Get Out October 25 2012

Page 1

Giant book sale at Westminster Church helps charity, page 14

Rev up the fun

Moonshine Festival and Halloween events scare up weekend treats

6 E G A P

Thursday October 25, 2012

gainesvilletimes.com /getout

get out Northeast Georgia’s entertainment guide


PAGE

g o inside

Thursday, October 25, 2012 | gainesvilletimes.com/getout

on the web whatshouldireadnext.com

Enter a book you like, and the site will analyze a huge database of real readers’ favorite books to provide book recommendations and suggestions for what to read next.

family

Take the kids antique hunting this weekend in Braselton Park as dealers converge for a shopping extravaganza. PAGE 6 Be sure to hit the haunts of local ghosts with the Northeast Georgia History Center’s 10th annual Ghost Tour and the second annual Trick-or-Treat on the Trail. PAGES 7 and 13

movies

A highly philosophical, high concept film, made all the more risky by its structure and scope, “Cloud Atlas” requires patience. PAGE 10

The Associated Press

arts

on the cover

Celebrate all the things that make North Georgia and NASCAR great at the Mountain Moonshine Festival. PAGE 6

Award-winning author and journalist Melissa Fay Greene will visit North Georgia College & State University. PAGE 14

music

The Piedmont College Cantabile will perform “Something Old, Something New” in Demorest. PAGE 15


Thursday, October 25, 2012

gainesvilletimes.com/getout •

get out

PAGE


CMYK PAGE

g o inside

Thursday, October 25, 2012 | gainesvilletimes.com/getout

etc events This week

Growing at Gardens on Green, Gainesville. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Oct. 25. Janelle Whalen will present solid ideas for success in growing fall and winter vegetables. Picnic area of Gardens on Green or an inside conference room, 711 Green St., Gainesville. Cooperative effort of Hall County School System and Hall County Master Gardeners. Free. 770-5323136. Giant book sale, Gainesville. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 25-28, noon to 5 p.m. Oct. 28. 1397 Thompson Bridge Road, Gainesville in the gym located behind Westminster Church. Free admission. Hardbacks, paperbacks and CDs. Cash, checks and credit cards accepted. All proceeds benefit Our Neighbor, Inc. and The Next Chapter Bookstore. www.ourneighbor.org 24 Hour Read-a-Thon, Gainesille. 5 p.m. Oct. 26. Hall Book Exchange, 1854 Thompson Bridge

Road, Gainesville. Readers/authors will come promote literacy in our area. Proceeds go to Gainesville/Hall County Alliance for Literacy. Free. 770-532-6693, www. hallbook exchange.com Haunted Historic Homer Walking Tour. 6:30 p.m. Oct. 27. Depart from the Historic Courthouse, 106 Yonah Homer Road in downtown Homer, and end at the Historic Jail with refreshments. $3 for individual or $5 for couple. Free to children 12 and younger when accompanied by an adult. Presented by Banks County Historical Society. 678-971-9390 www.bankscounty historicalsociety.org Ronda Rich book discussion and signing “There’s A Better Day AComin’,” Gainesville. Noon to 3 p.m. Oct. 27. Frames You-Nique, 104 Main St., Gainesville. 770-532-7074. “Red Lipstick and Clean Underwear” book signing with Carole Townsend, Gainesville. Noon. Oct. 27. Hall Book Exchange, 1854 Thompson Bridge Road, Gainesville. www.

outdoors events This week

Hiking in Helen. 1-3 p.m. Oct. 27. Guided hike travels three miles from the park’s lodge to Helen. Shuttle service is provided if hikers want to hike only one-way. Unicoi State Park and Lodge. Pre-registration required. $5 parking. 800-573-9659 ext. 305. Run For A Life, Gainesville. 1 mile fun run/walk 11:30 a.m., 5K run/walk noon, Toddler Dash 12:05 p.m. Oct. 27. Lakeview Academy, Gainesville. Benefits Gainesville Care Center. gainesvillecarepartners.org/calendar. Soque River Ramble. Oct. 27. Old Chimney Mountain Road, Batesville. www.soqueriverramble.com Run Your Cookies Off! Lawrenceville. 8:30 a.m. Fun Run, 9 a.m. 5K, Oct. 27. Tribble Mill Park, Lawrenceville. 5K $30, Fun Run $25, Girl Scouts $15. Register www.active.com, runyourcookiesoff@yahoo.com. Full Moon Hike, Tallulah Falls. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Oct. 28, 7-9 p.m. Oct. 29. The hike will begin at the Interpretive Center, following the North Rim Trail, with a descent of the Hurricane Falls Trail staircase to the suspension bridge over Hurricane Falls. This is considered a strenuous hike, consisting of approximately 1.5 miles and 1,099 steps. Register in advance. $5 plus $5 parking.

caroletownsend.com. “365 Daze” book signing with Lesa Osborn, Alpharetta. 1 p.m. Oct. 27. Barnes and Noble, Mansell Crossings, 7660 Northpoint Parkway, Suite 200, Alpharetta. Braselton Antique & Holiday Festival. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 27 and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 28. Braselton Town Park, 115 Harrison St., Braselton. Parking and admission is free. 706-824-7204.

Upcoming

Free yoga, Gainesville. 8 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 2 p.m. Nov. 4. Flip Your Dog Yoga Studio, 2480 Limestone Parkway, Gainesville. First class power flow all levels, second class deep stretch gentle yoga, third class power hour yoga. Free. Ages 12 and older. 678983-7717, doinyoga.net or doinyoga@gmail.com Gordon Sawyer: “Marketing Your Book the Old-Fashioned Way and the E-Way.” Gainesville. 1-3 p.m. Nov. 7. Free. Peach State Bank, 325 Washington St., Gainesville. Northeast Georgia Writers, www.negawriters.org,

HolmesLynda@bellsouth. net. 21st annual Marketplace. 6:30-9:30 p.m. Nov. 8. Gainesville Civic Center, Gainesville. Proceeds benefit Radiation Oncology at The Cancer Center at Northeast Georgia Medical Center. 770-219-1830. Veterans Day Program, Pine Mountain. 9:3010:30 a.m. Nov. 10. F. D. Roosevelt State Park, 2970 Ga. 190, Pine Mountain. $5 parking. 706-663-4858, www.GeorgiaStateParks. org/fdroosevelt 9th annual Dahlonega Literary Festival. Nov. 10-11. www.literaryfestival.org. East Georgia Genealogical Society monthly meeting, Winder. 2 p.m. Nov. 13. Piedmont Regional Library, Belview St., Winder. Its mission is to raise the standard of genealogical research through educational programs, workshops, publication of data, promotion of the collections and preservation of records. www.rootsweb.com.

Ongoing

Rot-N-Rusty’s Haunted

Tallulah Gorge State Park. 706-754-7981.

Upcoming

Tour de Tugaloo, Toccoa. 8 a.m. Nov. 3. Yonah Dam Park, Toccoa. 10th annual bike ride in memory of Lainie Weade benefits the Stephens County Foundation in support of the Tugaloo River Project. Discount for 10 or more. Information/registration tourdetugaloo.com and active. com. Evening Kayak and Wildlife Watching Adventures, Winder. 4–6 p.m. Nov. 9. Fort Yargo State Park, Winder. The stealthy kayak is a great vessel to sneak up on all sorts of wildlife. Ages 4 and older. $15, $5 parking. 770-867-3489. “Run of The Mill” 5K. 8 a.m. Tot Trot, 8:30 a.m. 5K, Nov. 10. 1210 West Ridge Road, Gainesville. Benefits student ministries of Montgomery Memorial Baptist Church. Tot Trot $15, 1K $15, 5K $20, Phantom Runner $20. Register at active.com. 770-534-3469. Stars Over Elachee hands-on telescope workshop, Gainesville. 5–7 p.m. Nov. 17. Elachee Nature Science Center. Learn how a telescope works, how to set up a large 6-inch Dobsonian telescope and then use it to take a tour of the moon, planets, stars and constellations. Reservations are required for each of the telescopes. $10 adults, $5 under 12 and free for Elachee members. Recommended for ages 8 and up. 770-535-1976

get out Northeast Georgia’s entertainment guide

To have your event listed we need: ■ The name, time and date of the event, and a short description ■ The location, street address ■ Admission and contact information ■ Send to getout@gainesvilletimes.com ONLY emails will be accepted. No faxes, flyers, mailers or phone calls. The deadline to have your event listed in Get Out is the FRIDAY before the next publication. Listings run at the discretion of the editor. If you would like to place an ad, call Betty Thompson at 770-532-1234 or email bthompson@gainesvilletimes.com House, Dahlonega. Dusk to 11 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays until Oct. 31. 312 Riley Road, Dahlonega. $14. Not recommended for children. Proceeds go to local charity. 706-867-9105, www.rottenrusty.com. Buford Lanier Woman’s

Club monthly meeting, Buford. 9:30 a.m. second Wednesdays. Buford Community Center, 2200 Buford Highway, Buford. Meetings start with coffee and fellowship. www. bufordlanierwomansclub. com.

Full Moon Hike, Tallulah Falls. 6– 8 p.m. Nov. 28. Tallulah Gorge State Park, Tallulah Falls. Enjoy the gorge in the magical, shimmering light of the full moon. $5 admission, $5 parking. 706-754-7981. Jingle Bell Run/Walk, Lawrenceville. 8 a.m. Dec. 1. 2125 Tribble Mill Parkway, Lawrenceville. Wear a holidaythemed costume and tie jingle bells to your shoelaces. Adult $30, ages 18 to 6 $25, 5 and younger $10. 678237-4458, pmcadams@arthritis.org or www.jbrwgwinnett. org


gainesvilletimes.com/getout •

Thursday, October 25, 2012

get out

PAGE

presents

The Broadway Hit Musical SHOWTIMES: November 15 - December 9

5IVSTEBZ 'SJEBZ 4BUVSEBZ QN t 4VOEBZ QN .BUJOFF Director Musical Director Amanda Leigh Pickard Bob Russell

Annie is a Broadway musical based upon the popular Harold Gray comic strip Little Orphan Annie. The original Broadway production opened in 1977 and ran for nearly 6 years. It spawned numerous productions in any countries, as well as national tours and won the Tony Award for Best Musical.

BK Productions will bring this delightful musical to the Cumming Playhouse stage in November. Audiences will enjoy the wonderful musical score with memorable songs such as Tomorrow, Maybe, Hard Knock Life and Easy Street. And don’t forget the hilarious characters such as Miss Hannigan, Rooster, Lily and of course, Daddy Warbucks and Annie herself.

Bring the whole family this holiday season to the Cumming Playhouse. Annie (with a live “on stage� band) will warm your hearts with laughter, music and comedy that the whole family will enjoy. What better way to start your holiday season with your kids and grandkids!!!!


CMYK

CMYK PAGE

go o y famil

Thursday, October 25, 2012 | gainesvilletimes.com/getout

Take a shine to Dawsonville Festival celebrates

area’s history

From staff reports A large array of antique vendors will gather Oct. 2728 for the Braselton Antique & Holiday Festival in the town’s downtown park. Antique and collectible dealers, nurseries, crafters, furniture collections, primitives, ironworks, vintage jewelry, pottery, glassware, yard art, soaps and candles, dolls and food items will be showcased from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. Admission and parking are free. Food vendors will offer sandwiches, hot dogs, pretzels and ice cream. “There is such variety to enjoy, and we’ve assembled the largest group of dealers ever for our festival,” said Donna Cannella, the festival coordinator. Braselton Park is located at 115 Harrison St. a block from Ga. 53. For more information, visit www. countrysideantiques.net or call 706-824-7204.

By michele hester Times regional staff

Dawsonville’s unique history comes alive this weekend with the 45th annual Mountain Moonshine Festival. The festivities begin Friday morning with the annual “Moonshine Run” that begins at the Georgia Racing Hall of Fame. Later that night, the events continue with the Georgia Racing Hall of Fame’s induction ceremony, followed by a classic car cruise-in and live band at the Dawsonville Municipal Complex. Early the next day, the roar of moonshine-era cars will fill the town as a procession of 1940 Fords line the square and signal the start of the weekend festival, which draws hundreds of vendors from across the Southeast to Dawsonville. Serving as grand marshal, championship car owner and NASCAR Hall of Famer Bud Moore will lead the parade and announce the festival’s official start about 9 a.m. on the main stage near Dawsonville’s Historic Courthouse. Live entertainment and a variety of activities will continue throughout the weekend. One of the most unique fall gatherings in north Georgia, the Mountain Moonshine Festival brings an estimated 100,000 visitors looking for mementos of a bygone era in Georgia history to Dawsonville every year.

Antique dealers to fill Braselton park

FILE | The Times

Organizers are anticipating an even bigger crowd for the 45th annual Mountain Moonshine Festival in Dawsonville. Festivities begin Friday morning.

Organizers are anticipating an even bigger crowd for the 45th annual event, which raises funds for Dawson County children in need. “Every year we look for new ways to make the festival more fun for everybody,” said Calvin Byrd, president of K.A.R.E. for Kids, which puts on the festival. New this year is a free concert Saturday night featuring Feedback and Across the Wide in the Winner’s Circle at the Dawsonville Municipal Complex. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. and organizers encourage everyone to bring chairs or blankets to enjoy an evening of live entertainment under the stars.

Mountain Moonshine Festival When: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 27-28 Where: Downtown Dawsonville More info: 706-216-5273, www. kareforkids.us, www.dawson.org

Organizers also expect the grand opening of the Dawsonville Moonshine Distillery to be a big draw for this year’s festival. “They’re in there making legal moonshine right now,” said volunteer Gordon Pirkle. “Now that’s something to see.”

www.gainesvilletimes.com/getout


CMYK CMYK

goo family

gainesvilletimes.com/getout | Thursday, October 25, 2012

History Center tours ghostly hangouts From staff reports Northeast Georgia History Center’s 10th annual Ghost Walk will spin yarns about ghosts and haunts, but unlike campfire stories, these tales are all true, based on local events, history and legend. “It’s not a scary walk, but it is eerie,” said Kathy Amos, Brenau University Learning and Leisure Institute director, who helped research the stories. Last year, hundreds of participants took part in the tour, which meandered from the history center on Academy Street to different stops on the Brenau campus. And investigators with the Southeastern Institute of Paranormal

Research came along, discovering a new haunt in Brenau’s Pearce Auditorium. “One of the investigators was up on the catwalk over the stage, while the rest of us were outside. She said she heard footsteps on the stage, but when she looked down, no one was there,” Amos said. Tour guides will lead groups from the center on 322 Academy St. in Gainesville to each of seven story-telling stations where they will learn about the area’s paranormal history. The tours will leave every 20 minutes — rain or shine — between 6 and 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Some of the tales featured well-known characters like the storied ladies of the lake

and Agnes, who is said to be Brenau’s resident ghost. Other stories had less well-known characters, like Dr. Hilbert Tingley, a New York doctor who met an untimely death and somehow ended up in a plot in Alta Vista Cemetery in Gainesville. Although the history center’s staff have pieced together some of Tingley’s puzzle, there are still a lot of unanswered questions. “The tour will feature old legends as well as newly discovered ones,” said Julie Carson, history center education and volunteer coordinator. And because some of the stories may be more frightening than others, the tour isn’t recommended for

children younger than 10. Seven walks per evening will be departing from the History Center at 6, 6:20, 6:40, 7, 7:20, 7:40 and 8 p.m. The tickets, which are still available, are $8 for History Center members and $10 for nonmembers. Groups are limited to 20 to 25 participants each, so center staff strongly encourage advance reservations. To save your spot, call 770-297-5900 or visit www.negahc.org. Because the stories include walking and standing for almost two hours, organizers say the Ghost Walk isn’t recommended for participants with mobility issues.

PAGE

Piedmont offers frights, delights

go o y famil From staff reports

Students at Piedmont College are planning new ways to scare you and have fun with a haunted house and Halloween fair at the campus from 7-11 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26, in Demorest. Both events are free. For older kids and adults who dare, tour the haunted house at Getman-Babcock dormitory, where scenes from the zombie-horror novel “The Infection” will be recreated. The haunted house will include flashing lights, loud noises and graphic scenes, and is not suited for young children. Next door in the student center, the Kids Halloween Town Fair is geared for all ages. There will be face painting, candy, coloring and much more. For more information, contact Natalie Crawford at 706-778-8500, ext. 1050, or email ncrawford@ piedmont.edu. The events are sponsored by the Piedmont Campus Activity Board.


get out Thursday, October 25, 2012

8-9

PAGE

family

music

movies

Get Out

Tillers Folly, Dahlonega. 8 p.m. Oct. 26. $15. The Crimson Moon Cafe, 24 N. Park St., Dahlonega. 706-864-3982, www. thecrimsonmoon.com.

2nd annual Trick-or-Treat Trail, Gainesville. 3-5 p.m. Oct. 27. Midtown Greenway, Grove St., Gainesville. Petting zoo, costume contest and games. Bring a canned food item for the Georgia Mountain Food

The Associated Press

Jazz Jam with Rick Harris, Dahlonega. Oct. 28. 7 p.m. $5. The Crimson Moon Cafe, 24 N. Park St., Dahlonega. 706-864-3982, www. thecrimsonmoon.com.

review, 10

On one level, the film plays like a desperate plea for compassion at a time when the world is becoming increasingly intolerant. It provides a few moments likely to have you wiping your eyes. ... The problem is, I admired “Cloud Atlas” more than I enjoyed it.

‘Cloud Atlas’

THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY

weekeND plANNeR

Northeast Georgia’s entertainment guide

gainesvilletimes.com/getout

For Get Out


Trunk-or-Treat Festivities, Sautee Nacoochee. 6-7 p.m. Oct. 31. Historic SNCA Campus, Sautee Nacoochee. Proceeds go to the Sautee Nacoochee Community Association. 706-865-4857 or 706-7686311 Trick-or-Treat on the Square. 5-7 p.m. Oct. 31. Downtown Clarkesville. All Hallows Eve Event/Autumn Hayride, Winder. 4-10 p.m. Oct. 31. Learn about All Hallows Eve from the 18th century as well as taking a hayride through the park. Learn about life in the late 1700s. Tours includes interactive activities and educational opportunities. $5 plus $5 parking. Fort Yargo State Park 770-8673489. Trick-or-Treat on the Square, Clarkesville. 5-7 p.m. Oct. 31. Downtown Clarkesville. Haunting on Main, Cornelia. 6-10 p.m. Oct. 31. Old Cornelia Bank Building, 2 Irvin St., Cornelia. Children 13 and younger must be accompanied by an adult.

For Get Out

NOV. 17: NOV. 30:

“The Nutcracker,” Gainesville. 7:30 p.m. and 2 p.m. Nov. 30-Dec. 2. Pearce Auditorium, Brenau University, Gainesville. $12 children, $18 adults, $14 seniors. 770532-4241, www.gainesvilleballet.org.

“Gloria,” Dawsonville. 7:30 p.m. Nov. 17. 900 Ga. 9 N., Dawsonville. $10 general admission, $8 students and Dawson County Arts Council members, children 10 and younger free. 706-216-2787.

Mountain Music & Medicine Show, Dahlonega. 8 p.m. Nov. 3. $15. The Holly Theater, 69 W. Main St., Dahlonega. Chili Cookoff & Car Show, Lula. 9:30 a.m. Nov. 3. 6459 Main St. Lula. $15 early registrants, $20 on registration day. 678-316-6003 or 770-869-3200. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Athens. 3 p.m. Nov. 4. Hodgson Concert Hall, Athens. 706542-4400 or 888-289-8497, www.pac.uga. edu.

For Get Out

lOOkING AHeAD

NOV. 3:

For Get Out

“Rocky Horror Show,” Clarkesville. 9 p.m. Oct. 26-27. Habersham Community Theater, 1370 Washington St., Clarkesville. $16. 706-839-1315, www. habershamtheater.org

Georgia Mountain Players presents “The Education of Angels,” Gainesville. 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25-26 and 2:30 p.m. Oct. 27. Georgia Mountains Center Theatre, $17 adults, $13 seniors, students and children. Tickets available at GMC box office or by phone, Web. Additional fees apply when ordering by phone or Internet. 770-534-8420.

65th Annual Members’ Exhibition, Gainesville. Through Dec. 1. Showcase of Quinlan members’ artwork. Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514 Green St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575, www.quinlanartscenter.org.

OcT. 31:

theater

arts

Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month, Gainesville. Through October. Inman Perk Café, Washington Street, Downtown Gainesville. Artwork by Mexican artists Mario Buzan: photographs, and Judy Martinez: paintings.

Get Out

Bank Pool Pumpkin Patch Palooza. Free.


CMYK PAGE

10

Thursday, October 25, 2012 | gainesvilletimes.com/getout

go o movies

‘Cloud’ a brave effort at complex tale JEFF MARKER jmarker@gsc.edu

Film Review In 1916, D.W. Griffith followed up his racist yet massively successful film “Birth of a Nation” with “Intolerance,” a 3«-hour long epic consisting of four separate stories, each set in a different time and place: ancient Babylon, the time of Christ, France in 1572 and contemporary America. The only thing that binds the stories is the theme of intolerance, and the structure was completely unprecedented. Rather than telling each story in its entirety then moving on to the next like an anthology, Griffith intercuts the stories — one scene from one story, then a scene from another story, and so on. Warner Bros. During the climactic sequence, Griffith melds the stories even Jim Broadbent, left, and Ben Whislaw in a scene from “Cloud Atlas,” an epic spanning centuries and genres. more intricately, cutting among individual actions within the stories. and Tom Tykwer (“Run Lola stories together, and the movie So bravo to the Wachowskis “Intolerance” is impressive Run”). It features a stellar cast borrows from musical structure. and Tykwer. I hope you continue from a technical standpoint lead by Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, The stories are like movements to be so bold. (to this day, every film major Susan Sarandon, Hugh Grant, in a symphony or variations on The problem is, I admired watches it), but for the most part Jim Broadbent, Hugo Weaving, a musical theme, each used “Cloud Atlas” more than I moviegoers found it tedious and Jim Sturgess, Ben Wishaw, Keith sometimes as melody and enjoyed it. Just like “Intolerance,” confusing. It was the beginning David, Xun Zhou and Doona sometimes as counter-melody. the second act drags painfully. of the end for Griffith, who Bae. The film repeatedly comes back And for a solid hour, I wasn’t sure gradually fell into complete This is a mammoth production to this refrain, which provides the what this movie is about. The irrelevance. that will surely generate a lot of work’s core meaning: “Our lives movie asks viewers to show a No one since then has conversation. are not our own. We are bound great deal of patience. attempted the same technique The ideas here are genuinely to others, past and present. Each of the actors plays on the same epic scale — until beautiful. On one level, the film And by each crime and every a role in each story, wearing now. plays like a desperate plea for kindness, we birth our future.” prosthetics and makeup to “Cloud Atlas” tells six stories, compassion at a time when the It’s a highly philosophical, high give them a radically different each set in a different time world is becoming increasingly concept film, made all the more appearance in each tale. This and place, all linked by the intolerant. It provides a few risky by its structure and scope. choice is supposed to hint that themes of freedom and the moments likely to have you I admire filmmakers with the these are the same characters interconnectedness of human wiping your eyes. courage to attempt something reincarnated into various times beings. The structure is lovely in some novel, to put a work of art into and to underscore the theme of Based on a David Mitchell ways, too. A piece of classical the world knowing full well that interconnectedness. novel, the movie was co-written music written by one of the no matter how effectively they But after a while it drifts into and co-directed by Andy and characters, called the “Cloud realize their vision, many will gimmick. The audience began Lana Wachowski (“The Matrix”) Atlas Sextet,” helps tie the dismiss or even mock it. playing spot the actor rather

‘Cloud Atlas’ Starring: Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, Jim Broadbent, Hugo Weaving, Jim Sturgess Rated: R, for violence, language, sexuality/nudity and some drug use Runtime: 2 hours, 44 minutes Bottom line: Ambitious but confusing

than focusing on the philosophy the filmmakers were trying to espouse. And while the climax of the interweaved stories is moving, the filmmakers then tack on an epilogue for each story, too. They’re aiming for a powerful final statement, but that power is sapped by redundancy as the same point is made several times. “Cloud Atlas” is both a great achievement and a confounding movie. It is worth the attention of every serious movie fan, but those fans should expect to walk away divided over the film’s merits. Jeff Marker teaches film and literature at Gainesville State College. His reviews appear weekly in Get Out and on gainesvilletimes.com/getout.


goo movies

CMYK

gainesvilletimes.com/getout | Thursday, October 25, 2012

Showtimes

go o movies

Hollywood Stadium Cinemas 770-539-9200 120 Green Hill Circle NW, Gainesville

Regal Mall of Georgia Stadium 20 678-482-5858

3333 Buford Drive, Suite 3000, Buford

Alex Cross (PG-13) Thu. 12:05-1:10-2:303:45-4:55-6:20-7:20-7:55-9:00-9:45-10:25 Fri.-Sat. 10:40-12:05-1:10-2:30-3:45-4:556:20-7:20-9:00-9:45-11:30-12:10 Sun. 10:40-12:05-1:10-2:30-3:45-4:55-6:20-7:209:00-9:45 Argo (R) Thu. 12:10-1:30-3:20-4:30-6:157:30-9:05-10:20 Fri.-Sun. 10:30-1:30-4:307:30-10:20 Atlas Shrugged: Part 2 (PG-13) Thu. 2:10-4:457:20-10:05 Chasing Mavericks (PG) Fri.-Sun. 12:05-2:405:15-7:50-10:25

11

Paranormal Activity 4 (R) Thu.-Sun. (12:152:35-4:55) 7:45-10:05 Pitch Perfect (PG-13) Thu.-Sun. (1:00-4:00) 7:00-9:55 Silent Hill: Revelation (R) Thu. 10:00 Fri.-Sun. (2:40) 7:30 Silent Hill: Revelation 3D (R) Fri.-Sun. (12:155:05) 9:55 Sinister (R) Thu. (1:30-4:10) 7:25-10:10 Fri.Sun. 7:10-9:50 Taken 2 (PG-13) Thu.-Sun. (12:25-2:50-5:15) 7:40-10:10 Trouble With the Curve (PG-13) Thu. (12:303:15) 6:30-9:25

Bargain shows denoted by parenthesis ( ).

Alex Cross (PG-13) Thu. 4:15-7:00-9:45 Fri.Sun. 1:45-4:15-7:00-9:45 Argo (R) Thu. 4:00-6:45-9:30 Fri.-Sun. 1:154:00-6:45-9:30 Atlas Shrugged: Part 2 (PG-13) Thu. 4:00-6:45 Chasing Mavericks (PG) Fri.-Sun. 1:45-4:157:00-9:45 Cloud Atlas (R) Fri.-Sun. 1:30-5:00-8:30 Frankenweenie (PG) Thu. 7:15 Fri.-Sun. 2:007:15 Frankenweenie 3D (PG) Thu.-Sun. 4:30-9:30 Fun Size (PG-13) Fri.-Sun. 1:15-4:00-7:00-9:30 Here Comes the Boom (PG) Thu. 4:45-7:15-9:45 Fri.-Sun. 1:45-4:45-7:15-9:45 Hotel Transylvania (PG) Thu. 7:15-9:30 Fri.-Sun. 1:30-6:45-9:15 Hotel Transylvania 3D (PG) Thu.-Sun. 4:30 House at the End of the Street (PG-13) Thu. 4:45 Fri. 2:15-4:45-7:30-10:00 Sat. 7:30-10:00 Sun. 2:15-4:45-7:30-10:00 Looper (R) Thu. 4:15-6:45-9:30 The Metropolitan Opera: Otello Live (Not Rated) Sat. 12:55 Paranormal Activity 4 (R) Thu. 4:00-4:45-7:007:30-9:15-10:00 Fri.-Sun. 1:30-2:15-4:004:45-7:00-7:30-9:15-10:00 Pitch Perfect (PG-13) Thu. 4:30-7:00-9:45 Fri.Sun. 1:15-4:15-6:45-9:30 Rifftrax Live: Birdemic (Not Rated) Thu. 8:00 Seven Psychopaths (R) Thu. 4:15-7:00 Silent Hill: Revelation (R) Thu. 9:45 Fri.-Sun. 4:30-9:45 Silent Hill: Revelation 3D (R) Thu. 9:45 Fri.-Sun. 2:00-7:00 Sinister (R) Thu. 4:30-7:00-9:45 Fri.-Sun. 2:00-4:30-7:15-9:45 Taken 2 (PG-13) Thu. 4:45-7:15-10:00 Fri.-Sun. 2:15-4:45-7:15-10:00 Trouble With the Curve (PG-13) Thu. 4:15-6:459:15

PAGE

Habersham Hills Cinemas 6 706-776-7469 2115 Cody Road, Mount Airy

Warner Bros. Pictures

Tom Hanks, as Zachry, hugs Halle Berry, as Meronym, in a scene from “Cloud Atlas.” Cloud Atlas (R) Fri.-Sun. 12:30-2:50-4:307:00-8:30 Cloud Atlas: The IMAX Experience (R) Fri.-Sat. 12:00-4:00-8:00-11:30 Sun. 12:00-4:00-8:00 End of Watch (R) Thu. 4:15-10:10 Frankenweenie (PG) Thu. 3:15-7:45 Fri.-Sat. 10:45-3:15-7:45-12:10 Sun. 10:45-3:15-7:45 Frankenweenie 3D (PG) Thu.-Sun. 1:00-5:3010:00 Fun Size (PG-13) Fri.-Sat. 11:30-12:15-1:452:30-3:55-4:45-7:10-9:20-11:35 Sun. 11:3012:15-1:45-2:30-3:55-4:45-7:10-9:20 Here Comes the Boom (PG) Thu. 12:15-1:302:45-4:00-5:15-7:05-9:35 Fri.-Sat. 11:001:30-4:00-7:05-9:35-12:05 Sun. 11:00-1:304:00-7:05-9:35 Hotel Transylvania (PG) Thu. 1:50-2:55-4:106:45-7:40 Fri.-Sat. 12:00-2:15-2:50-4:357:05-7:40-12:10 Sun. 12:00-2:15-2:50-4:357:05-7:40 Hotel Transylvania 3D (PG) Thu.-Sun. 12:305:20-9:55 Looper (R) Thu. 1:20-4:25-7:15-10:05 Fri.Sun. 12:00-10:35 Paranormal Activity 4 (R) Thu. 12:45-1:252:55-12:00-2:20-3:40-4:40-5:15-5:557:00-7:30-8:10-9:20-9:45-10:25 Fri.-Sat. 11:10-12:45-1:25-2:55-3:40-5:15-5:55-7:258:10-9:50-10:25-12:01 Sun. 11:10-12:451:25-2:55-3:40-5:15-5:55-7:25-8:10-9:5010:25 The Perks of Being a Wallflower (PG-13) Thu. 12:00-2:30-4:55-7:30-9:55 Fri.-Sun. 12:002:25-4:55-7:25-9:55 Pitch Perfect (PG-13) Thu. 2:20-5:00-7:3510:15 Fri.-Sun. 11:40-2:20-5:00-7:35-10:15 Seven Psychopaths (R) Thu. 2:25-5:05-7:5010:30 Fri.-Sat. 9:25-11:55 Sun. 9:25 Silent Hill: Revelation (R) Thu. 10:15 Fri.-Sat.

12:40-2:55-5:10-7:30-9:45-12:01 Sun. 12:40-2:55-5:10-7:30-9:45 Silent Hill: Revelation 3D (R) Thu. 10:00 Fri.Sat. 12:10-2:25-4:40-7:00-9:15-11:30 Sun. 12:10-2:25-4:40-7:00-9:15 Sinister (R) Thu. 2:10-4:50-7:45-10:30 Fri.Sun. 11:20-2:10-4:50-7:45-10:30 Taken 2 (PG-13) Thu. 12:50-2:00-3:10-4:305:35-7:00-8:00-10:20 Fri.-Sat. 10:30-12:503:10-5:35-7:00-8:00-9:20-10:20-11:40 Sun. 10:30-12:50-3:10-5:35-7:00-8:00-9:2010:20 Won’t Back Down (PG) Thu. 1:00-7:10

Movies 400 678-513-4400

415 Atlanta Road, Cumming

2016: Obama’s America (PG) Thu. (12:00-5:10) Alex Cross (PG-13) Thu.-Sun. (1:10-3:45) 7:2010:00 Argo (R) Thu.-Sun. (12:45-3:35) 6:45-9:35 Atlas Shrugged: Part 2 (PG-13) Thu. (1:00-3:45) 6:30-9:15 Chasing Mavericks (PG) Fri.-Sun. (12:00-3:00) 6:30-9:30 Cloud Atlas (R) Fri.-Sun. (1:00-4:35) 8:10 Frankenweenie (PG) Thu. (12:00-4:45) 9:30 Fri.-Sun. (12:00-2:20-4:45) Fun Size (PG-13) Fri.-Sun. (12:30-2:50-5:10) 7:35-10:00 Halloween (R) Thu. 7:30 Here Comes the Boom (PG) Thu.-Sun. (12:503:25) 6:50-9:25 Hotel Transylvania (PG) Thu.-Sun. (12:00-2:254:55) 7:20 Hotel Transylvania 3D (PG) Thu. (2:20) 7:05 Looper (R) Thu. (2:20) 10:20

Alex Cross (PG-13) Thu.-Fri. 4:30-7:15-9:45 Sat.-Sun. 1:15-4:30-7:15-9:45 Argo (R) Thu. 7:00-9:30 Cloud Atlas (R) Fri. 4:30-8:00 Sat.-Sun. 1:004:30-8:00 Fun Size (PG-13) Fri. 5:15-7:30-9:45 Sat.Sun. 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:30-9:45 Here Comes the Boom (PG) Thu.-Fri. 4:007:00-9:30 Sat.-Sun. 1:30-4:00-7:00-9:30 Hotel Transylvania (PG) Thu. 5:15-7:30-9:45 Paranormal Activity 4 (R) Thu.-Fri. 5:15-7:309:45 Sat.-Sun. 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:30-9:45 Pitch Perfect (PG-13) Thu. 4:15 Taken 2 (PG-13) Thu.-Fri. 5:30-7:45-10:00 Sat.-Sun. 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:00

Dawson 400 Stadium Cinemas 706-216-1622 189 North 400 Center Lane, Dawsonville

Alex Cross (PG-13) Thu. 5:10-7:35-9:55 Fri.Sun. 12:35-2:55-5:10-7:35-9:55 Argo (R) Thu. 4:15-7:15-9:15 Fri.-Sun. 1:054:15-7:15-9:15 Atlas Shrugged: Part 2 (PG-13) Thu. 4:10-7:20 Chasing Mavericks (PG) Fri.-Sun. 1:10-4:107:10-9:10 Fun Size (PG-13) Fri.-Sun. 12:40-2:50-5:007:20-9:30 Here Comes the Boom (PG) Thu. 4:05-7:159:35 Fri.-Sun. 1:00-4:05-7:15-9:35 Hotel Transylvania (PG) Thu. 4:55-7:00-9:50 Fri.-Sun. 12:35-4:55-7:00-9:50 Hotel Transylvania 3D (PG) Fri.-Sun. 2:45 Paranormal Activity 4 (R) Thu. 4:50-7:30-9:40 Fri.-Sun. 12:30-2:40-4:50-7:30-9:40 Pitch Perfect (PG-13) Thu. 4:05-7:00-9:30 Fri.-Sun. 12:50 Seven Psychopaths (R) Thu. 4:00-9:30 Silent Hill: Revelation (R) Thu. 10:00 Fri.-Sun. 12:30-4:55-9:25 Silent Hill: Revelation 3D (R) Fri.-Sun. 2:457:10 Sinister (R) Thu. 4:00-7:00-9:35 Fri.-Sun. 4:00-7:00-9:30 Taken 2 (PG-13) Thu. 4:50-7:05-9:50 Fri.-Sun. 12:30-2:40-4:50-7:05-9:50 Trouble With the Curve (PG-13) Thu. 7:00


CMYK PAGE

12

go o movies

Thursday, October 25, 2012 | gainesvilletimes.com/getout

now showing

Online

Movie reviews from Associated Press. Stars out of four.

Find more movie reviews and showtimes at gainesvilletimes.com/ movies.

opening

‘Cloud Atlas’ ■ Review, 10

Continuing

‘Seven Psychopaths’ HH½ (R for strong violence, bloody images, pervasive language, sexuality, nudity and some drug use.) In his second movie, Irish playwright Martin McDonagh has mangled together a comic, self-aware revenge flick that’s half Guy Ritchie, half Charlie Kaufman. It’s manic and messy. But it’s also filled with deranged wit and unpredictable genre deconstruction that make it, if not quite a success, a fascinating mutt of a movie. Colin Farrell plays Marty, a hard-drinking screenwriter in Los Angeles. He has his movie title — “Seven Psychopaths” — but little else. He gets sucked into the hijinks of his friend Billy (Sam Rockwell), whose dog-napping scheme turns bloody when Billy and his friend Hans (Christopher Walken) swipe the Shih Tzu of a pooch-loving gangster (Woody Harrelson). Rockwell — enthusiastic and deranged — is exceptional. In the film’s meta narrative, he’s a kind of stand-in for movies, themselves: violent, funny, crazy and irresistible. When the action decamps to the desert, the film finds its footing. The writer-director is best in such Beckett-like limbos, heavy with Catholic guilt — an enthralling talent even when obscured by all the selfaware playfulness here. After breaking apart the crime film, he puts it back together again for a conclusion worthy of the genre. And in the end, the movies — in all their insanity — win.

Summit Entertainment

Edward Burns, left, and Tyler Perry in a scene from “Alex Cross.”

‘Alex Cross’ H½ (PG-13 for violence including disturbing images, sexual content, language, drug references and nudity.) James Patterson titled his 12th Alex Cross crime novel simply “Cross.” The filmmakers who adapted it expanded the title to “Alex Cross.” They might as well have gone for broke and called it “Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Stab at Expanding Her-His Hollywood Marketability as James Patterson’s Alex Cross.” Perry’s name will draw his fans in. Patterson’s name will draw his fans in. There’s no trace of Madea in director Rob Cohen’s adaptation, yet the spirit of the sassy grandma inevitably hangs over the project for viewers curious to see Perry playing

it straight and dramatic. Alex Cross the man and “Alex Cross” the movie wind up suffering for it. It’s perfectly reasonable for Perry to try to broaden his enormous popularity beyond the Madea lineage in his own raucous portraits of family life. It’s also perfectly reasonable to say that casting Perry as Cross was a bad idea, though it’s not necessarily the worst in a movie built on bad ideas. Perry looks the part of Patterson’s big, athletic hero, but he’s low-keybordering-on-sleepwalker dull, and the standard-issue cop-vs.-serial-killer story presents Cross as more of a dopey psycho-babbler than a guy whose incisive mind cuts right to the heart of the case. With Edward Burns,

Matthew Fox and Cicely Tyson. ‘Argo’ HHHH (R for language and some violent images.)

A movie about the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis probably doesn’t sound like it would be a laugh riot but that’s just one of the many ways in which this is a glorious, gripping surprise. Directing his third feature, Ben Affleck shows a deft handling of tone, especially in making difficult transitions between scenes in Tehran, Washington and Hollywood, but also gives one of his strongest performances yet in front of the camera as the film’s star. “Argo” reveals his further mastery of pacing and storytelling, even as he juggles complicated set pieces, various locations and a

cast featuring 120 speaking parts. And the story he’s telling sounds impossible, but it’s absolutely true (with a few third-act tweaks to magnify the drama). When protestors stormed the U.S. embassy in Tehran, taking 52 people hostage, six employees sneaked out a back door and sought refuge at the home of Canadian Ambassador Ken Taylor (Victor Garber). Longtime CIA operative Tony Mendez (Affleck) comes up with a crazy scheme to rescue them: He’ll fly to Tehran, pretend that they all entered the country together to scout locations for a schlocky scifi movie called “Argo,” then walk right out the front door with them and fly home. Bryan Cranston, John Goodman and Alan Arkin are among the excellent supporting cast.


CMYK

goo family

gainesvilletimes.com/getout | Thursday, October 25, 2012

PAGE

13

Hit the trail for tricks, treats Tour Jefferson’s local haunts From staff reports A new Halloween tradition begun last year will continue this season when Gainesville Parks and Recreation presents its 2nd annual Trick or Treat on the Trail. The Midtown Greenway on Grove Street will come alive with superheroes, goblins and princesses from 3-5 p.m. Saturday. The event is free. The Midtown Greenway trail will be lined with whimsically painted house fronts, games, bounce houses and a petting zoo. “Trick or Treat on the Trail was created to give children a safe alternative for trick or treating without losing the traditional feel of dashing door to door and also to highlight our community’s trail systems,” said Julie Butler Colombini, marketing and communications manager for the Parks and Rec department. Last year’s event at Rock Creek Park was overflowing with trick-or-treaters enjoying the fun events while collecting

Family events This week

Ghostly Gathering, Gainesville. All day. Oct. 26. Trick-or-treating, games. Public Shopping Center, Dawsonville Highway, Gainesville. 770-267-0060. Halloween fair, Demorest. 7–11 p.m. Oct. 26. Free. 706-778-8500 ext. 1050 or ncrawford@piedmont.edu. Community Contra Dance, Sautee. Free lesson 7:30 p.m.; dance 8-11 p.m. Oct. 27. Sautee Nacoochee Center historic gym, Ga. 283 and 255 North. Live music and easy-tofollow calling. All ages. No experience necessary. $8 adults, $4 students, children younger than 8, free. 706-754-3254, SNCA. org. Hillbilly Hog BBQ Throwdown-Kids Q, Cleveland. Oct. 27. BabyLand General Hospital, Cleveland. www. cabbagepatchkids.com.

Trick or Treat on the Trail When: 3-5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 27 Where: Midtown Greenway, Grove Street How much: Free More info: 770-531-2680, www. gainesville.org/recreation

treats. Colombini said the event was moved to the Midtown Greenway this year because its 12-foot wide trails and large open space allowed room for more visitors. “The Midtown Greenway is the newest gem in our city’s greenway system, and we want everyone to enjoy it,” she said. Visitors can bring canned food donations to aid the Georgia Mountain Food Bank’s Pool Pumpkin Patch Palooza. For more information, contact 770531-2680 or visit www.gainesville.org/ recreation.

Halloween Spooktacular & Costume Contest, Cornelia. Noon to 3 p.m. Oct. 27. The Historic Cornelia Train Depot, 102 Clarkesville St., Cornelia. Trunk-or-Treat Festivities, Sautee Nacoochee. 6-7 p.m. Oct. 31. Historic SNCA Campus, Sautee Nacoochee. Proceeds go to the Sautee Nacoochee Community Association. 706-865-4857 or 706-7686311 Trick-or-Treat on the Square. 5-7 p.m. Oct. 31. Downtown Clarkesville. All Hallows Eve Event/

Autumn Hayride, Winder. 4-10 p.m. Oct. 31. Learn about All Hallows Eve from the 18th century as well as taking a hayride through the park. Learn about life in the late 1700s. $5 plus $5 parking. Fort Yargo State Park 770-867-3489. Trick-or-Treat on the Square, Clarkesville. 5-7 p.m. Oct. 31. Downtown Clarkesville. Haunting on Main, Cornelia. 6-10 p.m. Oct. 31. Old Cornelia Bank Building, 2 Irvin St., Cornelia. Children 13 and younger must be accompanied by an adult.

From staff reports

The ghosts of Jefferson will be summoned this weekend to share their tales of the past. The Crawford W. Long Museum Association, in collaboration with the Georgia Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Arts, will offer a glimpse into Jefferson’s past at Woodbine Cemetery. Local figures from the Revolutionary War to the early 20th century will tell their stories when the Crawford Long Museum Association presents the first ‘Haints and Saints’ cemetery tours Oct. 2627. The walking tours will begin at 7:30 p.m. and

go o y famil

‘Haints and Saints cemetery tours’

When: Oct. 26-27; tours begin at 7:30 p.m., final tours at 10:30 p.m. Where: Crawford W. Long Museum, 28 College St., Jefferson How much: $12; reservations required More info: 706-367-5307, www.crawfordlong.org

depart the museum every 30 minutes, with the last tour set for 10:30 p.m. The guided tours will take attendees through downtown Jefferson and the cemetery, where volunteer actors in period costume will present dramatic first-person accounts of the lives of a half-dozen cemetery residents. The accounts, based on historic records, give first-

person views of regional and local events. Admission is $12, with advance required by calling 706-3675307 or visiting www. crawfordlong.org. One child under 12 is admitted free with a paying adult. Participants must be able to walk five city blocks. This event is suitable for children ages 6 and older.


CMYK

CMYK PAGE

14

go o the arts

Thursday, October 25, 2012 | gainesvilletimes.com/getout

Award-winning author Greene visits North Ga. From staff reports Award-winning author and journalist Melissa Fay Greene will visit North Georgia College & State University on Nov. 1 to talk about her latest nonfiction book, a story about herself and her husband raising their own four children and five others adopted from foreign orphanages. “No Biking in the House Without a Helmet: Nine Kids, Three Continents, One Family,” is based on her 2011 book. The event, part of the university’s Visiting Authors Program, begins at 7 p.m. in the Health & Natural Sciences Auditorium at North Georgia and is free and open to the public. In the book, she writes: “We’ve steered by the light of what brings us joy, what makes us laugh, and what feels right and true. In shaky times, I’ve thought, ‘Did we take on too many?’ ‘Is the whole family at risk of capsizing?’ ‘What do the experts say?’ But we and the children seem to be thriving; it seems we have been right to trust love, laughter, and happiness.” A native of Macon, Greene and her husband, defense attorney Don Samuel, have lived in Georgia since 1975. They live in Atlanta and are the parents of six sons and three daughters. Greene is the author of five books of nonfiction: “Praying for Sheetrock” (1991), “The Temple Bombing” (1996), “Last Man Out” (2003), “There Is No Me Without You: One Woman’s Odyssey to Rescue her Country’s Children” (2006), and “No Biking in the House Without A Helmet” (2011). “Praying For Sheetrock,” about race relations and the “good old boy” network in McIntosh County, was named one of the top 100 works of American journalism of the 20th century and appears on Entertainment Weekly‘s list of “The New Classics-The 100 Best Books of the Last 25 Years.”

Giant Book Sale begins today at Westminster gym

theater events

The second annual Giant Book Sale is scheduled for Thursday through Sunday in the Westminster Presbyterian Church gymnasium, 1397 Thompson Bridge Road in Gainesville. The event is sponsored by Friends of Hall County Public Library System and Our Neighbor Inc., which will benefit from the proceeds. More than 20,000 gently used books and audiovisual materials will be available. Everything, except for collectibles, will be priced under $5, with many items at $1. Cash, checks and credit cards will be accepted. The preview sale runs from 6-9 p.m. Thursday for $5 admission. The regular sale is 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, followed by the “fire sale” from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. From staff reports

This week

Arts events This Week

“Embrace,” paintings by Jennifer Hartley, Oakwood. Display through Oct. 25. Roy C. Moore Art Gallery, Gainesville State College. 3820 Mundy Mill Road, Oakwood. Free. 678-7173707, www.gsc.edu. 2012 HAHC Juried Competition, Helen. Through Oct. 27. Helen Arts & Heritage Council, 25 Chattahoochee St., Helen. Free. 706-878-3933, www. helenarts.org.

Lenn Redman: A History of the Caricaturist, Gainesville. Through Oct. 28. Simmons Visual Arts Center, Presidents Gallery and John S. Burd Center for the Performing Arts Castelli Gallery, Brenau University, Gainesville. Free. 770-5346263. www.brenau.edu. Mary Ann Klimek Pottery Classes, Gainesville. 7-9 p.m. Thursdays Sept. 6Oct. 25. Quinlan members $130, nonmembers $150. Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514 Green St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575, www.quinlanartscenter.org.

Georgia Mountain Players presents “The Education of Angels,” Gainesville. 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25-26 and 2:30 p.m. Oct. 27. Georgia Mountains Center Theatre, $17 adults, $13 seniors, students and children. Tickets available at GMC box office or by phone, web. Additional fees apply when ordering by phone or Internet. 770534-8420. “Rocky Horror Show,” Clarkesville. 9 p.m. Oct. 26-27. Habersham Community Theater, 1370 Washington St., Clarkesville. $16. 706-839-1315, www. habershamtheater.org An Evening With Mark Twain, Dahlonega. 8 p.m. Oct. 27. The Holly Theater, 69 W. Main St., Dahlonega. $15. “Something Old, Something New,” Demorest. 5 p.m. Oct. 30. Brooks Hall, Piedmont College, Demorest. 706-778-3000 Ext. 1152 The Capitol Steps, Athens. 8 p.m. Oct. 30. Hodgson Concert Hall, Athens. 706-542-4400 or 888-

289-8497, www.pac.uga. edu

Upcoming

“Cirque du Soleil,” Atlanta. 8-10 p.m. Nov. 2. Atlantic Station, 1380 Atlantic Drive, Atlanta. Proceeds go toward mission of healing children, strengthening families and building community. $50-$160. 404-262-3000, www. cirquedusoleil.com GTA’s “The Producers,” Gainesville. 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6-10 and 13-17; 2:30 p.m. Nov. 11 and 17. Brenau University’s Hosch Theatre in the John S. Burd Center, 429 Academy St., Gainesville. $20-24 for adults, $18-22 for seniors and $1416 for students. 678717-3624, gainesville theatrealliance.org.


goo music

gainesvilletimes.com/getout | Thursday, October 25, 2012

Piedmont Cantabile to perform From staff reports

The Piedmont College Cantabile will perform “Something Old, Something New” in a 5 p.m. free concert Oct. 30 at Brooks Hall in the Center for Worship and Music on the Demorest campus. Cantabile is a highly select group of nine singers that specializes in jazz, pop arrangements, and novelty songs, as well as secular and sacred chamber music from the Renaissance and early Baroque periods. With a reputation as a highly entertaining and skilled group of singers, Cantabile performs in concert, at special events on campus and in the community, and on tour. For the Oct. 30 concert, Cantabile will perform “Something Old,” including 16th century works by Palestrina and traditional Irish and English folk songs. “Something New” includes songs by Dan Fogelberg, Duke Ellington and Lennon and McCartney. Members of the Cantabile include John Wright, Brianna Foley, Rebekah Staton, Sophia Allison, Jennifer Pitt, Chris Sudderth, Brett Belamy, Lindsey Brakhage and director Wallace Hinson.

concert calendar

For Get Out

15

706-864-3982, www. thecrimsonmoon.com.

Upcoming

go o music

This week

Members of the Piedmont College Cantabile include, front from left, John Wright, Brianna Foley, Rebekah Staton; back, Sophia Allison, Jennifer Pitt, Chris Sudderth, Brett Belamy, Lindsey Brakhage and director Wallace Hinson.

PAGE

Tillers Folly, Dahlonega. 8 p.m. Oct. 26. $15. The Crimson Moon Cafe, 24 N. Park St., Dahlonega. 706-864-3982, www. thecrimsonmoon.com. Adam Kadmon with special guest Carl Jah, Dahlonega. 8 p.m. Oct. 27. Free. The Crimson Moon Cafe, 24 N. Park St., Dahlonega. 706-864-3982, www. thecrimsonmoon.com. Traditional Jam Session, Dahlonega. 2-5 p.m. Oct. 28. Free. The Crimson Moon Cafe, 24 N. Park St., Dahlonega. 706-864-3982, www.thecrimsonmoon.com. Jazz Jam with Rick Harris, Dahlonega. Oct. 28. 7 p.m. $5. The Crimson Moon Cafe, 24 N. Park St., Dahlonega.

Rush, Clock Work Angels Tour, Alpharetta. Nov. 1. Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre at Encore Park, 2200 Encore Parkway, Alpharetta. www. vzwamp.com. Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, Athens. 8 p.m. Nov. 1. Hodgson Concert Hall, Athens. 706-542-4400 or 888289-8497, www.pac.uga.edu. Mountain Music & Medicine Show, Dahlonega. 8 p.m. Nov. 3. $15. The Holly Theater, 69 W. Main St., Dahlonega. Aurora Swing Nights, Lawrenceville. 8 p.m. Nov. 3. $18. 678-226-6222, www. auroratheatre.com Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Athens. 3 p.m. Nov. 4. Hodgson Concert Hall, Athens. 706-542-4400 or 888289-8497, www.pac.uga.edu.


PAGE

16

get out

• gainesvilletimes.com/getout

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Remember when you listened to radio because you wanted to? Now, you can again.

Jay Andrews in the Morning 6 – 8 a.m. weekdays. Plus all kinds of music, informative nonpolitical talk, local news and events, and national and international news from the BBC the rest of the week. WBCX-FM 89.1 – on the radio or streaming online.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.