Romeo & Juliet at Littleton Opera House

Shakespeare’s timeless tale is arguably the most loved and well-known love story and tragedy of all time. Love and hate turn on a dime as these young adults struggle to balance the intensity of their emotions: lust, love, anger, loyalty, joy, hatred, hope, the list goes on and these ancient characters are just as real in our lives today. The cast has been training with fight master Ric Alpers and you won’t want to miss the clash of their swords in some exciting fight sequences.

Romeo and Juliet is directed by Upstage Artistic Director, Andrew Lidestri with fight choreography by Ric Alpers and Madalyn Sheehy. The cast will consist of some wonderful local talent including Connor MacDonald, Madalyn Sheehy, David Weddington, Deborah Osborne, Owen Fogg, Alyssa Comeau, and Rosa VanWie. There is also a wonderful ensemble of local talent helping bring this play to life

November 10, 11, 17 & 18 at 7:30 p.m.
November 12 & 19 at 2 p.m.
Tickets: RESERVED $10 for advance purchase or $12 at the door

Over There — The Songs That Won The War (WWI)

Benjamin Sears & Bradford Conner will present the songs of World War I in a delightful concert at St. Kieran Arts Center.

They have been performing together since 1989. They are among those rare performers who combine entertaining performances with outstanding historical research and who can claim Irving Berlin and George & Ira Gershwin premieres. In 1997 they made music history with Oh Kay, Oh George, a first-time concert pairing of songs and music by romantic and musical colleagues Kay Swift and George Gershwin, featuring many rarely heard Swift songs along with premieres of two unpublished George & Ira Gershwin songs. Their reputation as Gershwin performers was honored by the selection of their recordings to be part of the Interactive Kiosk at the new George & Ira Gershwin Room at the Library of Congress.

Sears and Conner are the first cabaret act to be featured at Boston’s Emerson Majestic Theatre, and at Boston’s Wang Centre for the Performing Arts they revived a show-biz tradition by presenting a pre-show concert of Irving Berlin songs for a showing of Berlin’s classic film, White Christmas.

Sears and Conner are Producing Directors of American Classics and are founding members of the Boston Association of Cabaret Artists (BACA), an organization promoting awareness and performance of cabaret in the Boston area. They are known for their research in the music and lyrics of Tin Pan Alley, Broadway and Hollywood. In 1996 they rediscovered a long-lost Irving Berlin song from 1916, “Santa Claus: A Syncopated Christmas Song,” which they subsequently gave its modern premiere and first recording.

Romeo & Juliet at Littleton Opera House

Shakespeare’s timeless tale is arguably the most loved and well-known love story and tragedy of all time. Love and hate turn on a dime as these young adults struggle to balance the intensity of their emotions: lust, love, anger, loyalty, joy, hatred, hope, the list goes on and these ancient characters are just as real in our lives today. The cast has been training with fight master Ric Alpers and you won’t want to miss the clash of their swords in some exciting fight sequences.

Romeo and Juliet is directed by Upstage Artistic Director, Andrew Lidestri with fight choreography by Ric Alpers and Madalyn Sheehy. The cast will consist of some wonderful local talent including Connor MacDonald, Madalyn Sheehy, David Weddington, Deborah Osborne, Owen Fogg, Alyssa Comeau, and Rosa VanWie. There is also a wonderful ensemble of local talent helping bring this play to life.

November 10, 11, 17 & 18 at 7:30 p.m.
November 12 & 19 at 2 p.m.
Tickets: RESERVED $10 for advance purchase or $12 at the door

Concert with Tracy Grammer & Jim Henry

The Tracy Grammer/Jim Henry duo is synonymous with impeccable musicianship, tight harmonies, a diverse repertoire, and the kind of musical chemistry and humorous banter you’d expect from musicians who have been touring together for more than a decade.

Tracy Grammer rose to acclaim as half of the “postmodern, mythic American folk” duo, Dave Carter & Tracy Grammer. From 1998-2001, the duo released three internationally celebrated, folk chart-topping albums featuring Carter’s mytho-poetic Americana songcraft and, in 2002, toured with Joan Baez, both as featured artists and Baez’s band members. Called “the new voice of modern folk music,” the duo was clearly in its ascendancy when in July 2002, Carter suffered a fatal heart attack while the duo was on tour. He was 49; Grammer, 34.

Determined to honor the duo’s journey and bring Carter’s songs, and those of other favorite writers, to broader audiences, Grammer has kept to the road, releasing solo albums as well as selections from the Dave Carter & Tracy Grammer archives.

Grammer has become one of folk music’s most beloved artists. Renowned for her springwater-clear alto, perfectly intoned violin, and guitar playing that is by turns percussive and delicate, Grammer is also a masterful storyteller with an ease and charisma on stage — not to mention a riotous sense of humor — that hardly belie her modest beginnings as Carter’s reclusive accompanist. As one fan put it, “With Tracy, it’s never just about the music. It’s a soul journey.”

Tracy’s musician partner this night, Jim Henry, is an accomplished songwriter and one of folk and Americana’s go-to instrumentalists, just off the road from a three-year stint as a member of multiple Grammy-winner Mary Chapin Carpenter’s band. With an arsenal that includes acoustic/electric guitars, Dobro, and mandolin, Henry adds whatever the songs require.

Tickets are $15 each and available at Fiddleheads, 110 Main St., Colebrook, online at www.gnwca.org or at the door. Please call 603-237-9302 or 603-246-8998 for additional information.

 

Campfire at AMC Highland Center

Warm up — and socialize with other guests around a blazing campfire!

Highland Happenings Featured Evening Programs are FREE and OPEN to the public. For more information, please call (603) 278-4453.

AMC Presents: The People’s Forest —The Story of the White Mountain National Forest

The People’s Forest — The Story of the White Mountain National Forest is a David Huntley film.

The public is invited to enjoy this film about one of the greatest environmental comeback stories in American history.

Pinkham Happenings programs are free and open to all. Call to find out more or to be added to the monthly email list: (603) 466-2721. outdoors.org/pinkhamhappenings

AMC Presents: Trail Signs of the White Mountains & Finding Your Way

AMC volunteer and historian Bill Moss speaks on trail signage in the White Mountain National Forest. If you’ve ever wondered about trail blazes, trail names, or the rhyme and reason behind the signs that you see in the woods, check out this interesting talk.

Featured Evening Programs are free and open to the public. For more information, please call (603) 278-4453.

Berlin Jazz Benefit Concert

St. Kieran will host local jazz favorite, Berlin Jazz in its 17th annual benefit concert. In addition, the Material Girls of the Berlin Quilters Guild are currently exhibiting their works in the main hall. Come and check out the show and the exhibit, meet a few friends, have a cold beverage from our adult beverage bar, a hot beverage and/or a snack baked by our awesome team of volunteer bakers!

The jazz band, in existence since 1987, has amassed a library of over 200 selections. Among the selections for Saturday’s concert are All of Me, Stardust, My Funny Valentine, Sing, Sing, Sing and Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars.

“We have such a great book of music, we could play for more than 10 hours non-stop” claims the group’s president, Monique Lavertu. “It’s becoming increasingly difficult to select the play list for a 2-hour show: a great problem to have!”

Berlin Jazz has been blessed over the years to have many talented North Country musicians join the ensemble. The 18+ musicians that now fill their ranks donate their time each week for rehearsal and play for the love of music.

 

The Rittenhouse Family Plays Grieg, Mozart and Others

To show their support for the arts in the North Country, Dr. Jerry Rittenhouse, his wife Lauren, and sister Connie will present a free concert of classical music at the Tillotson Center. Among the works planned are selections from Mozart, Saint-Saens, and Edvard Grieg.