Events Archive

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Things to do in Downtown Albany this week!

Tuesday, July 12th – 6pm

Downtown Merchant Association Monthly Meeting

Location: Subway- 122 N. Jackson Street

Wednesday, July 13th- 5pm

Wine Down Wednesdays! Location: Chill Bar & Lounge every Wednesday. Mix. Mingle. Sip. Unwind. Hangout with friends, listening to music & mingle with other professionals. Sponsored by Downtown Merchants, Global Essence, and Living Legends Salon.

Thursday, July 14th “Earth, Moon, & Sun” Planetarium Show Premier

Wetherbee Planetarium at Thronateeska Heritage Center

Earth, Moon, & Sun will be playing in the Wetherbee Planetarium all day July 14. Show times are at 10:30, 11:30, 1:00, 2:00, and 3:00. Beginning on July 15, Earth, Moon, & Sun will be shown at 2:00 every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Admission to the Wetherbee Planetarium is $3.50+tax per person, age 3 and up. Groups of 20 or more, please contact us for reservations and to inquire about group discounts. Annual memberships are available. For more information contact: Allison Young. Phone: 229.432.6955

E-mail: museum@heritagecenter.org

Thursday, July 14th – 6:30pm

Twilight Paddle — 6:30 pm (trip lasts approximately 45 minutes)

Enjoy a leisurely canoe trip on a pretty section of the river from the Georgia Power dam to downtown Albany followed by hors d’oeuvres at the Flint RiverQuarium. Space is limited and reservations are recommended. Participants meet at the Flint RiverQuarium. Minimum age is 21. Fee: $35 per canoe (paddles & flotation devices provided) For reservations: Call 229.639.2650 Ext. 221

Saturday, July 16th – 8am-1pm

The Downtown Albany Market. Open every Saturday through November 12 from 8AM-1PM at the parking deck on the corner of Jackson St. and Broad Ave.

Saturday, July 16th Youth League Championship Games

Location: Albany Civic Center

Time: Doors open at 9:00 am; First game at 10:00 am

Tickets: FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC!

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Upcoming Events for July

July 21 – RECESSIONISTA – VERGE Fashion Show 5:30-7:30. $10 per guest RSVP Chamber of Commerce at 434-8700

July 22 – LETS GET WIGGY WIT IT! – Flock of Gulls Event. State Theatr

e 7pm – $20 in advance and $25 at the door. 21 and up

July 29 – NIGHTS@DTOWN 8pm – Live Music, Live Art, Food, & Drinks. Top of the Parking Deck. 21 and up.

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Pritchett/Pippin Dance Recital to be held May 25-26

Dance recital on tap

 

As the curtain goes up on the annual Pritchett/Pippin Dance Recital, slated for Wednesday and Thursday, May 25 and 26, 7 p.m. at Albany High School, Kathy Hall Hawkins and the Prichett-Pippin Dancers will present “IF THE SHOE FITS … DANCE IN IT.”

In addition to showcasing local youth talent from the Pritchett-Pippin School of Dance, the event is a major fundraiser for the Kiwanis Club of Dougherty County. Proceeds from the recital benefit Kiwanis of Dougherty County’s numerous community service projects in the Dougherty and Lee county area.

Tickets for the performances are $10 and all seats are reserved seating. Tickets will be on sale at the Albany High auditorium starting one hour before performances and the following times: 3 to 6:30 p.m. May 18-19; and 5-7 p.m. May 23-24.

Kiwanis of Dougherty volunteers will assist the performances with backstage help, ticket and program ad sales, and ushering.

“Please come out and support this performance,” Kiwanis of Dougherty County fundraising chair Todd Butler. “Every ticket sale represents a helping hand in the Dougherty and Lee County communities.”

Tags: Events
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Roles revisited after 12 years

Lorber, White

By Lon McNeil

For Doug Lorber and Glenn White, Theatre Albany’s current production of “Scapino” must surely have an element of deja vu mixed in with their performances. Twelve years ago, both were hitting their marks in the same play, as the same characters; Scapino, played by Lorber, and Geronte, played by White.

The plot has the two at odds with each other in a fast-paced comedy that is expected to be as much fun today as it was the first time around. In real life, the two have become good friends through their mutual love of the theatre. They are among a devoted group of actors that Theatre Albany has come to rely on over the years for professional level performances, giving the commitment of time and effort that it takes.

For Lorber, acting has been in his blood his whole life, taking the stage in high school and then getting accepted to Boston’s Emerson College for theatre. At the time he was living in Virginia and economics, logistics, and some fatherly guidance found him instead at Mary Washington College, in Fredericksburg. Having just been converted from an all girl school to a coed college, Lorber said that auditioning for roles almost always had him on the stage, as there were only a few hundred male students on campus. He joked, “Usually I got the old men parts because I could grow a beard in a few weeks.”

His first performance for Theatre Albany was shortly after moving here in 1983, in “The Rainmaker”. It was the beginning of a long run of shows, and his long-running marriage to his wife, Nancy, as well.

“We had just been married, and because I was in the show we didn’t get a honeymoon until five years later,” Doug Lorber said.

The couple, business partners with Albany Audiology, are strong supporters of the area’s community theatre. “My wife has been incredibly supportive of my acting over the years”, added Lorber. “Acting gives me a chance to be somebody else, to do dialects, and just crazy stuff for a few hours.”

Glenn White has been a service technician for Johnson Controls in Albany for 16 years. He has been acting for about 21 years.

“I just love it. It feeds my ego,” he said.

White, Lorber

White is a thespian that Theatre Albany can rely on year after year. He has performed in more than 20 shows, and has no plans to stop.

White said he enjoys sharing the stage with others like himself; people with a genuine passion for the craft, and an appreciation for the hard work that goes into every performance. “It’s a good group of people, getting together to do something very special. We have a lot of fun,” said White. He is certain that his second time around with Lorber as comedic adversaries will be fun to do, which will only make it that much more entertaining for the audience to watch.

This performance of “Scapino” will have some style and pacing differences from the first because of the venue. Twelve years ago it was presented in the more informal studio upstairs. This season it’s on the main stage, and although it is still a very energetic offering, will probably not be quite as physical.

“I was actually in the audience back then more than I am now,” said Lorber.

Beyond their own personal calling to act, the bonds they have developed over the years with other performers make it an enjoyable process. They are each also quick to point out that the reactions from those that come to see a show, make it all worthwhile.

Said Lorber, “The applause you get at the end for a job well done is a great feeling.”

You can catch these two reprising their “Scapino” roles beginning March 17th. The play runs for two weeks, with evening performances on Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., and Sunday matinees at 2:30 p.m.

For more information and reservations, call the Theatre Albany box office at 439-7141.

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World-renowned young violinist to perform in Albany

Gareth Johnson

 

Special to the Journal

When he was 10, Gareth Johnson and his dad attended a St. Louis Symphony Orchestra concert. That’s when Johnson first heard famed violinist Itzhak Perlman perform. That performance made Johnson decide to learn how to play the violin. He went on to become a child prodigy and has been called the Tiger Woods of classical violin.
Now in his mid-20s, Johnson has performed around the world and won numerous awards because of his musical virtuosity. On Sunday, April 3, he’ll bring his talents to Albany for a recital at the Albany Municipal Auditorium during Albany State University’s Founder’s Day Weekend.
Johnson earned a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in music performance from the Lynn University Conservatory of Music in Boca Raton, Fla.
His accomplishments include winning the Sphinx Competition Senior Division in 2010 and the Junior Division in 2002 as well as the Lynn University Conservatory Competition in 2008. Johnson’s other awards include a Lynn University Music Scholarship (2002-2009), the Madelyn Savarick Annual Music Scholarship Competition (2004), Arts Recognition and Talent Search (Arts) Award (2003), New World Symphony Concerto Competition (2002), Lynn University Young Musician Competition for Strings (2002), St. Louis Gateway “Young Heroes in Music” Award (2001), St. Louis Laclede String Quartet Solo Competition (2001) and Collegiate All- American Scholar (2003).
From 2001 to 2010, Johnson held residencies or appeared as a solo performer with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, the Boston Pops, the Orchestra of the Triangle, the National Orchestra of the Dominican Republic, Boca Philharmonic, Carnegie Hall and others. Johnson has performed in Pittsburgh, Pa.; Battle Creek, Mich.; Rochester, N.Y.; Atlanta, Ga.; St. Louis, Mo.; Cincinnati, Ohio; Baltimore, Md.; Annapolis, Md.; Detroit, Mich.; Memphis, Tenn.; Albany, Ga.; and others.
Johnson’s Albany performance is part of the ASU Department of Fine Arts and Lyceum Performance Series. This year’s series is dedicated to Dr. T. Marshall Jones, retired head of the ASU Department of Fine Arts. The recital will begin at 4 p.m. Tickets are $15, $10 and $5. (ASU student tickets are $12, $7 and $3.) Tickets are available at the Albany James H. Gray Sr. Civic Center Box Office or at www.ticketmaster.com.
In addition to the recital, Johnson will also hold a master class for local student violinists at 4 p.m. Monday, April 4, at the Albany Municipal Auditorium. For more information about the master class, call the ASU Department of Fine Arts at 430-4849.
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Arts at Darton Day to be held Tuesday (Exclusive to thealbanyjournal.com)

By Walter L. Johnson II

Local high school students with an interest in the arts will have the chance to express their appreciation for it closer to home

The Albany-based two-year college will host the third-annual “Arts at Darton Day”, this Tuesday, Feb. 8, on the Darton campus.

Darton professor of music Jeff Kluball says the “Arts at Darton Day” is a tremendous opportunity for high school students to gain greater awareness, as well as exposure to, the arts at the constantly growing institution.

“It provides us a way to actually educate, and let high school students in the area come in, and experience college life first hand, instead of just a traditional recruiting day where students come and visit the college, and pick up brochures,” Kluball said. “We actually have them come in, and experience the arts at Darton College.  They go to theatre classes, art classes, music classes, and theatre and dance classes.”

Kluball added: “They leave here better artists, and better prepared.  Plus, they know what it’s like to be at college for a day.  They’re actually in classes with college students, and they play their instruments, they play the musical instruments, their try their dance shoes, they participate in that, and they also put together things in the theatre.  So, it’s quite an experience, it lets them know what college is all about.”

Participants in the “Arts at Darton Day” will also learn how to use computer art to make images of themselves, including magazine covers, art professor John Dimino said.

“We’re learning different programs like Photoshop and In Design,” Dimino said, “but we’re teaching the students to use the computers as art-making tools. So, at the ‘Arts at Darton Day’, we’re going to have the (high school) students work in different areas, like the computer lab, and then they’ll work in ceramics, and we’ll have them doing drawing, so they can experience what it’s like to be an art student at Darton for the day.”

Kluball says the response to the “Arts at Darton Day” has grown positively in the two years that it’s been held on campus.

“It’s been well-received every year, and we have high school sponsors and counselors that bring students up,” Kluball said, “and students can come over on their own as well, and we’ve had very good feedback on it.  It actually serves a purpose as well, because it lets high school students know there’s more things to do in the arts beyond high school.”

Kluball also expects to see about the same numbers attending the “Arts at Darton Day.”

“We’ve averaged almost 100 students every year,” said Kluball. “We’re already anticipating at least that this year.  We have over 75 (students) that have already confirmed reservations, and we have some very nice things to offer them since we started the ‘Arts at Darton Day.’

Additionally, students who attend Darton from outside of Albany/Dougherty County will also be encouraged to make the most of the new student center that opened last year, as well as the on-campus housing, Kluball added.

“We do have new dormitories,” Kluball said. “We’re in our second year with dormitories.  We have a brand-new student center that is great for student activities.”

Dimino hope students take away a lot of things they’ll learn from the “Arts at Darton Day.”

“We’re just looking forward to meeting the high school students that will be here,” Dimino said, “and to show them what we do, give them the opportunity to work in the ceramics room, and to make something to take home with them.”

For more information on the “Arts at Darton Day”, contact Jeff Kluball at (229) 317-6852, or send e-mail to jeff.kluball@darton.edu, or Gail Apperson at (229) 317-6554, or send e-mail to gail.apperson@darton.edu.   Students can also register online at http://www.darton.edu.

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Georgia Peanut Farm Show set for January 20

Kelley Manufacturing Company sponsors Grand Door Prize

Producers can fine-tune their farming operations with information gained at the 35th annual Georgia Peanut Farm Show on Jan. 20, 2011, at the Albany Civic Center. The show is sponsored by the Georgia Peanut Commission in cooperation with the University of Georgia.

During this year’s show, Kelley Manufacturing Company is providing the grand door prize of one season’s use of a new four or six row peanut combine, valued at $10,000. At the end of the season the winner has the option of purchasing the combine from a KMC dealer after a reduction in the list price of $10,000. Amadas Industries is also providing a door prize of $10,000 towards the purchase of a peanut combine.

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Summer Astronomy Series continues Tuesday at the Wetherbee Planetarium

The next Thronateeska Heritage Center Summer Astronomy Series program on Tuesday August 24th at the Wetherbee Planetarium. 

 The Science Museum will be open at 7:00 p.m.  After introductions, guests will view a planetarium show followed by a presentation on the latest observations and theories on black holes and the life cycle of stars to be followed by questions and answers.  The program will last approximately until 8:30 p.m.

Oasis in Space will start off the program and the evening continues with information on the latest discoveries in our galaxy.  Visitors will also investigate deep space objects and constellations.

Admission to the series is $3.50 plus tax per person.  Thronateeska members are admitted at no charge.  While reservations are not required, seating is limited.  Program content is suitable for all ages.  For more information call 229-432-6955.

Tags: education
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Albany Marine Band performs free concert Tuesday

The Albany Marine Band with Marine Corps Logistics Command is scheduled to perform a free concert for Marines, civilian-Marines and their families Tuesday, Aug. 24, from noon to about 1:30 p.m. at the Base Theater.
Tuesday’s concert is a replica of the concert they are scheduled to perform at the Champlain Valley Exposition in Essex Junction, Vt., Aug. 30. The band will perform at other locations in Vermont Aug. 28-Sept. 1.

Tags: Events, music
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Chorale wrapping up with I Remember Love

Special to the Journal 

            The Albany Chorale’s final concert of the 2009-2010 concert season will be I Remember Love on April 10. The festivities will begin at 7 p.m. with a silent auction with hors d’oeuvres and beverages. The concert begins at 8 p.m. on the main stage at Theatre Albany, 514 Pine Ave.. 

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GRACE & GLORIE

Francie Michas (Glorie) and Joy Johnson (Grace) in a scene from Theatre Albany’s production of GRACE & GLORIE playing its final week Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. with a Sunday matinee at 2:30 p.m.

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