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Arts
October 5 – 18, 2013
CCA season has comedy, nostalgia, more Tickets are on sale for most of the Chandler Center for the Arts’ 201314 season, which features something for everyone—dance, music, comedy, nostalgia and more. Below are just some of the season highlights for the CCA, located at 250 N. Arizona Ave. in Chandler. To review the entire season lineup, visit chandlercenter.org.
Flashbacks Get your groove back with some help from “Jive Talkin’: The Australian Bee Gees Show,” a tribute to the Bee Gees, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Nov. 9. Tickets are $36-$48. The Bee Gees sold more than 200 million records worldwide and had more than 40 hit singles. Jive Talkin’ presents the story of the Bee Gees on stage, accompanied by a live string section. In keeping with the flashback-music theme, Michael A. Pollack presents Blood, Sweat & Tears, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Nov. 16. Tickets are $38-$54. It’s been more than four decades since drummer/producer Bobby Colomby and friends assembled the first group to successfully blend rock and jazz into a genre-crossing sound and style. So successfully, in fact, that the band’s second album, “Blood, Sweat & Tears,” topped the Billboard charts, beat out The Beatles’ “Abbey Road” for Grammy Album of the Year, and produced three major hit singles: “You Made Me So Very Happy,” “And When I Die,” and “Spinning Wheel.”
COMING TO TOWN: “Jive Talkin’,” a tribute to 1970s mega-group the Bee Gees, showcases all the top hits and fan favorites during the show set for 7:30 p.m. Sat., Nov. 9, at the Chandler Center for the Arts. Submitted photo
Freddie Mercury fans will rejoice with “One Night of Queen,” 7:30 p.m. Sat., March 8. Tickets are $36-$48. Gary Mullen brings legendary Queen frontman back to life in a two-hour energy-filled concert that will have toddlers to grandparents dancing in the aisles.
Comic relief Give your funny bone a workout with
Joan Rivers in Comic Pain Relief, 7 p.m. Fri., Nov. 15. Tickets are $55-$100. Rivers is an American television personality, comedian, writer, film director and actress. She has proven herself time and time again as a fantastic entertainer and she is still on top of her game even after 40-plus years in the business. All attendees will experience the “Orange Carpet Entrance.” Back by popular demand is humorist Jeanne Robertson, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Feb. 1. Tickets are $28-$38. You may have seen this southern Hall of Fame speaker being interviewed by CBS correspondent Morley Safer on “60 Minutes.” Or you may have watched one of the six humor DVDs she has produced in the last 12 years … or heard her daily on Sirius/XM Radio’s Family Comedy Channels. Her YouTube clips have had more than 13.5 million hits. But only if you’ve seen Robertson in person at one of the thousands of speeches she has given over the past 48 years can you really appreciate why she stands at the top of her profession. Comedian Yakov Smirnoff is on the road, taking a break from his own theater in Branson, MO, to stop by the CCA at 7:30 p.m. Sat., March 15. Tickets are $40-$50. The funny philosopher takes us on a comedic journey and brings a unique insight into life, family, and these United States. His comedy focuses on the dynamics between men
www.SanTanSun.com and women, the happiness that can be found inside oneself, and a celebration of the spirit of life. He shares a vision of the world where laughter truly is the best medicine. Techodelic Comedy, often described as Japan’s answer to the Blue Man Group, performs 7:30 p.m. Fri., March 21. Tickets are $28-$38. The show perfectly fuses modern technology with mime, breath-taking optical illusions, movement and—all set to a pulsating electro beat. This visually stunning show performed to 30,000 people at the Shanghai Expo and won the Spirit of the Fringe award at the prestigious Edinburgh Festival.
Family affair Family friendly entertainment is also a highlight of this year’s season. Zoppe, An Italian Family Circus, returns to the CCA’s west lawn in its 500-seat tent, Dec. 26 through Jan. 5. Ticket prices vary and range from $22-$34 for adults and $15-$28 for children. This one-ring circus honors the best history of the Old-World Italian tradition: where you come as strangers but leave as family. A bit of history mixed with adventure and love can be found with “Mr. & Mrs. Wyatt Earp, The Sunset Years,” 3 p.m. Sun., Jan. 28. Tickets are $20-$24. This is the true story of love, adventure, secrets and betrayals as told by the elderly Wyatt and Josephine Sarah Marcus Earp. The show follows the couple’s 47-year life together as they traveled and prospected throughout the west and Alaska.