Maria Island paragonevents.com December 13 – 15, 2019
Porsches in the Park St. Armands Circle Park starmandscircleassoc.com December 14, 2019
Showfolks Circus Robarts Arena, Sarasota showfolks.com December 14, 2019
Atomic Holiday Bazaar Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota atomicholidaybazaar.com December 14 – 15, 2019
Christmas Arts & Crafts Show Elks Lodge, Englewood December 14 – 15, 2019
Sarasota New Year’s Eve Pineapple Drop Downtown Sarasota December 31, 2019
Elks Lodge, Englewood January 4, 2020
HITS Triathlon Series Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org January 5, 2020
Gem-Jewelry-Bead Show Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota frankcoxproductions.com January 10 – 12, 2020
Sarasota Winter Fine Arts Festival Gulfstream Ave, Sarasota paragonartevents.com January 11 – 12, 2020
Anna Maria Islandfest Arts & Craft Show 5801 Marina Drive, Holmes Beach sunsetboulevardpromotions.com January 11 – 12, 2020
32nd Anniversary Circus Ring of Fame St. Armands Circle starmandscircleassoc.com January 12, 2020
Manatee County Fair 1402 14th Ave W Palmetto manateecountyfair.com January 16 – 26, 2020
Sarasota Seafood & Music Festival Gulfstream Ave, Sarasota paragonartevents.com January 17 – 19, 2020
Sarasota Antiques + Art + Design Show Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota sarasotaartandantiques.com January 18 – 20, 2020
Taste of St. Armands St. Armands Circle Park starmandscircleassoc.com January 18, 2020
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Embracing Our Differences
Sarasota National Stamp Exhibition
Sarasota Invitational Regatta
Bayfront Park embracingourdifferences.org Outdoor International Juried Art Exhibit January 18 – April 5, 2020
Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota sarasotastampclub.com February 7 – 9, 2020
Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org February 21 – 23, 2020
Bradenton Area River Regatta
Fine Arts Festival of Manatee County
Venice Nokomis Rotary Arts Festival
bradentonarearegatta.com February 8, 2020
Venice Airport Grounds venicenokomisrotary.org January 18 – 19, 2020
Elk’s Valentines Arts & Crafts Show
Forks and Corks 2020
Elk’s Lodge, Englewood February 8 – 9, 2020
Mote Marine Festival Arts & Crafts Show
Downtown Sarasota Festival of the Arts
Ken Thompson Park mypromotions.com February 22 – 23, 2020
eatlikealocal.com January 23 – 27, 2020
Englewood Seafood & Music Festival Pioneer Park paragonevents.com January 24 – 26, 2020
Downtown Venice Craft Festival Main St, Venice artfestival.com January 25 – 26, 2020
St. Armands Circle Art Festival artfestival.com January 25 – 26, 2020
FEBRUARY 2020 Sarasota Highland Games & Celtic Festival Sarasota Fairgrounds sarasotahighlandgames.com February 1, 2020
Coquina Beach Winterfest Arts & Craft Show Phillippi Estate Park sunsetboulevardpromotions.com February 1 – 2, 2020
Winterfest at the Mansion Arts & Craft Show Phillippi Estate Park sunsetboulevardpromotions.com February 1 – 2, 2020
Sarasota Masters Art Festival Main St and Gulfstream Ave boulderbrook.net February 1 – 2, 2020
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Main St, Sarasota artfestival.com February 8 – 9, 2020
AACA Car Show Centennial Park, Venice visitvenicefl.org February 9, 2020
American Youth Cup Regatta Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org February 15, 2020
Downtown Sarasota Arts & Craft Show Five Points Park sunsetboulevardpromotions.com February 15 – 16, 2020
Riverwalk Park, Downtown Bradenton artcentermanatee.org February 22 – 23, 2020
Siesta Key Craft Festival Siesta Key Village artfestival.com February 22 – 23, 2020
The Venice Antiques Show Venice Community Center allmanpromotions.com February 22 – 23, 2020
Fairy House Festival Historic Spanish Point historicspanishpoint.org February 29, 2020
Italian Feast & Carnival Airport Festival Grounds, Venice visitvenicefl.org February 29 – March 1, 2020
Sarasota Bradenton Home & Garden Show
Lido Tides Arts & Craft Show
Bradenton Area Convention Center sarasotabradentonhomeshow.com February 15 – 16, 2020
Ben Franklin Drive, Sarasota sunsetboulevardpromotions.com February 29 – March 1, 2020
Valentine Arts & Crafts Show
Venice Home Show
@the Shops at North Port February 15 – 16, 2020
Venice Community Center venincehomeshow.com February 29 – March 1, 2020
Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival Village of Cortez cortez-fish.org February 15 – 16, 2020
Lido Beach Winter Fine Art Festival Lido Beach paragonartevents.com February 15 – 16, 2020
MARCH 2020 Irish Celtic Festival lwrcac.com/events March 2020 date TBD
Through Women’s Eyes International Film Festival Hollywood II, Sarasota throughwomenseyes.com March 6 – 8, 2020
Florida Creativity Conference USF Sarasota-Manatee & Florida Studio Theatre flcreativity.com March 6 – 8, 2020
ArtSlam Old Main St, Bradenton realizebradenton.com March 7, 2020
Lakewood Ranch Winter Fine Art Festival Lakewood Ranch paragonartevents.com March 14 – 15, 2020
Venice Book Fair & Writers Festival
Anna Maria Island Art League Springfest Art Festival
La Musica International Chamber Music Festival
Gem-Jewelry-Bead Show
Florida Winefest & Auction
Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota frankcoxproductions.com March 20 – 22, 2020
floridawinefest.org April 2 – 5, 2020
University Town Center Art Fair
Venice Airport grounds sharkstoothfest.com April 3 – 5, 2020
140 University Town Center Dr artfestival.com March 21 – 22, 2020
Downtown Venice Art Classic W Venice Ave artfestival.com March 7 – 8, 2020
lwrcac.com/events April 2020 date TBD
Opera House lamusicafestival.org April 2 – 13, 2020
Sarasota Spring Fine Art Festival Downtown Sarasota paragonartevents.com March 7 – 8, 2020
EGGstravaganza
Centennial Park venicebookfair.com March 20 – 21, 2020
My Hometown Fest Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org March 2020 TBD
APRIL 2020
Downtown Sarasota Springfest Arts & Craft Show Five Points Park, Sarasota sunsetboulevardpromotions.com March 21 – 22, 2020
City Hall Field, Holmes Beach islandartleague.org March 7 – 8, 2020
Sarasota Film Festival
40th Annual Sarasota Jazz Festival
Suncoast BBQ & Bluegrass Bash
sarasotafilmfestival.com March 27 – April 5, 2020
Venice Shark’s Tooth Festival
Children’s Book Fair Bradenton Farmers’ Market realizebradentoncom April 4, 2020
Downtown Sarasota Art & Craft Festival artfestival.com April 4 – 5, 2020
Lido Beach Spring Fine Art Festival
Venice Airport Festival Grounds suncoastbbqbash.com March 27 - 28, 2020
paragonartevents.com April 4 – 5, 2020
2020 Jewish Film Festival
Springfest at the Mansion Arts & Craft Show
Various Venues jfedsrq.org March 11 – 22, 2020
Phillipi Estate Park sunsetboulevardpromotions.com March 28 – 29, 2020
Historic Spanish Point historicspanishpoint.org April 5, 2020
Sarasota St. Paddy’s Festival
InspireSarasota! 2019
JD Hamel Park, Downtown Sarasota paragonartevents.com March 13 – 15, 2020
Five Points Park, Downtown Sarasota sarasotaarts.org March 28, 2020
Sarasota County Fair
The Rotary Club of Englewood’s Fine Arts Festival
Various Venues jazzclubsarasota.org March 8 – 14, 2020
Sarasota Fairgrounds sarasotafair.com March 13 – 22, 2020
Anna Maria Taste of Arts & Crafts 5801 Marina Dr, Holmes Beach sunsetboulevardpromotions.com March 14 – 15, 2020
Dearborn St, Englewood therotaryclubofenglewod.org March 28 – 29, 2020
Transportation Through Time
US Rowing Olympic Time Trials Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org April 12 – 19, 2020
Suncoast Boat Show Marina Jack suncoastboatshow.com April 17 – 19, 2020
Gem-Jewelry-Bead Show Municipal Auditorium, Sarasota frankcoxproductions.com April 24 – 26, 2020
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42nd Annual Siesta Fiesta
Venice Brew Bash
Siesta Key Village artfestival.com April 25 – 26, 2020
Centennial Park, Venice visitvenicefl.org May 23, 2020
Lakewood Ranch Spring Fine Arts Festival
Memorial Day Tribute to Heroes Parade
Main Street, Lakewood Ranch paragonartevents.com April 25 – 26, 2020
lwrcac.com/events May 2020 date TBD
Sarasota Music Festival Earth Day Sunday Buchanan Airport Community Park, Englewood planetenglewood.com April 28, 2020
MAY 2020
SarasotaOrchestra.org May 30 – June 20, 2020
SUMMER 2020 Savor Sarasota Restaurant Week visitsarasota.com June 1 – 14, 2020
Sarasota Cinco de Mayo Festival Gulfstream Ave, Downtown Sarasota paragonevents.com May 1 – 3, 2020
Classic Corvette Car Show St. Armands Circle starmandscircleassoc.com May 2, 2020
11th Annual Harvey Milk Festival
Connect with us on Social Media!
Five Points Park harveymilkfestival.org May 7 – 9, 2020
US Rowing Southeast Regional Championships
@sarasotascene
Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org May 7 – 10, 2020
@scenesarasota
Venice Seafood & Music Festival
@sarasotascene
Centennial Park, Venice paragonartevents.com May 8 – 10, 2020
@scenemagsrq
Sarasota International Dragon Boat Festival Nathan Benderson Park gwndragonboat.com May 15, 2020
St. Armands Seafood & Music Festival St. Armands Circle Park paragonartevents.com May 22 – 24, 2020
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Sunshine State Games Paddling Championship Nathan Benderson Park nathanbendersonpark.org June 6, 2020
St. Armands Craft Festival St. Armands Circle starmandscircleassoc.org June 6 – 7, 2020
Downtown Venice Craft Festival Miami Ave, Venice visitvenicefl.org June 20 – 21, 2020
Sarasota Powerboat Grand Prix Lido Beach, Downtown Sarasota & Marina Jack sarasotapowerboatgrandprix.org June 29 – July, 7 2020
Christmas in July Downtown Venice visitvenicefl.org July 25 – 26, 2020
ARTS COMMUNITIES & ORGANIZATIONS AIA Florida Gulf Coast Chapter PO Box 160 Sarasota, FL 34236 941.315.8242 aiagulfcoast.org
Alliance Francaise de Sarasota 715 N Washington Blvd Sarasota, FL 34236 afsarasota.com
All Children’s Music Foundation 2150 Wason Rd Sarasota, FL 34231 941.306.9444
Arts & Cultural Alliance of Sarasota County 1226 N Tamiami Trail, Ste 300 Sarasota, FL 34236 941.365.5118 sarasotaarts.org Celebration of the Arts Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall October 21, 2019 Principals Luncheon November 13, 2019 Inspire Sarasota Family Festival Five Points Park, Downtown Sarasota March 28, 2020 Alliance Member Exhibits Center for Arts and Humanities September 15, 2019 – May 31, 2020
Center for Architecture Sarasota 265 S Orange Ave Sarasota, FL 34236 cfasrq.org Exhibits Solo Architecture Series Halflants + Pichette: Studio for Modern Architecture September 12 – October 10, 2019 4 Site Lines Architectural Views John Pirman, Greg Wilson, Ryan Gamma, Sean Harris October 24 – December 7, 2019 Solo Architecture Series [STRANG] Design December 12 – January 23, 2020
The Designed Environment Series Frank Lloyd Wright: Architecture of the Interior February 7 – March 21, 2020 Obdurate Space: Architecture of Donald Judd April 2 – May 9, 2020
Fine Arts Society of Sarasota
Trolley Tours Lunch + Lido Trolley Tour Harold Bubil Tour Guide October 26, 2019 Tampa Architectural Bus Tour Harold Bubil Tour Guide November 16, 2019 Florida Southern College Architectural Tour Harold Bubil Tour Guide February 22, 2020 Architectural Tours of Sarasota Tour Guides Harold Bubil and Lorrie Muldowney Thursdays, February 13 – April 30, 2020
floridawestcoastbeadsociety.com Leslie Venturoso Workshop Designing Women Boutique October 31 – November 4, 2019
PO Box 1432 Sarasota, FL 34230 941.330.0680 fineartssarasota.org
Florida West Coast Bead Society
Founders Garden Club of Sarasota PO Box 25612 Sarasota, FL 34277 foundersgcsarasota.org Visit website for community events.
Friends of Sarasota County History Center
926 12th Street W Bradenton, FL 34205 941.746.2223
701 N Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34236 941.361.2453 foschc.org Visit website for Florida Humanities Speaker Series info.
Congregation for Humanistic Judaism Sarasota Chapter
Friendship Knot Quilters' Guild
3023 Proctor Rd Sarasota, FL 34231 941.929.7771 shj.org
friendshipknotquiltersguild.com Retreats March 26 – 29, 2020 July 30 – August 2, 2020
CreArte Latino Cultural Center
Gulf Coast Chapter of the US National Committee for UN Women
Arts Council of Manatee County
8251 15th Street E Airport Mall Plaza Sarasota, FL 34243 creartelatino.org
Education Foundation of Sarasota County 1960 Landings Blvd Sarasota, FL 34231 941.927.0965 edfoundationsrq.org
Embracing Our Differences PO Bo 2559 Sarasota, FL 34230 941.404.5710 embracingourdifferences.org Outdoor International Juried Art Exhibit January 18 – April 5, 2020
gulfcoast@unwomen-usnc.org unworn-usnc.org Through Women’s Eyes International Film Festival March 6 – 8, 2020
Hermitage Artist Retreat 6660 Manasota Key Rd Englewood, FL 34223 941.475.2098 hermitageartistretreat.org Visit website for event schedule.
Historic & Preservation Coalition of Sarasota County historicpreservationsarasota.org Visit website for a list of member organizations.
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Lakewood Ranch Main St
The Parrish Arts Council
8100 Lakewood Ranch Blvd Bradenton, FL 34202 941.907.9243 lwrcac.com/events Music on Main Free concerts the first Friday of each month. Classic Car Show First Wednesday of each month. BooFest October 25, 2019 Holiday Around the Ranch December 13, 2019 Irish Celtic Festival March 2020 TBD EGGstravaganza April 2020 TBD Memorial Day Tribute to Heroes Parade May 2020 TBD
parrishartscouncil.org Visit website for events, exhibitions and classes.
Manasota Weavers Guild PO Box 17876 Sarasota, FL 34276 manasotaweaversguild.com Deflected Doubleweave by Clara Carroll November 11 – 12, 2019 Swedish Pattern Weave by Joanne Hall February 3 – 5, 2020
Petticoat Painters
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1680 Fruitville Rd Sarasota, FL 34236 941.309.1200 filmsarasota.com
petticoatpaintersfl.com
Realize Bradenton 941.621.6471 realizebradenton.com Bradenton Farmers Market Every Saturday from October – May Mainly Art Every third Saturday October – May Howl’Ween October 26, 2019 Bradenton Blues Festival December 6 – 8, 2019 Art Slam 2020 March 7, 2020 Children’s Book Fair & Family Fun Day April 4, 2020
Sara De Soto Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution 941.953.7955 facebook.com/saradesoto.fssdar
Sarasota Film Society Burns Court Cinemas 506 Burns Court Sarasota, FL 34236 Lakewood Ranch Cinemas 10715 Rodeo Drive #8 Lakewood Ranch, FL 34202 941.955.3456 filmsociety.org Cine-World Film Festival November 1 – 10, 2019
SARTQ Artist Collective sartq.com Visit website for exhibition schedule.
Sarasota Garden Club
PO Box 1754 Sarasota, FL 34230 941.953.8727 historicsarasota.org
1131 Blvd of the Arts Sarasota, FL 34236 941.955.0875 sarasotagardenclub.org Gardens in Paradise: Annual Premier Garden Tour March 14, 2020 Ikebana Exhibition April 1, 2020
Sarasota Architectural Foundation
Sarasota Italian Cultural Events, Inc.
941.364.2199 sarasotaarchitecturalfoundation.org Umbrella House Tour Third Saturday of the Month Cocoon House Tour First and Third Saturday of the Month SarasotaMOD Architecture Festival November 8 – 10, 2019
PO Box 17292 Sarasota, FL 34276 italyinsarasota.com A Venetian Reception and Book Discussion November 7, 2019 Lecture by Dr. Rosanne Martorella Venice: La Serenissima December 5, 2019 Meet Sarasota Opera Artists January 30, 2020 Film & Discussion: “Bread & Tulips” February 12, 2020 Lecture by Dr. Chrystine Keener Titian & Tintoretto February 25, 2020 Film & Discussion: “Dangerous Beauty” March 11, 2020 Bus Trip to McClellan Glass & Blow Workshop April 2, 2020
Sarasota Alliance for Historic Palm Ave Merchants Association Preservation palmavenue.org First Friday Walks (evenings) An Evening of Classics October 4, 2019 A Prelude to Season November 1, 2019 Holiday Treasures December 6, 2019 An Evening on Palm January 3, 2020 Romancing the Arts February 7, 2020 A Taste of Palm Avenue March 6, 2020 An Affair to Remember April 3, 2020 Jazz on the Ave May 1, 2020 Sunset Serenade June 5, 2020 An American Salute July 3, 2020
Sarasota County Film And Entertainment Office
Sarasota Choral Society 5317 Fruitville Rd Sarasota, FL 34232 941.343.9894 sarasotachoralsociety.org
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Sarasota Pen Women
Village of the Arts
Holiday of Song with 2PM
941.342.8542 sarasotapenwomen.com Selby Library Workshop Seven Keys to the Writing Quest February 29, 2020
Bradenton, FL 941.747.8056 villageofthearts.com
December 16, 2019 African Americans and the Vote Art Exhibit January 11 – February 16, 2020 Mara Levine
Selby Library Panel Discussion The Artist’s Journey February 29, 2020 Event Launching Leaders in the Arts Awards March 11, 2020
Sarasota Shell Club PO Box 4124 Sarasota, FL 34230 sarasotashellclub.com Annual Sarasota Shell Show Potter Building/Sarasota Fairgrounds February 7 – 9, 2020
Sumi-E Society of America Sarasota Chapter sarasotasumi-e.weebly.com Brush Painting in the East Asian Manner Visit website for meetings and workshops. Exhibits Jacaranda Trace Gallery, Venice October 1 – December 30, 2019 Art Center Manatee May 12 – June 5, 2020
Surface Design Guild Sarasota sarasotasurfacedesign.com Exhibitions & workshops offered year-round.
Tapestry Artists of Sarasota 8069 Stirling Falls Cir Sarasota, FL 34243 941.359.1765 americantapestryalliance.org
Venice Main Street 941.484.6722 venicemainst.com See Festivals & Fairs section.
Art Walks First Friday & Saturday every month. Events & workshops schedules available online.
January 27, 2020 World Culture: Caribbean Exhibit February 22 – March 28, 2020 Greg O’Haver
Visit Sarasota County
February 24, 2020 Brian Smalley
701 N Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34236 941.955.0991 visitsarasota.org Savor Sarasota Restaurant Week June 1 – 14, 2020
WEDU
March 30, 2020 Earth Day Art Exhibit April 4 – May 9, 2020 Grant Peeples April 27, 2020 China Art Exhibit May 16 – June 21, 2020
1888 Brother Geneen Way Sarasota, FL 34236 941.375.9435 wedu.org
Women Contemporary Artists 3619 Quail Hollow Place Bradenton, FL 34210 941.739.3677 womencontemporaryartists.com Women Contemporary Artists Spring Exhibit – 2020 May 15 – June 11, 2020
WSLR+ Fogartyville Community Media & Arts Center 525 Kumquat Ct Sarasota, FL 34236 941.894.6469 Kyshona October 6, 2019 The Art of Pamela Callender Through October 27, 2019 Mike Worrall October 28, 2019 Mel Goodman November 1, 2019 Native American Art Exhibit November 2, 2019 – January 5, 2020 Very Merry Jerry Day November 3, 2019 The Dunn Deal November 25, 2019 Phoebe Hunt December 8, 2019
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PERFORMING ARTS CALENDAR BROUGHT TO YOU IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE ARTS AND CULTURAL ALLIANCE OF SARASOTA COUNTY
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FLORIDA STUDIO THEATRE
Best SEATS
EA BO
941.366.9000 / floridastudiotheatre.org Who Loves You September 3 – October 13 Comedy Lottery Through September 21 The More You Know September 28
THE ISLAND PLAYERS 941.778.5755 / theislandplayers.org Steel Magnolias September 19 – 29
LEMON BAY PLAYHOUSE 941.475.6756 / lemonbayplayhouse.com The Ladies Foursome September 4 – 22 Two Funny! September 28 & 29
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MANATEE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER 941.748.5875 manateeperformingartscenter.com Grey Gardens September 5 – 22 The Favorite September 27 & 28
THE PLAYERS CENTRE FOR PERFORMING ARTS 941.365.2494 / theplayers.org Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat September 18 – October 6
THE RINGLING 941.359.5700 / ringling.org Gallery Performance: RHINO September 26
RISE ABOVE PERFORMING ARTS 941.702.4747 / riseabovearts.com Battle of the Bands September 7 School of Rock September 12 – 15
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WITH YOUR HELP... A promising future becomes a reality, a passion becomes a career and a dream comes true.
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SARASOTA OPERA 941.328.1300 / sarasotaopera.org HD at the Opera House The Nutcracker – Ballet Film September 8 La Traviata – Opera Film September 22 Classic Movies at the Opera House Young Frankenstein September 6
SARASOTA ORCHESTRA 941.953.4252 / sarasotaorchestra.org Chamber Soiree Musical Mélange September 12 Mozart and More September 22 Discoveries Discover Beethoven’s Fifth September 28 & 29
VAN WEZEL PERFORMING ARTS HALL 941.955.7676 / vanwezel.org Friday Fest Ari and the Alibis September 20
THE VENICE INSTITUTE FOR PERFORMING ARTS 941.218.3779 veniceperformingartscenter.com The Boss Project September 7 Nightbird September 21
VENICE THEATRE 941.488.1115 / venicestage.com The Jungle Book September 6 – 15 The Gold Tones September 7 Born Yesterday September 20 – October 6 The Bikinis September 27 – October 20
Your support impacts a student’s future. Contact Cassandra Holmes 941-752-5390 or HolmesC@SCF.edu
For a full list of this season’s performing arts events, view our Arts & Culture Guide. SCENESARASOTA.COM
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Meet the Artists
FELIX F. DUENAS Felix F. Duenas was born in Ecuador and is from an area of Incan culture nestled in the beautiful mountains of the Andes. In his youth, his family moved to New Jersey where he began painting and playing music. Felix went on to study art at New Jersey City University and continued to explore an array of styles developing his passion for color and music. Felix began his extensive music career as a drummer, touring throughout New York and New Jersey doing an average of 300 shows a year. While on the road he would sketch and finish his paintings once he arrived home. In 1999, Florida became his home. He continued his career as a hair stylist and drummer while painting in his spare time, working very prolifically. Now retired, Felix is enjoying his freedom to paint which is now his first passion in life. His life-long development and love for color is vividly expressed in each painting, combining mixed media, contemporary, abstract styles. Felix is honored and excited to exhibit his artwork in support of and in conjunction with the art of artist Rex A. Begaye. With Rex, Felix shares not only a connection as a hair stylist and long-time friendship, but also camaraderie through their indigenous roots.
HAROLD LITTLEBIRD Harold Littlebird is originally from the Laguna and Kewa Pueblos in New Mexico. He now resides in Florida. For more than forty-five years, Harold has been making his award-winning pottery. He began his career in clay under the tutelage of the brilliant artist and craftsman Ralph A. Pardington and graduated from the Institute of American Indian Arts in 1969. Harold developed his unique styles of hand building clay without the use of a potter’s wheel. His work is entirely hand built using slab construction and added adaptions of traditional coil building. His work veers from traditional Pueblo pottery in that it is stoneware,totally usable as tableware. Harold’s methods of decoration also differs from traditional Pueblo pottery. The elaborate designs on most of his work are meticulously hand drawn created with underglaze pencils. He then kiln fires his stoneware in an oxidation fired process. Harold’s work in nationally recognized in many private collections and in numerous museums throughout the country, including the prestigious Smithsonian Museum in Washington D. C.
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GET Inspired CULTURAL HAPPENINGS BROUGHT TO YOU BY
artcentermanatee.org | 941.746.2862 Something Tasty Open Juried Show September 5 – October 4 Instructor Showcase September 5 – October 4 3rd Annual Chef’s Challenge September 28
THE ARTS AND CULTURAL
ART UPTOWN GALLERY
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artuptown.com | 941.955.5409 Walking on the Wild Side September 10 – 27
COUNTY
CHASEN GALLERIES chasengalleries.com | 941.260.5787 How Do We Figure? September 3 – 28
DABBERT GALLERY dabbertgallery.com | 941.955.1315 Summer Showcase Through September 30
DISCOVER SARASOTA TOURS discoversarasotatours.com | 941.260.9818 Circus City Trolley Tour 1:00 p.m. Saturdays & Wednesdays September 28 – October 30
NORTH PORT ART CENTER northportartcenter.org | 941.423.6460 Open House and “Parks and Recreation Reception” 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. September 13
STATE OF THE ARTS GALLERY sarasotafineart.com | 941.955.2787 Mid Mod : Mid-Century-Inspired Art Collection Through October 1
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RINGLING COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN ringlingcollege.org/galleries | 941.359.7562 2019 Annual Faculty Exhibition September 6 – October 4 2019 Annual Ringling College Staff and School of Continuing Studies Instructors Exhibition September 6 – October 4 Flamingo Inn: Shawn Pettersen and Morgan Jannsen September 6 – October 4 Opening Reception: September 6 6 – 8 p.m. Patricia Thompson Gallery
THE UNITY GALLERY AT THE UNITY UNIVERSALIST CHURCH OF SARASOTA unityofsarasota.org | 941.955.3301 From Realism to Frivolity: Paintings by Leda Palermo September 1 – 30 Tuesday – Thursday
Have an upcoming visual art event? Send your event details to COMMUNICATIONS@SARASOTAARTS.ORG 1 16
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LITERARY Scene By Ryan G. Van Cleave
THREE REWARDING END-OF-SUMMER READS
reform school in Florida during the Jim Crow days. And the book is terrific.
THE NICKEL BOYS: A NOVEL by Colson Whitehead I wish it weren’t so, but more times than not, when someone wins a big literary prize, the next book falls short of (admittedly, potentially unattainable) similar lofty expectations. So, when Colson Whitehead’s last book, The Underground Railroad, won the Pulitzer Prize, received the National Book Award, and was a #1 New York Times bestseller, I worried about the next one. Well, the MacArthur Genius Award-winner just delivered The Nickel Boys, a novel about two boys sentenced to an awful
Whitehead wanted to write a crime novel, but he admits that when he read news reports about the atrocities that happened at The Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys, a segregated reform school in Mariana, Florida that opened in 1900 and was finally shut down for good in 2011, this became the story he had to tell. Unmarked graves of brutalized boys were still being discovered as Whitehead continued his research, for one thing. Plenty knew about what was going on there, but too few seemed to care. In addition to being a potent exposé about one of many midcentury reform schools, this story also offered ample opportunities for Whitehead to explore the complex issues of race and the ironies of justice that he’s become known for. In his novel, that real-world school became the equally-dangerous Nickel Academy, and that’s exactly where the main character, an African-American teen from Tallahassee named Elwood Curtis, is tossed into after being caught up in a car theft (even though he was an unwitting passenger who simply bummed a ride). This wasn’t at all the future this college-bound good kid should’ve had. This Civil Rights aficionado and accomplished student was primed for greatness.
Elwood struggled to find his place inside the walls of “the Nickel” because brutality seemed the norm, and every choice seemed fraught with peril. “If everyone looked the other way, then everybody was in on it. If he looked the other way, he was as implicated as the rest. That’s how he saw it, how he’d always seen things.” Much of the latter half of the book shows Elwood interacting with Turner, a former inmate and cynical loner who was back on his second stint at the Nickel. This book is part of Whitehead’s ongoing literary conversation with the Civil Rights movement, and like his personal hero, Ralph Ellison, Whitehead deftly moves between stark realism and powerful idealism, while asking some of the biggest questions of personal and community identity. The Nickel Boys is another masterful addition to Whitehead’s body of work. Highly recommended. Rating:
ColsonWhitehead.com
THE HIDDEN THINGS: A NOVEL by Jamie Mason I was too young to remember this crime, but perhaps you recall the 1990 heist where 13 pieces of art valued at $500 million were stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. Here we are, nearly three decades later, and that pricey art is all still MIA. Why bring that up? Because this brazen, real-life robbery provides the inspiration for Jamie Mason’s new book, The Hidden Things. In this novel, a home security camera catches fourteen-year-old Carly Liddell fending off an attacker in her own home. The police release the video on social media and right away, the attacker is SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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found. Terrific! But what no one expected was how the video—which had gone viral because any kid beating up an attacker is pretty impressive and worthy of watching—shows the corner of a painting that’s hanging in the family foyer. It’s 17-century Dutch master Govert Flinck’s Landscape with Obelisk, one of the 13 real-world paintings that were actually stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. The art thieves who were double-crossed years ago see this painting and now they’re fully committed to reclaiming what they think is theirs. Mason does an effective job of revealing how John Cooper, Carly’s relatively unlikable
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stepfather, came to possess the stolen artwork. Even the bad guys are presented in such a way that it’s hard not to be a bit empathetic toward them. Carly is, by far, the star of this story. She’s feisty and fun in all the right ways. Perhaps she’ll return in a future Mason book? She’s got enough character to carry another story for sure. If you dig real-world heist stories, art mysteries, or reading about kids with serious chutzpah, this thriller might be a hit. Rating:
Jamie-Mason.com
Billed as Sabrina the Teenage Witch meets Roller Girl, this debut graphic novel from Emma Steinkellner is a laugh-inducing look at middle school. Thirteen-year-old Moth Hush loves everything that has to do with witches, but then she discovers that her town has a centuries-old history of witch drama. Even crazier, her family’s smack dab in the center of it all.
Don Sr. Sincerely, Don Carlson Carlson Sr. Sincerely, QUALITY & SERVICE. Sincerely, Don Carlson Sr. Don Carlson Sr. Sincerely, 3115 Southgate Circle Sincerely, Don Carlson Sr. 3115Sarasota, Southgate Circle Don Carlson Sr. Fl. 34239 3115 Southgate Circle Sincerely, Don Carlson Sr. Sarasota, Fl. 34239 3115 Southgate Circle Sarasota, Fl. 34239 Don Carlson Sr. 3115 Southgate Circle Sarasota, Fl. 34239 34239 (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 3115 Southgate Circle Sarasota, Fl. 34239 (941) 275-4647 (941) 275-4647 3115 Southgate Circle Don Carlson Sr. Sarasota, Fl. 34239 (941) 275-4647 5193 Clark Road (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 34239 3115 Southgate Circle (941) 275-4647 3115 Southgate Circle 5193 Clark Road Sarasota, Fl. 34233 34239 Sarasota, Fl. (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 Sarasota, Fl. 34239 5193 Clark Road (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 Sarasota, Fl. 34239 3115 Southgate Circle 5193 Clark Road (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 34233 Sarasota, Fl. 5193 Clark Road Sarasota, Fl. (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 34239 5193 Clark Road (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 5193 Clark Road Sarasota, Fl. 34233 5193 Clark Road (941) 275-4647 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 Sarasota, Fl. 34233 5193 Clark Road
Things get worse for Moth when she realizes she’s a half-witch. Her new powers soon go out of control and secrets from generations past come back to complicate her life. At least she’s got a talking cat, an enchanted diary, and a hidden world of witches to help her through it all!
Sarasota, Fl. 34233
THE OKAY WITCH: A GRAPHIC NOVEL by Emma Steinkellner
This story about a witch-in-progress is a weird, fun, and memorable read. If you like Steinkellner’s art, you can see more of it in the projects of her sister Kit, such as the teen rom-com webcomic Aces and the Eisnernominated superhero coming-of-age story Quince.
Rating:
EmmaSteinkellner.com
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REWIND A LOOK BACK THROUGH SCENE’S ARCHIVES
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SARASOTA SCENE HONORS THE MEMORY OF PHILANTHROPIST BEA FRIEDMAN, WHO SUPPORTED SO MANY CAUSES IN OUR TOWN, AND ESPECIALLY HER BELOVED SARASOTA ORCHESTRA.
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Laughing MATTERS THE ONE WITH CHEESE, OR 13 WAYS OF LOOKING AT LIMBERGER By Ryan G. Van Cleave | Illustrations by Darcy Kelly-Laviolette
M
aybe it’s because I was born in Wisconsin, but I love cheese. Just the other day, I went to Culver’s simply because it’s one of the few places where I can get cheese curds. I mean, c’mon. Who doesn’t get excited about deep-fried cheese clumps that squeak off your teeth when you chomp into them? With that glorious snacking moment in mind, I offer you some decidedly cheesetastic musings. *Odor not included. 1: Casu Marzu, a.k.a. Maggot Cheese. Yep, it’s a real thing. I learned about this monstrosity years back on a Travel Channel TV show called Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern (still in production as of this writing). Flies lay eggs inside this cheese. When the maggots emerge, they chomp their way out, leaving holes en route to their freedom. The people of Sardinia consider this a delicacy, and if any maggots still remained? Even yummier (allegedly). I, however, do not find the idea of Casu Marzu appealing. It strikes me as being about as tasty-looking as, say, the laces on an old pair of Chuck Taylors, or perhaps the passenger-side headrest of my 2015 Kia Optima. 2: President Andrew Jackson, a.k.a. Old Hickory (love that nickname!), was given a cheese wheel some four feet in diameter, two feet thick, and clocking in at 1,400 pounds. It sat around for two years before he realized he’d have to deal with it. So, he set it out at his last public reception in the White House and invited all visitors to have some. The massive mountain of cheese was gone in less than two hours—no joke. (The clingy reek of two-year old cheese, though, stuck around for years afterwards, I hear.)
I tried the same thing at a Van Cleave Game Night some years back. I put out a can of Pringles Restaurant Cravers Cheeseburger for my gaming guests because it’d been sitting around so long that it was near its expiration date. Unlike President Jackson, my food situation did not get solved. Come midnight when the guests left, I still had 90% of those foul chips—sorry, “potato crisps”—left. Good thing, too, since the product was recalled a few weeks later thanks to a salmonella possibility. I think that was the cover story by Proctor & Gamble to get people past the idea that any company on earth could possibly put out such a vulgar, yucky product as the can of whatever-it-was that I tried to perpetrate upon my poor guests who just wanted a little food to go with their Trivial Pursuit marathon. 3: Brieoncé. 4: On some random Buzzfeed page, I read that Cheddar cheese is never naturally orange. WTF? That’s like saying Donald Trump isn’t naturally orange either. I don’t believe it. You shouldn’t either! 5: What do you call a cheese that isn’t yours? Nacho cheese. 6: If the majority of cheese is grown and cultivated in a cheese cave, what’s the story with a man cave? 7: My daughter just came into the room, read points 1 through 6 over my shoulder, then declared, “You know a lot about cheese. You’re a cheese wiz!” The funniest part is she had no idea why I laughed. Makes sense. I ate the stuff in college when I was too poor to care and too dumb to know better, but it’s been forever since I’ve bought a jar of Cheez Whiz, that shelf-stable, superprocessed stuff that has 0.0% cheese in it. Now plenty of Philly folks will say “Whiz wit” is the only way to order a cheesesteak. But I still have a hard time getting past how when it cools, it forms a shellac-like coating that summons to mind the image of ochre-colored tar. Sure, it SEPTEMBER 2019 | SARASOTA SCENE
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can help you pick up a whole clump of French fries in one grab. But is it worth it? Really? 8: Mice don’t like cheese. They much prefer fruits, grains, or nuts. And sometimes, as evident from the goings-on in my neighbor’s attic, foamy insulation.
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9: Nicolby Kidman. 10: The official name for a seller of cheese is “cheesemonger.” Last week, I sold my old iPhone. Does that make me an applemonger? 11: Chèvre Chase. 12: “That’s what cheese said.” (It’s a joke from The Office. Sort of.)
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13: Sweet dreams are made of brie. Who am I to diss a brie? I cheddar the world and the feta cheese. Everybody’s looking for stilton.
Have your own cheese-related gripe? Want to make your case why mascarpone should be considered a cream versus a cheese? Need to get a gouda tragedy off your chest? Is it time for you to confess how you cleared an airport terminal thanks to a thick slice of well-aged Comté? If any of those questions apply to you, go ahead and email ryan@sarasotascene.com with the 411. And remember— please share your most terrific cheese stories with me. If you don’t, I’m not sure I camembert it.
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