A&E SEASON PREVIEW: Critically selected highlights
A highly selective, very subjective guide to the most promising arts and entertainment events on the way in the 2012-13 season.
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A highly selective, very subjective guide to the most promising arts and entertainment events on the way in the 2012-13 season.
I am the parent of a seventh-grader who looks forward to this school year with excitement, hope and a sense of optimism. Unfortunately, many of her peers do not share those thoughts. I am particularly concerned about African-American males.
It’s getting close to election time. I find many voters are feeling a depressed malaise. When we feel that way, it’s hard to imagine regaining the energetic confidence we could have, and that we need to succeed.
Among news people in Indiana there is an excited buzz: Mourdock may be in trouble in his Senate race against Donnelly. Indiana Democrats were swamped in the 2010 elections.
It’s nine weeks until the election, and Richard Mourdock from southern Indiana and Joe Donnelly from northwest Indiana are in a barn-burner race for the Senate seat. I am going to vote for Mourdock because I like his “tell it like it is” style, much like my all-time best Indiana senator, William Ezra Jenner.
When the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the vast majority of the Affordable Care Act, it threw a curveball to politicians like Gov. Daniels and Mike Pence, who were counting on the court killing the implementation of national health reform.
When my kids were growing up, I coached their baseball and basketball teams. Like all coaches, I preached teamwork as one of the key fundamentals that would make us successful.
Music in the Garden, Indianapolis Jazz orchestra, Aug. 30 at Garfield Park. Details here.
The Contours celebrate 50 years of Motown music, Aug. 30-31 at Conner Prairie Amphitheater. Pop rocker Jon McLaughlin plays Sept. 1. Details here.
“The Sound of Music” closes out the Summer Nights film series at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Aug. 31. Details here.
Gordon Bonham performs at the Indianapolis Artsgarden Sept. 4. Details here.
Rascal Flatts takes the stage at Klipsch Music Center, Aug. 31. Kelly Clarkson and The Fray follow on Sept. 2. Details here and here.
Big & Rich is the latest act to play Hoosier Park Racing & Casino, Sept. 2. Details here.
There’s a lot of sincere talk these days about compromise. Most Hoosiers honestly struggle with the question of whether we need to get tough on Washington and firmly stand our ground against business as usual or “compromise” and strike the middle ground. It’s a fair and natural dilemma.
Make sure to pick up a copy of the upcoming IBJ, on newsstands Saturday. It contains the annual IBJ A&E Season Preview, featuring dozens of critically selected picks for the coming months—plus Talking Points, our IBJ list of top performing arts organizations, and a first look into upcoming IBJ A&E Road Trips
Sept. 5-8
Butler Studio Theatre
Butler University Theatre and Phoenix Theatre team up for this staged reading of a unique play in which seven different playwrights crafted monologues culled from interviews with female world leaders. A combo professional/student cast performs the piece, which kicks off the season for Butler Theatre. Details here.
Sept. 5-30
Indiana Repertory Theatre
We have met the enemy, and he is us. Such has been the core of many dramatic works going back to “Oedipus”. But the most famous hero/villain-in-one-body belongs to Dr. Jekyll. The Robert Louis Stevenson creation goes back to 1886, but has been tinkered with and transformed so many times in film and on stage that the story might actually have become suspenseful again. The Indiana Repertory Theatre opens its season with Jeffrey Hatcher’s 2008 adaptation (no, this isn’t the musical), which takes an interesting approach to casting the villain. Details here.
The announcement of a potential Super Bowl bid for 2018 is creating a buzz, reminding us that Indianapolis and central Indiana are now on the national, even international, stage in many ways.
Initially, I think Gov. Daniels should find a way to celebrate the great projects happening in teacher education.
Gov. Daniels will have a momentous opportunity to make Purdue’s College of Education a national model for teacher preparation.
The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra season would shrink from 52 weeks to 36 under management’s proposal to restore financial stability to the performing arts organization.
Indiana Republican gubernatorial candidate Mike Pence is calling for more innovation on energy sources, improved transmission infrastructure and a renewed focus on nuclear energy.
A businessman has donated $20,000 to the city of Anderson to help replace two police dogs that died during violent confrontations in the past month. The contribution from David Myers of Indianapolis should cover most of the expenses for replacing the dogs, which typically cost between $10,000 and $12,000. One of the dogs was euthanized last week after being shot in the face by a suspected bank robber. The other mistook an officer as an aggressor during a late July standoff and had to be shot.
Fire crews battled a fire Tuesday morning on the near-east side of Indianapolis. Smoke could be seen for miles. The fire began about 9:45 at the former location of Indy Lumber, 411 S. Ritter Ave. The building has been abandoned for years. One firefighter suffered a strained back. No other injuries were reported.
The Mount Zion Academy, which recently completed a two-year renovation project, suffered major damage during an overnight fire in Indianapolis. Firefighters were called to the scene near Crown Hill Cemetery about midnight. The renovation, partly funded by the United Way of Central Indiana, was to be unveiled this week. The building sustained an estimated $200,000 in damage. The fire is under investigation.