Volume I No.11 | March 12, 2019
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ARTS NEWS
& PROFILES
FROM
FLORIDA'S
TREASURE COAST & BEYOND
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Sharing our wealth of arts and culture.
We're having an ARTS BLAST!
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In This Issue
Vero Beach Opera, Rising Stars & Marcello Giordani - A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Vero Beach Theatre Guild - The Radicals at Vero Beach Museum of Art - Swimming at Pineapple Playhouse - Riverside Kids - Have a Cuppa - Elliott's Cars
Calendar Listings
EASY LINKS
Guidelines for submitting to ARTS BLAST and
the Cultural Council of Indian River County's CulturalCalendar.org.
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Now, that's what I'm talking about -
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The Arts Students Guild of Brevard
is planning a group trip to Vero Beach Museum of Art this month to see
Victorian Radicals: From the Pre-Raphaelites to the Arts & Crafts Movement
. I certainly can’t take any credit for that but my goal for ARTS BLAST has always been to spread the wealth of our arts from county to county.
I know some folks feel as though driving from Vero Beach to Tequesta, or from Port St. Lucie to Melbourne is such a loooong trip, but they don’t know what they’re missing. I hope ARTS BLAST can change that.
As I research places to write about for Road Trip! I’m realizing that it’s been far too long since I’ve been to many places I loved. Today’s Road Trip tip is the Morse Museum in Winter Park, unassuming on the outside but an explosion of Louis Comfort Tiffany’s art and more on the inside.
If you're someone who enjoys discovering new places to go and new things to do, I'd love to hear about your adventures.
Limited advertising is now available in Arts Blast! Email about the end-of-season special.
Recycling works. Help reach more readers and spread the word. Please share.
Arts Blast! is dedicated with gratitude to Helen Miller, Angelina Christaldi, and Bill Miller.
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To opt out of receiving this newsletter, "unsubscribe" at the end of the page or
email to willi@willimiller.com with "unsubscribe" the subject.
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A note from Community Church of Vero Beach: The
Imani Milele Children’s Choir
concert scheduled for March 24 has been canceled.
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My Fair Lady is just arriving at
Riverside Theatre
and tickets are flying out the door. Don't wait!
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It's a Grand Week for Opera
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St. Lucie County may have the baseball Mets but it’s Vero Beach that attracts two of that other Met’s best. That’s the Metropolitan Opera and soprano Deborah Voigt and tenor Marcello Giordani I’m talking about. Their making Vero Beach their adopted home is thanks to
Vero Beach Opera
’s Roman and Joan Ortega-Cowan and their hardworking Board of Directors.
Marcello Giordani returns to Vero Beach next week for five outstanding days of music to commemorate 30 years of Vero Beach Opera. Deborah Voigt, whose foundation’s International Vocal Competition, in partnership with Vero Beach Opera, has helped put Vero Beach on the opera map, will be in town for a gala anniversary celebration.
The week of music begins March 19, with a Master Class by Giordani. The Rising Stars vocal competition jumps right to the semi-finals Wednesday and the finals on Thursday. All three days are open to the public, 2-5 p.m., with a three-day pass available for $20. For children, it’s $10. Giordani and the Rising Stars will be in concert Friday, March 22, 7 p.m. All events are at the Vero Beach High School Performing Arts Center.
Putting a week like this together is a massive effort by many people, but it’s fun, Roman said. “Lots of work, a million tasks to fulfill. We have a tremendous team that enjoys the challenges of smoothly delivering great musical moments to our audience.” That team is the Vero Beach Opera’s Board of Directors. They all serve pro bono, he said, and “contribute multiple organizational disciplines, and generous financial support to our success.”
Roman noted that Vero Beach Opera has been host for five international vocal competitions, three with Giordani and two with Voigt. This one, celebrating the big 30 year anniversary, is “VBO’s own special Rising Stars competition.” Giordani will present the Master Class and act as jury president for the vocal competition.
Both Giordani and Voigt understand the importance of guidance for youthful singers. In her book,
Call Me Debbie: True Confessions of a Down-to-Earth Diva,
Voigt said, “When it came to myself, it was my teacher, who was an opera singer, who led me down that path. She said my voice clearly was made to be an opera singer, but I do often think: ‘Well, what if she had been a country and western singer or a musical theatre singer?’ What would my life look like?”
The Marcello Giordani Foundation is “dedicated to the help and support of young opera singers to enable them to pursue and achieve their career goals and to succeed on international opera stages.”
Giordani
definitely likes it here. He said, “It's beyond thrilling for me to come back to Vero Beach, almost like a visit in paradise. I can't wait to see all of my wonderful friends and catch up with everybody.”
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Hello, Gorgeous at Vero Beach Museum of Art
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Well before there was a Women's Movement and long before the cigarette ad that told us "You've come a long way, Baby," there was the English Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, a group of artists, poets and critics who wanted to bring back the feeling of the 15th century Italian art known as Quattrocento. The Cambridge dictionary describes a Pre-Raphaelite beauty as one with “pale skin and long, wavy, reddish-brown hair.”
At Vero Beach Museum of Art,
Victorian Radicals: From the Pre-Raphaelites to the Arts & Crafts Movement
, organized by the American Federation of Arts and Birmingham Museums Trust is made up of 145 works from the collection of the city of Birmingham, United Kingdom. This a first showing of many of the pieces anywhere other than the UK. The exhibit has taken over the entire museum, with several galleries displaying the art and a series of lectures built around the theme.
Kirsty Stonell Walker, the “Historian of the Victorian,” gives a tour of Victorian England in her
Muses and Makers: The Pre-Raphaelite Girl Gang
seminar March 20 at 4 p.m. She’ll focus on the women behind the movement, Elizabeth Siddal, Jane Morris, and Fanny Cornforth, the unsung influencers of today’s woman’s world.
International fashion historian Aileen Ribeiro addresses
Life with the Pre-Raphaelites: Art, Dress & Beauty
in her 4:30 p.m. March 25 International Lecture Series appearance. The Pre-Raphaelite artists designed and made a new style of fashion for their models that was inspired by an earlier era. Their views of women were a different kind of beautiful, with distinctive features and flowing red hair.
Both lectures are ticketed, space is limited and pre-registration is required. Visit
vbmuseum.org
or call 772 321 0707 ext. 136.
Victorian Radicals: From the Pre-Raphaelites to the Arts & Crafts Movement
is in the Holmes, Schumann, Titelman, and Stark Galleries through May 5.
The Art in Bloom luncheon is sold out but the floral display, inspired by art from the Museum’s permanent collection, is on view March 15-16. March 30 is free admission Saturday at Vero Beach Museum of Art. (
Photo above:
Rossetti - Proserpine)
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Kids and Camps Just Go Together
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As happens every summer, kids rule at Riverside Theatre, where RC Star leads the parade of camp counselors into Riverside Children’s Theatre’s celebration of performance. Beginners and old hands all have a chance to perform in front of an audience at the end of their camp time.
Experience doesn’t matter; RCT’s young professional instructors create a review that will showcase all the kids at camp, spring or summer. There are Rascals summer camps, RT Star’s Stars Revue camps for all age students, and even a “Little Stars” Beginning Stages summer camp. There will be two summer musicals that will require auditions in May: Shrek the Musical JR., and Matilda, the Musical.
Signup for Summer Camps begins March 26. Tuition scholarship programs are available to provide financial assistance to qualifying students.
Before school ends, however, RCT has the perfect solution to the problem of what to do on spring break. It’s a week of singing, dancing, and storytelling, of course. While summer camps are open to students as young as five, Spring Break camp is recommended for ages 8-13. Call 772-231-6990 for more information or check
online
.
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A Funny Thing's Happening at
Vero Beach Theatre Guild
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Take music and lyrics by
Stephen Sondheim
and a book by
Burt Shevelove
and
Larry Gelbart
. Then add on the years of experience of the cast and crew of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum at Vero Beach Theatre Guild and you’re pretty much guaranteed to have a rollicking good time between the March 12 opening night and the closing curtain March 31.
One
of the things the Guild does so well is a well-written farce and farces don’t get much better than Forum. Greg Harris plays the role of the slave Pseudolus, played originally by Zero Mostel on stage and in the 1966 film. Harris said he loved watching Zero Mostel and Nathan Lane bring the character of Pseudolus to life, “and now it’s my turn … It’s fun and daunting all in one … an actor’s dream! What other show do you get to go in and just play and make people laugh?”
Harris made his debut at Vero Beach Theatre Guild in Hello Dolly and has appeared in Cabaret and last year’s fundraising events. He’s been music director of two Gilbert and Sullivan shows there and did a Reader’s Theatre production opposite his wife, Caitlin Harris. Both Harrises teach at Storm Grove Middle School in Vero Beach.
This is lucky 13 for Martha Kelly, who plays Domina in “Forum.” She began with a small role in Annie Get Your Gun in 2008 and has taken hold of the funny lady genre, from “Miss Hannigan in 'Annie' to Lady Bracknell in 'The Importance of Being Earnest'; from the madame of a whorehouse in 'Tenderloin' to a singing nun in 'The Sound of Music' and a lady detective in 'The Games Afoot’,” she said.
It’s a brilliantly written show that takes more than the usual stamina. The lyrics are quick, so “it’s a challenge to sing them without losing their meaning. The dialogue moves at breakneck speed and most singing is done on the run,” Kelly said.
This is Tara Giovannone’s third show for Vero Beach Theatre Guild but her first Sondheim, and she said she enjoys the challenge of singing the music. Her character, Philia, has been taught only the importance of beauty and grace, and not a bit of the three Rs, an interesting challenge for Giovannone, who has a degree in electrical engineering.
Costume designer Patti Hall said she goes back to a show’s roots when she begins her costuming journey. “I research the original concepts and then start from there. Next I draw my design concepts and start creating.” Hall is fairly new to the Guild, beginning with Yankee Tavern as head prop master and costume assistant. From that start, she jumped to the head of the costume department, with a bit of directing thrown in. She’ll direct Moonlight and Magnolias next season. Hall is also a mixed-media artist and “a creative soul who has designed many costumes, puppets, and a small clothing line,” she said.
Director Beth Shestak called directing the show a rewarding challenge. She has choreographed several shows for Vero Beach Theatre Guild but, “having full control to bring my whole interpretation of a show to life is extremely fulfilling!” she said. Shestak did the technical work on “forum” at the Bert Reynolds Institute as a teenager and has wanted to revisit it ever since. She said, “I truly love this script, but it is a very energetic undertaking for all involved, production team, technicians, and especially the cast.”
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Alex Martinez, Greg Harris,Tara Giovannone
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Alex Martinez, Tara Giovannone
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Elliott Museum's Cars are Coming. Is Yours?
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If you want your car to strut its stuff at the
Elliott Museum's 23rd annual Classics at the Beach Car Show, it's time to hustle. Registration closes March 15. Download the
registration form here. Be aware that no trailer parking is available at the museum and cars must be in place by 9:30 a.m. Questions?
Email Don Gilbert.
The pre-car show benefit reception is March 22, 6-8 p.m. Tickets are required, so
RSVP: 772-225-1961 or email RSVP@elliottmuseum.org.
The Classics at the Beach show is March 23, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m, in the Museum's parking lot.
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The Lady Swims Today at Pineapple Playhouse
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There’s history all around us on the Treasure Coast. Theaters, art clubs, musical organizations — all a part of why we love being here.
In St. Lucie County, Pineapple Playhouse’s Wilma Cowles had an idea back in 1949 for a theatre group, The Dolphin Players. It didn’t make it for very long but some die-hard theatre people regrouped as The Fort Pierce Little Theatre and, as the official history reads, “was in business again. Rehearsing in garages, upstairs over Warren’s Laundry, in the Historic Arcade Building where it survived a devastating fire, performing in Fort Pierce Central High School, where vandalism was a problem at the time, and in Indian River Community College’s Student Center on a home-made 7,000-pound portable stage, where the set had to be dismantled after each night’s performance and reassembled before each show.”
In 1973, it was re-incorporated as Saint Lucie Community Theatre, with its first show, Bell, Book, and Candle, performed at Indian River Community College’s McAlpin Fine Arts Center. The college’s school schedule soon forced the group to find it’s own permanent spot, at 700 Weatherbee Rd., Fort Pierce.
A typical year includes five main-stage productions, a Reader’s Theatre program, a Children’s Summer Camp, and other special events. The offerings generally run to comedies, with a drama or two thrown in, and a Christmas show is scheduled for the coming season. The next show at Pineapple Playhouse, The Lady Swims Today, runs March 14-31.
A women who wears many hats at the theatre, Ellen Gillette, has been there for most of 20 years. In The Lady Swims Today, she plays Joyce Stephens, the long-time friend of Beverly, the new wife of the owner of the Carney Hook Marina Motel, the scene of the play. Joyce is a writer who is doing well, and visiting for the first time since Beverly got remarried.
Gillette’s exposure to the group was in high school, when she went to a play at the IRCC students union. Her first audition was in 1997, for a play directed by John Procino, one of the founding members of Pineapple Playhouse.
Others in the cast are Sharon Taylor, Jack Kranz, Joe Moore, Mike Lynch, Tony Ferrino, and Melissa Baez. The playwright, H.G. Brown, is also the director. Ticket, summer camp, scholarship, and volunteer opportunities are online at https://www.pineappleplayhouse.com.
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L-R: Melissa Baez, Howard Brown, Tony Ferrino, Jack Krantz - rehearsal of The Lady Swims
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"A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" directed by Clara McCarthy in 1989. L-R: Audree Lezniewicz, Robert Fox.
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Learn About Matcha and Much More
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Matcha is the powdered green tea used in a Japanese tea ceremony; its health benefits are known far and wide, says Maria Sparsis, potter and owner of Tea and Chi. Join her at Indian River Clay, a non-profit collaborative, on Sunday, March 24
from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Learn about the history of matcha, the beautiful pottery bowls used in the Japanese tea ceremony, traditional methods of preparation, and ways to use matcha in recipes. You'll also taste matcha prepared in various ways.
The event is for potters, matcha lovers and the matcha-curious. It is free to all, but a contribution would be gratefully accept.
Indian River Clay, 1174 S. US1, Vero Beach
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ROAD TRIP!
The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art
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Transom, c. 1910–20
Wisteria, Leaded Glass
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My first visit to the
Morse Museum
in Winter Park was with a bus tour organized by Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute quite a few years ago, before FAU was added to the name. That trip made quite an impression.
The museum, founded by Jeannette Genius McKean and named for her grandfather, is home to the most comprehensive collection of Louis Comfort Tiffany’s works in the world. Nobody can say that if you’ve seen one piece of Tiffany art you’ve seen them all. At the Morse Museum, in addition to his well-known lamps, you’ll see windows, jewelry, pottery, paintings, buttons, and even the chapel Tiffany made for the 1983 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
The collection houses pieces from Tiffany’s country estate on Long Island, Laurelton Hall — the artist’s most prized paintings, art glass, pottery, and furniture as well as windows, lamps, and other objects that made their debut at international expositions and later lived in his home.
The Morse isn’t all Tiffany, however. The Arts and Crafts movement is represented by pieces by Gustav Stickley and the Roycrofters, and an extensive American art pottery collection, including 500 pieces of Rookwood pottery. Look for sculpture, paintings, glass and metal work, textiles, costumes, and a collection of outdoor commercial signs.
Art at the Morse Museum includes music, with a Spring Friday Nights series. The March 22 program has the Victoria Lynn Schultz Harp Trio, with a Celtic harp, flute, and violin. The website lists performers through April.
If you plan your Road Trip for April, consider the free Friday Brown Bag Matinees, featuring Northern European Art in the spring series. The films are shown in the Jeannette G. and Hugh F. McKean Pavilion, just behind the museum. Also in the Pavilion is the April 12 Metalworking demonstration by artist Stefan Alexandres, 6-7 p.m.
There are gallery tours, docent tours, group tours, cell phone audio tours and gallery talks to help you fully enjoy your trip. A PDF copy of the
Visitor’s Guide to the Morse Museum
is available online.
Please click here to download.
If You Go:
9:30 am –4:00 pm Tuesday through Saturday (Open until 8:00 pm Friday, November through April)
1:00 pm –4:00 pm Sunday
Closed Monday and most major holidays
Admission
$6 Adults
$5 Seniors age 60 and older
$1 Students (with valid ID)
Free for children younger than 12
Free for federal employees until further notice (with valid ID)
All visitors free 4:00 pm–8:00 pm Fridays (November through April)
The website is so user friendly it provides a link for traffic updates and warns that there is extensive road construction on one of the major roads leading to Winter Park.
445 North Park Avenue | Winter Park, FL 32789 | (407) 645-5311
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Tree of Life window 1928-31
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On The Calendar
Not
a complete list of things to do - This is a very busy place!
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March 14-17 - Centennial Pickleball Tournament is at 2140 14th Ave., Vero Beach.
verobeach100.org
March 16, Noon-4 p.m. -
Vero Beach Airport
Heritage Day celebrates 90 years of history. Free.
March
19-22
- The
Vero Beach Opera's
Master Class and Rising Stars concerts go all week at Vero Beach High School Performing Arts Center. Times vary.
March
24
- 2-3.30 p.m. Learn about Matcha Tea, pottery bowls used in Japanese tea ceremonies and traditional methods of preparation. At
Indian River Clay
, 1174 South US1, Vero Beach.
March
29-31
-Vero Beach Art Club's
New Dimensions Fine Art Show
is at Marsh Island Clubhouse. Opening reception 3/29 6-8 p.m. Show hours 10-4 Sat., Sun.
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Brevard County
March 1-17
weekends - "The Best Little Whorehouse" is at
Surfside Playhouse
in Cocoa Beach. 321-783-3127
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March 12,
8:30 - Jazz Jam with the Wolves of Schumann School for the Visual & Performing Arts and the
Fort Pierce Jazz & Blues Society
at Sunrise Theatre. The Wolves will be featured from 8:30-9:15 for a set.
March 15
, 5 p.m. - It's
Art Walk
in Fort Pierce
March 15,
7 p.m. - Movies in the Fort, a free showing of Incredibles 2 at the main police department in Fort Pierce.
March
13
, 6:30 p.m. - At Port St. Lucie Community Center, 2195 Airoso Blvd, OxBow Eco-Center presents For the Love of Florida “A Land Remembered.” Rick Smith (Patrick Jr.) utilizes special effects and sounds to bring his presentation to life. He’ll introduce you to his late father’s works and why he chose society’s underdogs to tell the story of “real” Florida.
March
9 - 4/28
- Backus & Butcher and the Florida Landscape is the exhibit at the Backus Museum & Gallery, Fort Pierce.
March 15-16 - The Rowdy Micks play music for St. Patrick's Day at
the Port St Lucie Civic Center. Times vary.
March
15, 6 p.m.
- Backus & Butcher opening at Backus Museum & Gallery. Ticketed event.
Pineapple Playhouse
community theatre, 700 W Weatherbee Rd, Fort Pierce is looking for directors.
The Jazz Market is
every Saturday
, rain or shine, along the waterfront in downtown Fort Pierce.
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Martin County
March 13, 7 p.m. -
Oceanside Lecture series at
House of Refuge
Keepers Quarters
March
17,
1-2 p.m. - Rock’n Riverwalk, 99 SW Seminole St., Stuart. Free concert.
March 18
, 3 p.m. - Youth Arts Celebration auditions 2019 at the
Lyric Theater,
by appointment.
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Palm Beach County
March 15,
6 p.m. - Opening reception for Armory Artists and Faculty Shows at the
Armory Art Center
in West Palm Beach. Dates and times vary.
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Information is to
be received in an email no later than the Friday before publication.
Use this format:
Who (organization)
What (Event)
When (dates, time)
Where (Name of venue, address)
Why (a brief description of the purpose)
Web address
Contact for public (for tickets, questions, etc.)
Then add a short, descriptive release if available.
Send only one photo, with caption, until more are requested.
Media contact with email for my followup (not for publication)
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Here's a suggestion for uploading information to calendars that allow you to input your own events.
In the
body
of the listing, sometimes called
Description
, make sure to include all dates in each upload. For example: Performances are on March 12-31; or the exhibit is open March 12, 14, 15, and 17. That information should be in all dates you post individually.
If you are a member of the
Cultural Council of Indian River County
, you need this information:
The deadline is MONDAY - 10 days prior to the Wednesday publication.
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Copyright
©2019 Willi Miller's ARTS BLAST!, all rights reserved.
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