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Statesman Journal from Salem, Oregon • Page 12

Publication:
Statesman Journali
Location:
Salem, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NEW SHOWS 4B, Statesman-Journal, Salem, Friday, October 30, 1987 Entertainment and the Arts Katz, cello. The group first appeared in 1969 at the Marlboro Music Festival and has gone on to perform throughout the world. The string quartet regularly appears in the Mostly Mozart Festival at Lincoln Center in New York. The series will continue with appearances by the Aulos Ensemble, Jan. 8: the Los Angeles Piano Quartet, Feb.

the Ridge String Quartet, March 11. KATHLEEN HAYDON AND MARY LOU ZEEK are the featured artists In the November show at the SAIF Corp. gallery, 400 High St. SE, Salem. Haydon, a Monmouth artist, is showing mixed media collages.

Zeek, a teacher for the Salem Art Association, is displaying porcelain. The gallery is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. Theater Although the concert is free, tickets must be obtained in advance at the Chiles Center box office or the symphony ticket office at 813 S.W.

Alder St. The program features works by Kabalevsky, Faure, Beethoven, Liszt, Keltonic, Barber, Mozart and Rachmaninoff. PORTLAND SINGER ROGER WHITTAKER will perform in 8 p.m. concerts Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 4 and 5, at the Schnitzer Concert Hall.

Whittaker recently returned from a European tour. Admission is $17.50 and $21. Tickets are on sale at G.I. Joe s. PORTLAND JOHN MAYALL'S BLUES-BREAKERS will be joined by The Party Kings for a 9 p.m.

Friday show at the Pine Street Theater, 221 S.E. 9th St. Tickets are $9.50 in advance at G.I. Joe's stores. PORTLAND THE AL DIMEOLA PROJECT will perform at 8 p.m.

Tuesday, Nov. 3, at the Starry Night. Tickets are $13.50 in advance at G.I. Joe's stores. CORVALLIS FAMOUS DAVES, a Portland jazz oand, will perform at 8 p.m.

Friday at Oregon State University's Memorial Union East For im. admission is $3. The program is part of a four-week JazzFest. The band consists of bassist Dave Captein, pianist Dave Leslie, tenor player Dave Hage-lanz, drummer Dave Storrs and also player Warren Rand. The band's style is called neo-mainstream.

Pictures, letters, scrapbooks and other items are being sought. Anyone interested can contact coordinator Kathryn Boe at the society, 1230 S.W. Park or call 222-1741. OREGON ARTS CHALLENGE GRANTS totalling $500,000 will be presented by Gov. Neil Goldschmidt Monday to representatives of nine major Oregon arts organizations.

The ceremony will be at 10:45 a.m. in the Governor's Ceremonial Office at the Capitol in Salem. The grants are the first round in a new program approved by the 1987 Legislature. Goldschmidt proposed the program, based on a concept developed by the Oregon Arts Commission and Oregon Advocates for the Arts. The recipients must match the grants from private support or earned income, with 50 percent of that being new sources of income.

The first grants will go to the Oregon Shakespearean Festival, the Oregon Symphony Association, the Oregon Art Institute, the Portland Opera Association, the Portland Civic Theatre, the Oregon School of Arts Crafts, the Peter Britt Festivals, the Eugene Symphony Association and the Oregon Bach Festival (Eugene). KWVT, the Salem television station which carries Home Shopping Club programming, has changed its call letters again. KWVT, Channel 22, is now KHSP reflecting its programming. The independent UHF station originally was known as KECH. seniors.

Tickets are on sale at the box office. The reservation number is 5887002. Dan Nelson directs the comedy, which looks at a teacher experience in New York City public schools. PENTACLE THEATRE is presenting the Agatha Christie mystery 7V Mousetrap through Nov. 7 at the theater in West Salem.

The play is set at a snowbound boarding house where a group of colorful characters is preyed on by a killer. A detective, played by Jeff Sanders, attempts to unravel the mystery, Fred Owen directs the cast which features Cherie Brownson. Ken Hermens. Rob Sim, Helen Shepard, Jack Willenbacher, Cecilia Koontz and Robert Herzog. The set, which depicts Monkswell Manor, is by De-vmn.

Performances are at 8:15 p.m. Oct. 30 and 31 and Nov. 4 to 7. All the shows are sold out, with the exception of the Nov.

4 benefit performance. Tickets for the Nov. 4 performance, a benefit for AISP. are $6 by calling 378-4238. The theater is located at 324 52nd Ave.

NW. THE MASSENKOFF RUSSIAN FOLK FESTIVAL. featuring Nikolai Massenkoff. will appear in Salem Thursday, Nov. 12.

at Willamette University's Smith Auditorium. Admission is $5, $7.50, $10 and $15 for the 8 p.m. show. Tickets are on sale at the Mid-Valley Arts Council office, 265 Court St. NE.

Salem. A 2 p.m. student matinee is being provided free to local schools by the sponsor, the arts council. The folk festival features an ensemble of eight dancers, five musicians and Massenkoff, a singer. They will perform authentic Ukraman folk dances to the music of balalikas and accordions.

The folk songs will be interspersed with Russian language lessons for the audience. EUGENE SINGER JOAN BAEZ will perform at 8 p.m. Friday in the Silva Concert Hall of the Hult Center for the Performing Arts. Baez is best known for her singing and activism in the 1960s. VSA Today, reviewing Collins new autobiography, And a NEWBERG AN ART SONG RECITAL will be presented by faculty member Carole Stewart at 8 p.m.

Thursday, Nov. 5, in the Bauman Auditorium of George Fox College. The free concert will feature songs by Mozart, Brahms, Debussy and Hudley. Stewart, a soprano, will be accompanied by pianist Sylvia Killman. NEWPORT THE SCRUFFY LUMPERS will perform sea chanties, Irish tigs and ballads, and Scottish aires in an 8 p.m.

Wednesday, Nov. 4, concert at the Naterlin Community Center. The show is a benefit for the Oregon Coast Aquarium Project by the Lincoln County Folklore Society and the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts. Admission is $4 for adults, $3 for students and seniors and $10 for a family. The performers are David LoVine and Bo Leyden, who will dance, sing and play instruments such as the hammered dulcimer and the mandolin.

Audience participation in spoon playing will be encouraged. The Scruffy Lumpers regularly perform with the Oregon Shakespearean Festival in Ashland. The aquarium is planned for construction at South Beach as an economic development project. Auditions ALBANY A RETROSPECTIVE SHOW of the work of artists Amanda Snyder and Charles Mean-ey will be on exhibit Nov. 1 to 29 at the Schubert Gallery, 103 Main St.

SE. The 30-year retrospective features oils, woodcuts, watercolors, caseins and drawings. An opening reception, with a wine tasting, will be from 7 to 10 p.m. Friday, Nov. 6.

The gallery is open 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. WALDPORT A MULTI-MEDIA EXHIBIT, Holiday Showcase, will be featured from Nov. 1 to Dec.

24 at the Gale Gallery and Glashaus Pottery, located on Highway 101. In addition to works by seven watercolorists, the featured artists are R.D. and Denise Lewis with wood ducks and a carousel horse; Suzanne Stillwater, molded prints; and Lois Clark, designer kites. The gallery is open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

daily. CORVALLIS CONTEMPORARY CUPS by 77 U.S. artists are on exhibit through Nov. 21 in the Memorial Union Concourse Gallery at Oregon State University. The exhibit is sponsored by the Salem Art Association and consists of work created specifically for the show.

Among the artists are Nancy Adams, Betty Bean, David Gilhooly and Philip Jameson. Gallery hours are 8:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. DUNDEE WOOD TOYS by P.K.

Cuffney of Grants Pass are among the items on exhibit at the Red Hills Gallery, 575 S.W. Highway 99W. Also showing work are Mary Lou Bretzmann, a Eugene stained glass artist; Linda Holmes, a Colton stained glass artist; Barbara Jacobs, a Portland enamelist; Daniel Stevens, a Boring ceramicist; and Phyllis Landon, a myrtlewood artist. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Wednesday through Saturday and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. Voice to Sint fa With, called her AT? iui i. -4 a generation." i Admission is JoanBiez $15 and $14. Tickets are on sale at G.I.

Joe's stores and the Mid-Valley Arts Council, 265 Court St. NE, Salem. Music et cetera PENTACLE THEATRE will hold auditions for Neil Simon's comedy-drama Brighton Beach Memoirs at 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 7, at the theater in West Salem.

Callbacks will be at 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8, also at the theater. The play is an autobiographical work which portrays the writer as a Brooklyn teen-ager living with his family in 1937 in a crowded, lower-class home. The cast calls for a girl, ages 12 to 13; a 15-year-old boy; a man and a woman in their late teens or early 20s; and a man and two women, 35 to 50.

Further information is available by calling director Chris Fletcher at 364-7121 days or 364-4527 evenings. The play will be performed from Jan. 15 to 30 of 1988. The theater is located off Highway 22 on 52nd Avenue NW, 5 miles west of Salem. Pentacle also is seeking 15 to 20 volunteers to work as house managers for the 1988 season.

The house manager is trained in all aspects of hospitality at the theater. Along with the directors, they are in charge of the theater during the run of a play. A meeting for prospective house managers will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 9, at the home of Cherie Lawrence.

Further infomation is available from the Pentacle office at 364-7121. Pentacle also has openings for alcohol servers. Classes will be held by Service Industry Programs at 10 a.m. on two Sundays, Nov. 15 and Dec.

6, at the theater. 'V MONMOUTH CLOWN COSTUMES AND GUTTER are among the unusual elements in Western Oregon State College's production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, which opens at 8:15 Wednesday. The show, the tirst in the 1987-88 season for the theater department, will be performed Wednesday through Saturday, Nov. 4 to 7. in Rice Auditorium.

Admission is S3 50 for non-students and $2 50 for students. Reservations can be made by calling the box office at 838-3771. The classic comedy features two sets of lovers in confusion, a group of workmen mechanicals turned actors, fairies and the hobgoblin Puck. Hermia, who is engaged to Demetrius, a man she does not love, escapes to the woods with her true lover, Lysander. Helena, who is in love with Demetrius, tells him of the elopement.

The complications are aggravated by the quarreling king and queen of the fairies. Oberon and Titama, and the foolish Nick Bottom, who is disguised as an ass. Director Dr. Richard Davis, who also designed the costumes, said he is borrowing from the commedia dell'arte theatrical tradition by costuming the foolish lovers as clowns. Among his other innovations, he will put the Duke Theseus and his fiance.

Hippolyta, in cages and introduce Shakespeare himself as a character. Doug Getzoff settings feature a glittering, modernistic look. Original music has been composed by Western student Arthur Atsma. The cast features Rich Adams. Aaron Fawcett, Stacy Eggman, Carolyn Reid, Kalen Summers, Jean Becker, Jeff Baer, Valerie Griffiths, Jennifer Reece, Lise Adams, David Lund, Michael Scott, Dan Kay, Jim Steele, K.C.

White, Anne Lansingh and Jim Rem-mington. CORVALLIS THE VALLEY BARN THEATER production of The Dining Room opens at 8:15 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 5, at the Odd Fellows Hall, 223 S.W. 2nd St.

Performances will be at 8:15 p.m. Nov. 5 to 7 and 1 1 to 14, with a 2 p.m. matinee Nov 8. Tickets are on sale at The Inkwell and at the door.

The play is a study of the dynamics of inheriting family and cultural behavior patterns. The overlapping scenes, all set in a dining room, present glimpses into the lives of more than 50 men, women and children in 20 upper-class families. The cast members are Michael Hart. Jean Heath, Linda McCloud, Nathan Meyers, Catherine Neary, Graham Pratt, Jenalee Santos and Paul Schwab. Barry J.

Kerr is the director. SOUTH SALEM HIGH SCHOOL students will explore the worid of old age in a production of J. P. Jacob's play Ice Milk, which opens at 7:30 p.m. Thursday Nov.

5. Performances will be at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 5 to 7 and 2:30 p.m. Nov.

8. with a special senior citizens performance at 7:30 m. Nov. 4. The location is the Little Theater at 1910 Church St.

SE. Salem. Admission is S3 for adults and $2 for students. Tickets for Nov. 4 are $1.

Tickets will be sold at the door. The play tells the story of Mr. Mandell (Ezia Ereck-son), who meets his wife in a nursing home where they both worked in their younger days. Also in the cast are Rich DuVall, Jason Lohr, Tara Johnson, Cherie Corson, Lawrence Spurgeon, Julie Ullom, Coleman Zeigen, J.C. Cottrell, Shawn Miles, Greg Bowers Dan Wren, Jeremy Golar, Lisa Ackerson and Scott Matlock.

To prepare for the play, the students spent several hours observing and talking to senior citizens in Salem area nursing homes. Tim Jaskoski is the director. McKAY HIGH SCHOOL is selling tickets for its production of the musical Annie, which opens Nov. 19. Tickets are now on sale for $2 50 at the school office, at 2440 Lancaster Drive NE, Salem.

Performances will be at 7:30 Nov. 19 to 21, with a 2 pm. matinee Nov. 21. Marilyn Buchanan is directing the musical, assisted by vocal director Jane Petersen, technical director Stuart Sparkman and choreography Jinny Martin.

Among the cast members are Candie Ream, Bonnie Wilson, Jenny Bird, Christopher Wales, Jessica Schleif. Felicia Laird, Jeff Schatz and Glade Diviney. The cast features 50 students, with Lori Schmidt and Brad Parker as student directors. SALEM THEATER OF PERFORMING ARTS is presenting the Bel Kaufman comedy Up the Down Staircase from Nov. 5 to 13 at the Grand Theater 191 High St.

NE, Salem. Performances will be at 8 p.m. Nov. 5 to 7. 12 and 13.

There will be a 2 p.m. matinee Nov. 14. which will be signed for the hearing impaired. Admission is $5 for adults and $4 for students and 1 i ML ml 11- 4 Sharon, Lola and Brm 4k RICKY AND THE ROCKETS will play at a fundraiser for the Boys and Girls Club of Stayton tonight at the Stayton Community Center.

The band will be on stage from 8 p.m. until midnight playing the classic tunes of 50s60s. This is an 18-and-over party. Tickets are $3 per person, $5 per couple. Call 769-5044 for more information.

Prizes for costumes will be $50 for the best single's costume; $50 for the best couple's costumes. PORTLAND FREE PUBLIC TOURS are now available on Sundays through Dec. 6 for the new Portland Center for the Performing Arts, at 1 1 1 1 S.W. Broadway. The hours are 11 a.m.

to 1 p.m., with the one-hour tours leaving from the lobby of the new building on the hour and half hour. Free reserved tours for groups of 10 or more can be scheduled by calling 248-4334. PORTLAND DRUMS, PIPES AND DANCERS will be featured when the Grenadier Guards band and the Gordon Highlanders pipes and dancers perform at 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 5.

The company of 90 from Her Majesty's Royal Regiments will appear at the Memorial Coliseum. The program will feature the traditional music of England and Scotland, as well as popular favorites from the movies and 8roadway. Admission is priced from $7.50 to $12.50. Tickets are on sale at G.I. Joe's stores.

PORTLAND THE OREGON HISTORICAL SOCIETY is seeking the papers and memorabilia of former Oregon legislators for its legislative collections. THREE VOCAL ENSEMBLES will perform in a 3 m. Sunday concert at Willamette University's Smith Auditorium in Salem. The Willamette University Choir, the Willamette Singers and the Madrigal Singers will perform works ranging from modern religious texts to secular madrigals. General admission is $3 and students are admitted for $2.

Tickets are on sale at the music department office and will be sold at the door. THE WILLAMETTE WOODWIND QUINTET, which is composed of Willamette University faculty members, will open its 1987-88 season with an 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4. concert in the Hatfield Room of the university's Hatfield Library.

The location is on the Salem campus. Admission is $5 for adults and $2 for students and seniors. Tickets are on sale at the music department office and will be sold at the door. The ensemble will perform Peter Muller's Quintet No. 3, Ingolf Dahl's Allegro and Arioso for Five Wind Instruments, and Carl Nielsen's Woodwind Quintet.

This is the fifth season of the quintet. The members are Jeanne Eikrem, flute; Mary Lott, oboe; Richard Stewart, clarinet; Ann Obenour, bassoon; and David Crane, horn. CORVALLIS THE CLEVELAND QUARTET will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4, as part of the 29th season of the Friends of Chamber Music series.

The concert will be at the LaSells Stewart Center, 26th Street and Western Boulevard. Season memberships are available at $28 for adults and $17 for non-Oregon State University students. OSU students are admitted free. Individual tickets are $10 at the door. The quartet consists of Donald Weilerstein.

violin; Peter Salatf. violin; James Dunham, viola; and Paul i atfir: Art PORTLAND SHARON, LOIS BRAM, a Canadian trio that performs for a family audience, will give a 1 p.m. concert Saturday at the Cabell Center of Catlin Gabel School, 8825 S.W. Barnes Road. Admission is $5.

Tickets are on sale at A Children's Place, 1631 N.E. Broadway. Reservations can be made by calling 284-8294. The three performers Sharon Hampson, Lois Lilienstein and Bram Morrison are recording artists who also have a television show. The program, Sharon, Lois Bram's Elephant Show, can be seen at 11 a.m.

weekdays on the Nickolodeon cable network. Havasu Stream, Ariz, by Stu Levy PHOTOGRAPHY BY STU LEVY is on exhibit through Nov. 12 at the Campus Gallery of Cfte-meketa Community College, 4000 Lancaster Drive NE, Salem. A reception for the artist will be from noon to 2 p.m. Thursday, Nov.

12, The gallery is located in building 3. The gallery is open from 1:30 to 4 p.m. weekdays and until 8 p.m. Wednesdays. MOUNT ANGEL QUILTS by Louise Van Dyke of Oregon City will be on display during November in the foyer of the Mount Angel Abbey Library.

Van Dyke is a teacher and author of the book Create a Heirloom. The exhibit continues through Nov. 30. Gallery hours are 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.

weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays and 10 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Sun- PORTLAND THE OREGON SYMPHONY will give a free concert at 7:30 p.m.

Thursday, Nov. 5. in the Earle A. Chiles Center at the University of Portland. The concert, which will be conducted by James DePreist, is sponsored by the Chiles Foundation.

days. mmm Are you tired of living in FEAR? Come to SALEMS BEST MEAT S. POTATOES HOUSE I ORD OF LIFT7 PETITE FILET MIGNON hr iriim t. complete 2 piece dinners of fresk fAMILT FELLOWSHIP I chicken including trusted BEEl WITH COUPON lour choke of tiled TK II in I snail drink. 4 A A I I RESTAURANT I z1 ft fimH thru Frirlav Nov.

6. 1987 iqfl7 Where you can learn to live in FREEDOM Even Sunday it Die Chuiuret ainex. Aspen rocn. 9:00 am-Bible School, 10:00 am-Morning Service 6:00 pm-Evening Service iin miusm. via MP A tender Filet Migon cooked to perfection and served with your choice of potatoe, vegetable, and mini loaf of onv fresh bread.

Served daily 4 p.m. til 10 p.m. Don Brockman's GUEST HOUSE RESTAURANT 4850 Portland Rd. N.E. WMT FREE preview on SHOWTIME Saturday Night! i(Q)W OCTOBER 30 NOVEMBER 1 See World champion skier, Dan Schindler, performing on the ramps in front of the Emporium, plus visit these exciting displays: i '7 hi SKI BLUEWOOD HOVERCRAFT AMERICAN TIRE KAWASAKI HOODOO SKI SKI ASHLAND MT.

HOOD MEADOWS ANDERSONS SKATE PALACE SIERRA WHITEWATER 7v t- rv ir t- -v HVRVEY NDERSON'S u-orumautttiLi by: fox's SJtr ra.LV BPORTINO GOODS 'i in I inmii rAiPMMl See Pretty In Pink Free! October 31st, beginning 8:00 on Ch. 31. See Jay Leno And The American Dream Free! October 31st, beginning 10:00 on Ch. 31. TRICK OR TREATING up to 10 years old in Mall Stores where sign is posted OCTOBER 31, 5-6 PM Free Halloween safety bags given away 10am-6pm while supply lasts.

Also stickers and color books provided by City of Salem Police Department. Kids, 15 under ENTER to Win a Halloween gift assortment. Free Face Painting 2-4 pm SHOWTIRflE MAS WE HITS mOMBSSES VIACOM CABLEVISION Tune in to Ch. 31 or call 370-2759 for details. Designs by Westside Smile Factory (Salem Jaycees Safety ASSISt) in front of Zales frail SHOWTIME'THF.

MOVIE CHANNEL INC IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH HOME BOX OFFICE. INC SHOWTIME IS A REGISTERED SERVICE MARK OF SHOWTIME THE MOVIE CHANNEL INC WHICH PRODUCED THIS PROMOTIONAL PIECE HBO is a registeiefl service mark ol Home Bok Office, Inc. Titles eiclusive in National Pay Cable lor terms ol license. 1987 SHOWTIMETHE MOVIE CHANNEL INC All lights reserved I.

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