Dec. 15
Clowes Hall
Dec 16
Christ Church Cathedral
Originally meant to celebrate Easter and Lent, George Frideric Handel’s “Messiah” was actually first performed in April. But with a libretto culled from the Bible by Charles Jennens, the three-act oratorio migrated to December, where it has become a Christmas tradition. This week, you can catch two different performances. The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir take the Clowes Hall stage on Dec. 15 (Details here.) and the choirs of Christ Church Cathedral and the Indianapolis Baroque Orchestra do the same Dec. 16 at Christ Church Cathedral. (Details here.)
Dec. 14
Palladium
I’ve heard the case made that Burt is actually more magical than Mary. I’ve seen scenes from the movie recut to seem like a horror film. And I’ve heard the objections to the film by the writer of the original book. But none of these have diminished the magic of “Mary Poppins,” Disney’s 1964 classic that has the guts and beauty to take its time (imagine a two-plus-hour children’s film today). It’s got charming animation, great songs, Julie Andrews, Dick Van Dyke, a pair of terrific kid performances, and a wonderful supporting cast. And it’s being show in its big-screen glory as part of the new Great American Songbook Movie Series. Details here.
St. Vincent Health named Julie Carmichael as its chief strategy officer for the 22-hospital system, starting
Dec. 31. Carmichael succeeds Kevin Speer, who left St. Vincent in November to become CEO of Hendricks Regional Health in Danville.
Carmichael worked the past 19 years as CEO of the Suburban Health Organization, a partnership of several Indianapolis-area
hospital systems, including St. Vincent Health. She holds a bachelor’s degree Stanford University and an MBA from Indiana
University.
Dr. Jonathan Ting, an otolaryngologist, has joined Wishard Health Services. He received his medical degree
from the University of Western Ontario.
Dr. David K. Booth, a family medicine physician, has joined Community Physicians Network, a subsidiary of
Indianapolis-based Community Health Network, after practicing privately in Meadville, Pa. He earned his medical degree at
Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Hospital in Harrisburg, Pa.
Dr. Michael DaRosa, a primary care sports medicine physician, has joined Community Physician Network in
Greenwood. He completed his medical degree at Des Moines College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Dr. Vin Gupta, a pediatric hospitalist, has joined Community Hospital North in the Castleton neighborhood.
He earned his medical degree from the Medical College of Ohio.
Dr. Syeda Naqvi, a geriatrician, has joined Community Physician Network. She completed her medical degree
at Sind Medical College in Karachi, Pakistan.
Dr. Nicole Zulkowski, a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician, has joined the Community Spine Center
in Greenwood. She earned her medical degree at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
Union Health System Inc. in Terre Haute named Patrick S. Board as its CEO. Board succeeds David Doerr,
who announced his retirement earlier this year. Board has been CEO of Union Health’s physician group, called Union Associated
Physicians Clinic LLC, in Terre Haute. Starting Jan. 1, Board will oversee both the Union physician practice and Union Hospital,
which will continue to be led by Scott Teffeteller. Board received a bachelor’s degree in business from the College
of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn., and a master’s degree in hospital and healthcare administration from the University
of Minnesota.
The RND Group Inc., which makes software for medical-device and diagnostic firms, will expand its operations
in Indianapolis, adding as many as 25 jobs by 2016. The company employs 27 full-time people along with the equivalent of 14
full-time contractors. The Indiana Economic Development Corp. agreed to give RND Group $700,000 in tax credits if it fulfills
its job-creation commitment. The city of Indianapolis is considering additional tax incentives.
Indianapolis-based Nico Corp. has raised another $6.5 million in venture capital from its existing shareholders
and board members. Nico’s Myriad line of products allow minimally invasive removal of brain tumors and tissue in adults
and children. Now, Nico wants to use the new round of capital to develop technology to address diseases that were often considered
inoperable, such as metastatic brain cancer, intracerebral hemorrhages and glioblastoma multiforme. Since 2008, Nico has raised
$20 million, with half of that coming in 2009. Investors participating in its latest fundraising round included Rose-Hulman
Institute of Technology, River Cities Capital Fund, CHV Capital, Cornelius Private Investments and Twilight Venture Partners.
Nico was founded in 2007 by many of the executives and investors that created Suros Surgical Systems Inc., which was sold
in 2006 to Massachusetts-based Hologic Inc. for $248 million.
West Lafayette-based Perfinity Biosciences Inc. has partnered with Japan-based Shimadzu Corp. to market
and distribute its technology, which automates the preparation and analysis of protein samples in research and diagnostic
labs. The Perfinity Integrated Digestion Platform cuts down sample preparation time from 18 hours to 30 minutes or less. The
companies worked together to launch Perfinity’s technology in the United States earlier this year. Financial details
about the agreement were not disclosed.
Micro Machine Co. LLC, an orthopedic medical-device manufacturer, will build out a new manufacturing plant
in Warsaw, creating as many as 60 jobs by 2015. The company, based in Kalamazoo, Mich., will invest $2.8 million in its expansion
to produce parts for Warsaw-based Zimmer Holdings Inc. and Warsaw-based DePuy Orthopaedics Inc., and perhaps other companies.
Micro Machine already employs eight in Warsaw in addition to 72 in Kalamazoo. The Indiana Economic Development Corp. offered
Micro Machine up to $585,000 in tax incentives and training grants if it fulfills its job-creation plans. Kosciusko County
approved additional property tax abatement for Micro Machine.
Two investors in Indianapolis are trying to raise money to fill the gap in early-stage funding for life sciences companies in the Midwest. San
Francisco-based CMEA Capital is trying to raise $100 million for early-stage life sciences investments, according
to multiple people briefed by CMEA’s Midwest partner in the fund, Kent Hawryluk. Hawryluk, a co-founder of Carmel-based
drug development firm Marcadia Biotech, will oversee Midwest investments of the fund from Indianapolis, with a focus on biotech
and pharmaceutical companies, according to people familiar with his plans. In addition, Oscar Moralez, managing director of
the StepStone Angels network, plans to start pitching a new fund to investors early next year. His plans
are to raise $10 million to $20 million to invest in technology companies, including life sciences firms, in Indiana and surrounding
states. “We feel the timing is right,” said Moralez. He described the fund he wants to raise as, in part, a "sidecar"
to help the seven companies now supported by StepStone Angels—six of which are life sciences companies—to continue
to get the cash they need to grow.
Due to the closing of Franciscan St. Francis Health’s Beech Grove hospital, Select Specialty Hospital-Beech
Grove relocated from Beech Grove to a new freestanding location at 8060 Knue Road in the Castleton neighborhood.
In its new location, Select Specialty Hospital has 45 beds, on-site CT machines, lab services, a rehabilitation area and a
cafeteria. The hospital will now be called Select Specialty Hospital – Indianapolis.
A North Carolina-based maker of cancer-fighting ultrasound machines plans to create 27 jobs at its Indianapolis facility over the next three years.
US HIFU LLC will add positions paying an average of $36 an hour at its offices at 4000 Pendleton Way, on
the northeast side of the city along Interstate 465 near Pendleton Pike. The company already employs 15 people at that location.
The new jobs are for engineers, researchers and support personnel to help US HIFU make its Sonablate 500 system, which uses
"high-intensity and focused ultrasound" to treat cancer with fewer side effects. US HIFU, founded in 2004, has yet
to receive regulatory approval for its technology, but the company is studying it in a U.S. clinical trial for treating prostate
cancer and around the world as a potential treatment for other cancers. The new jobs were announced Monday morning by the
Indiana Economic Development Corp., which promised the company up to $350,000 in conditional tax credits and up to $50,000
in training grants. Also, the company has applied to Marion County for property tax abatement.
Novia CareClinics LLC opened the first multi-employer clinic for downtown employers Monday at its headquarters
at 429 N. Pennsylvania St. Novia, which operates 50 clinics statewide, made its latest clinic open to other employers. Harrison
College, the law firm Plews Shadley Racher & Braun LLP and McFarling Foods Inc. have joined so far. The 1,200-square-foot
health and wellness center, first made public in July, will be staffed with a physician and nurses, offering primary care
services 40 hours per week. The four companies using it have more than 500 employees combined at locations in or near downtown.
Novia has said it needs to sign up 1,000 employees to make the cost per employee reasonable. If employer demand proves high,
Novia could expand its downtown clinic to as large as 2,000 square feet, add a second physician or nurse practitioner, and
serve as many as 2,000 employees.
European Union regulators have agreed to review the drug vintafolide, discovered by West Lafayette-based Endocyte
Inc., bringing it one step closer to reaching the market. Endocyte and its development partner, New Jersey-based
Merck & Co. Inc., said the European Medicines Agency will review vintafolide, formerly known as EC145, as a treatment
for ovarian cancer that is resistant to platinum-based chemotherapy. The agency also will review their application for an
imaging agent that can help identify patients most likely to benefit from the drug. According to the Associated Press, vintafolide
and the diagnostic agent both have orphan drug status, which means competing products will be barred from the market for up
to 10 years if they are approved. Merck will pay Endocyte $5 million because the application was accepted.
The government dropped its antitrust concerns about health insurer WellPoint Inc.'s
proposed acquisition of Amerigroup Corp. last week, clearing WellPoint to proceed with the $4.9 billion deal. According to
the Associated Press, U.S. Department of Justice officials had objected to the proposed merger because WellPoint and Amerigroup
are the only providers of Medicaid managed care plans in northern Virginia. To address that concern, Amerigroup agreed to
sell its Virginia business, Amerigroup Virginia Inc., to Inova Health System Foundation. It did not disclose financial terms
of that deal, which was announced in September and is conditioned on the closing of the WellPoint-Amerigroup merger. The sale
to Inova ensures that Medicaid users will have at least two options for managed care, the Justice Department said.
$3 Bill Comedy presents its latest sketch revue "The Fancy Schmancy Razzle Dazzle Hoity Toity Black Tie (optional) Christmas Affair Show!" Dec. 7-15. Details here.
Indianapolis Downtown Beatification presents its annual benefit screening of “It’s a Wonderful Life” Dec. 6 at United Artists Circle Centre. Details here. http://www.indydt.com/its%20a%20wonderful%20life.cfm
Artist Judy Chicago speaks about her career Dec. 6 at IUPUI’s Eskenazi Hall in conjunction with the opening of the Undergraduate Student Exhibition. Details here. http://www.herron.iupui.edu/event/judy-chicago-jane-fortune-outstanding-woman-artist-lecture
The Cathy Morris Holiday Party takes over the Athenaeum Dec. 10-11 with music, dance, poetry and visual art from, among many others, Gary Walters, Everette Greene, Capital City Chorus and the Indianapolis Suzuki Academy. Details here. http://cathymorrismusic.eventbrite.com/
The Moody Blues play the Murat on Dec. 6. Straight No Chaser follows on Dec. 7. Details here. http://www.ticketmaster.com/Murat-Theatre-at-Old-National-Centre-tickets-Indianapolis/venue/41109 and here. http://www.ticketmaster.com/Murat-Theatre-at-Old-National-Centre-tickets-Indianapolis/venue/41109
Gallery 924 opens “Tiny,” featuring miniature work by 50 artists Dec. 7. Details here. http://www.artscouncilofindianapolis.org/gallery924/. Meanwhile, Primary Gallery presents “Toys.” Details here.https://www.facebook.com/events/432186740175502/
Booth Tarkington Civic Theatre revisits “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” Dec. 14-Jan. 5. Details here. http://www.civictheatre.org/shows-tickets/joseph-and-the-amazing-technicolor-dreamcoat/
Gregory Hancock Dance Theatre presents its "Nutcracker" Dec. 7-9 at the Pike Performing Arts Center. Details here.
Dec. 7-16
Basile Opera Center
As it continues to expand its range of operatic offerings, Indianapolis Opera stages this made-for-prime-time-TV opera that was originally commissioned by NBC in 1951. At the time, 5 million people saw it. Far fewer will fit in the Basile Opera Center, which is closer in size to a TV studio than it is to a full-scale opera house. That intimacy should benefit the kid-friendly piece, which tells the story of a young boy who encounters the three kings on their way to the manger. Details here.
Dec. 7-9
Georgia Street
Free ice skating, Santa visits and musical performances highlight this effort to make the most out of the downtown Georgia Street redo. St. John’s Catholic Church offers a live nativity with cookie decorating for the kids and mulled cider and hot chocolate to warm up. Details here.
Dec. 7-April 7
Indianapolis Museumof Art
Yes, it’s the stuff in pencils. And it’s used in sculptures. And in this first-of-its-kind exhibition, it’s also a prime medium for artists from France, Austria, England and the United States. The free opening event on the 6th includes a trio of hip-hop MCs offering freestyle interpretations of the work. Details here.
Dec. 6-16
Indiana Repertory Theatre
Rat Pack style meets Dance Kaleidoscope moves in this concert featuring new choreography by David Hochoy and Cynthia Pratt. Knowing I wouldn’t be able to make it to opening weekend, I accepted an invitation to sit in on a dress rehearsal and, even in a rehearsal room without theatrical lighting, the show satisfied, particularly Jillian Godwin’s attitude-packed “That’s Life” and a playful company spin on “Mambo Italiano.” Details here.
Dec. 1
The Blue Bird, Bloomington
“The Last Waltz” is widely considered one of the best concert movies of all time. A big part of that is because the subject of the film, the announced final performance by The Band—accompanied by a stellar lineup of guests including Bob Dylan, Neil Diamond and Muddy Waters—was a landmark concert. Indiana musicians re-created the concert in a performance last summer at Radio Radio in Fountain Square. For those, like me, who are kicking themselves for missing it, news that the concert is being re-created again, albeit in Bloomington, warrants some road-trip planning. Details here.
Folk singer John McCutcheon performs “Christmas in the Trenches” Dec. 1 under the auspices of Storytelling Arts. Details here.
Kevin Pollak visits Crackers Comedy Club in Broad Ripple Nov. 29-Dec. 1 on his “How I Slept My Way to the Middle” tour. Details here.
Jeannie Logan—who has performed at Theatre on the Square, the American Cabaret Theatre and Holland-America Cruise Lines—offers a cabaret show at Chef Joseph’s at the Connoisseur Room Nov. 30. Details here.
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band celebrates “Creole Christmas” Dec. 5 at Purdue University’s Long Center for the Performing Arts. Details here.
Butler Ballet’s “The Nutcracker” is performed Nov. 29-Dec. 2 at Clowes Hall. Details here.
The American Pianists Association presents Sara Daneshpour Dec. 2 at the Indiana History Center. Details here.
Eagle Creek Park hosts its annual “Celebration of Nature” exhibition at the Earth Discovery Center Dec. 1-9. Details here.
Indulge in a Victorian Holiday Tea at the Morris-Butler House Dec. 1 and 8. Details here.
The Buselli-Wallarab Jazz Orchestra plays its annual holiday show at the Jazz Kitchen Dec. 2. Details here.
On Nov. 29, New Day Meadery hosts a discussion of the book “Food for Thought: An Indiana Harvest” with author David Hoppe, photographer Kristen Hess, David Barrickman (Wildflower Ridge Honey) and Chris Eley (Goose the Market). Details here.
Nov. 29-Dec. 23
Phoenix Theatre
Not knowing what to expect is one of the core pleasures of the Phoenix Theatre’s annual show featuring short plays and musical numbers woven together into a holiday tapestry. And this year there’s an added twist: The addition of The Fourth Wall, an ensemble of musicians/dancers/actors. Details here.
Nov. 30-Dec. 23
Hilbert Circle Theatre
Look for double the hosts this year when Yuletide Celebration returns—plus a homecoming. Half of the hosting team is Indiana’s own Angela Brown, whose career has taken her to the Metropolitan Opera and beyond. Sharing duties with her is Ben Crawford, who has made guest appearances with the ISO over the years in between duties on Broadway and elsewhere. As if the guest list weren’t already interesting enough, Cirque de la Symphonie acrobats will also be in the show. Details here.
-JBM Contractors has completed a 2,836-square-foot office build-out for Artemis Medical Group at 14555 Hazel Dell Parkway, Carmel.
-Kort Builders has completed a 2,160-square-foot restaurant build-out for Punch Burger at 137 E. Ohio St.
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Laura-the festivals and tastings are free. What does is strengthen the sense of community with activities. What are those empty lots doing for the Village? it's sad you can't see the good that this progress can do for the area. No one is requiring anyone to shop there. I guess you'd rather see a Dollar store move in or no, we'd rather see the property stand empty b/c change is out of the question.
Read down to the part about Brizzi. Someone needs to subpoena his "purchases" of Red RockPictures and Cellstar and his corresponding bank records, I mean c'mon, I'd like to see his alcohol usage records, too. http://diana-vice.blogspot.com/2011_01_01_archive.html
Wonder if my neighborhood can advertise our "retention" pond and act like it is a beach too?
a new record at the '11 salebration until they realized that it was a futile effort to get their crapwagon moter and crapwagon car up speed. And then they just quietly slunk off into the night and never spoke of it again. Nothing to see here folks.
millions for putting a company's bumper sticker on one of its Lolas. But you gotta take what you can get.