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Event Archives
Event Archives

Sunday
Feb202011

February 20, 2011, Sunday - Accordo at Southern Theater (2 nights)

Times:
Sunday, February 20 - 7:00pm
Monday, February 21 - 7:30pm

Location: The Southern Theater, 1420 Washington Avenue South

Named “best new chamber ensemble 2009” by the Star Tribune, Accordo returns for a second season in the Southern’s intimate space.

The ensemble features principal players from the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and Minnesota Orchestra, including Steven Copes, Ruggero Allifranchini, Maiya Papach, Ron Thomas and Tony Ross.

Schubert: String Trio in Bb Major, D. 471
Martinu: Duo #1 for Violin and Cello, H. 157
Kodaly: Serenade for Two Violins & Viola, Op. 12
Mendelssohn: Viola Quintet #1 in A Major, Op. 18
with Rebecca Albers, viola & Kyu-Young Kim, violin

Program notes:
Mendelssohn at his finest is represented in his lyrical A Major String Quintet, complete with virtuoso writing for the strings and a scherzo reminiscent of his Midsummer Night's Dream. A short but sweet Schubert String Trio starts the program, and two rarely heard works written in the years after WWI from by Martinu and Kodaly fill out the first half of the program. Kodaly's close colleague and fellow Hungarian Bela Bartok praised his colorful Serenade for Two Violins & Viola of 1920 as "extraordinarily rich in melodies," and his music as "the most perfect embodiment of the Hungarian spirit." Czech composer Martinu's Duo #1 for Violin & Cello, written in Paris in 1927, shows the strong influence of Stravinsky's neoclassical style and Ravel's Duo, written only a few years before.

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Faculty Concert at MacPhail

Time: 3:00pm

Location:  Antonello Hall, MacPhail Center for Music, 501 South 2nd Street

MacPhail Faculty Concert Series

MacPhail’s faculty concerts offer an opportunity to hear great music from MacPhail’s outstanding faculty of teaching artists. With over 165 faculty members teaching 35 instruments, many faculty members use these concerts as an opportunity for collaboration and innovation. All faculty concerts are free to the public. For program information visit the events page on MacPhail’s website at macphail.org.

Faculty Recital
Saturday, February 19, 2011
3 p.m., Antonello Hall

Fratres by Arvo Pärt
Daniel McIntosh-cello
Gail Olszewski-piano

Trio, op. 9, no. 1 in G Major: I.  Adagio- Allegro con brio by Ludwig Van Beethoven
Faith Farr-cello
Elizabeth Ericksen-violin
Stella Anderson-viola

Sonata for Piano and Cello in E minor, op. 38, mvt. 1 by Johannes Brahms
Hanno Strydom-cello
Jon Iverson-piano

Two jazz pieces (TBD)
James Allen-guitar
Tom Pieper-acoustic bass

Piano Quartet no. 1, op. 15 in C minor: IV.  Allegro molto by Gabriel Fauré
Jason Alfred-piano
Orieta Dado-violin
David Auerbach-viola
Teresa Richardson-cello

From “Perennials” by David Crittenden
  I. Bittersweet
 II. Carousel
III. At Water’s Edge
 IV. Laurel Lane
  V. Winterscape

Jeff Lambert-guitar

Requiem for Three Cellos by David Popper
Joe Kaiser-cello
Faith Farr-cello
Andrea French-cello

Selections from Neun deutsches Arien (Nine German Arias) by G. F. Händel
Momoko Tanno-soprano
Gail Olszewski-harpsichord
Daniel McIntosh-baroque cello
Julie Johnson-flute

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Bundle Up, Walk Right Into Winter at Minneapolis Central Library

Time: 2:00pm–4:00pm

Location: Minneapolis Central Library, Children's Library

Bundle Up, Walk Right Into Winter.

Kindergarten and up. Naturalist and artist Martha Zemur will help you create a wood walking stick you can use for walks or sing and dance! Read a really good book, check out some for later, then grab your stick and hike right out the library door.

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Alisa Weilerstein and Gabriel Kahane at Southern Theater

Location: Southern Theater, 1420 Washington Avenue South

Time:  8:00pm

A natural virtuoso hailed for her impassioned musicianship and expressive range, 27-year-old cellist Alisa Weilerstein is renowned internationally as one of the premiere soloists and chamber musicians of her generation, set apart by her distinctive musical presence and charisma.

Gabriel Kahane’s rapid ascent as a composer of concert works comes into focus with this season’s premiere of three commissions: a large chamber work for the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by John Adams; a string quartet for the Kronos Quartet; and this program’s cello sonata/song cycle for Weilerstein and himself.

Kahane set Little Sleep’s Head to the eponymous poem by Galway Kinnell, from his monumental work The Book of Nightmares. The work expresses a dialogue between movements for cello and piano and song-like settings of Kinnell’s poem. Twin Cities premiere: Little Sleep’s Head Sprouting Hair in the Moonlight, Gabriel Kahane.

Co-commissioned by Stuart and Linda Nelson and the Southern Theater.

Information.  

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Scandinavian Classic Baking with Pat Sinclair at Mill City Museum

Location: Mill City Museum, 704 South Second Street

Times: Noon and 1:30pm

Join award-winning cookbook author Pat Sinclair as she celebrates the publication of her latest book, "Scandinavian Classic Baking," with demonstrations in the Baking Lab.

The book, organized by type of dish, includes information about each of the Scandinavian countries along with anecdotes and notes about traditions, holidays, and baking tips and tricks. Featuring photographs from around the region and information on where to find the equipment for specialty baking endeavors, this cookbook invites bakers of all levels to experience Northern Europe’s best coffee breads, cakes, cookies, tarts and traditions. After each demonstration, copies of Sinclair's book will be available for purchase, and she will be available to sign copies in the gift shop from 3 to 5 pm.

Fee: Programs included with museum admission of $10 adults, $8 seniors and college students, $5 children ages 6-17; free for MHS members.

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Twisted Fairy Tales at Minneapolis Central Library

Time: 10:30am–Noon

Location: Minneapolis Central Library, Pohlad Hall

Twisted Fairy Tales: Turn traditional fairy tales upside down and inside out with a Children’s Theatre Company “Neighborhood Bridges” storytelling before the films.

Preschool (age 3) and up and their families.  Children's film curators for the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival will present a pre-show art activity and educational intro for children's films fans before each screening. Seating is first-come, first-served.

Sponsored by the Presented by the Library Foundation of Hennepin County. Made possible in part by a grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board, through an appropriation by the Minnesota State Legislature and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional support: Whole Foods Market, Target, Weston Wood Studios, Jagged Edge and Minnesota Parent.

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Whisker Whirl: A Party for People and Pups at the Depot

Location: The Depot, 225 Third Avenue South

Enjoy a night out on the town with your canine valentine and animal-loving friends. Where else can you dress up and enjoy a sit-down dinner with your best friend right at your side? Whisker Whirl is filled with more frolicking fun than ever before in a winter wonderland space filled with games, silent and live auctions and… dogs, all to help the animals of the Animal Humane Society.

Information and tickets.

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Mill City Farmers Market at Local D'lish

Location:  208 North 1st Street
 
Hours: 10:00am – 2:00pm

Local D’lish has teamed up with the Mill City Farmers Market to bring you the Winter Farmer-in-the-Market event.  This event features about 20-25 vendors, a mix of familiar faces from the Mill City Farmers Market and product vendors here at Local D’lish.

At the Winter Farmer-in-the-Market, customers will find a wide variety of locally grown and produced meats, cheeses, chocolates, breads, sweets, and more!   To nurture a strong local foods economy, our farmers and producers must have a stable income year-round, and this monthly event is meant to help in this arena through the winter months.

The 2010-11 Winter Farmer-in-the-Market will be held on the following dates, from 10am – 2 pm:

February 19, 2011
March 19, 2011
April 16, 2011

Saturday
Feb192011

February 19, 2011, Saturday - Midwest Photo Safari "Minneapolis Nights" in the Mill District, Winter 2011 Special Session

This is a Midwest Photo Safari special winter session.

Walk parts of the St. Anthony Heritage Trail and practice early evening light photography.  Learn the principles of low light settings on your digital SLR's or the various "scene" mode settings of your digital point and shoot.

The safari starts with a short presentation covering basic principles of low light/night photography. When darkness sets in, this area comes alive with interesting lights. From the Minneapolis night skyline to the great lights on the area bridges, capture stunning night images you are sure to want to frame.

This safari is best done with a digital SLR or a better quality digital point and shoot with advanced scene modes. Your Safari guide / photographer will be carrying a Sony digital point and shoot to demonstrate the techniques we will be covering. For this safari, a sturdy tripod is necessary... Midwest Photo Safari can provide pro-quality rental tripods on request. A remote shutter release is also very handy to have along, or you may use the "self timer" feature of your camera.

Friday
Feb182011

February 18, 2011, Friday - Ten Thousand Things' Doubt, A Parable at Open Book

Location: Open Book, 1011 Washington Avenue South

Four weekends:  February 11-13, 18-20, 25-27 and March 4-6, 2011

Times: 
Friday and Saturday shows start at 8:00pm
Sunday shows at 4:00pm

Doubt, A Parable by John Patrick Shanley

Directed by Peter Rothstein
Featuring Sally Wingert, Kris Nelson, Jane Froiland, and Regina Williams

A fiery battle between a nun and a priest over suspicions of the sexual abuse of a child. Can you get at the truth, when the truth is so colored by our lenses of experience?

Ten Thousand Things explores this central question with John Patrick Shanley’s Doubt, A Parable, beginning with a tour to prisons, housing projects, homeless shelters and senior centers starting January 28, and culminating with four weekends of public performances at Open Book February 11 to March 6. Peter Rothstein guest directs Sally Wingert and Kris Nelson in this fiery battle between a nun and a priest over suspicions of sexual abuse of a child. The Doubt cast also includes Jane Froiland and Regina Marie Williams. Peter Vitale provides music, with sets by Dean Holzman and costumes by Amelia Cheever.

Tickets: $25. $15 student tickets on Sundays for current students (valid student ID is required at the door). Use the password DoubtStudent when making reservations.

Information

Friday
Feb182011

February 18, 2011, Friday - Alisa Weilerstein and Gabriel Kahane at Southern Theater

Location: Southern Theater, 1420 Washington Avenue South

Time:  8:00pm

A natural virtuoso hailed for her impassioned musicianship and expressive range, 27-year-old cellist Alisa Weilerstein is renowned internationally as one of the premiere soloists and chamber musicians of her generation, set apart by her distinctive musical presence and charisma.

Gabriel Kahane’s rapid ascent as a composer of concert works comes into focus with this season’s premiere of three commissions: a large chamber work for the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by John Adams; a string quartet for the Kronos Quartet; and this program’s cello sonata/song cycle for Weilerstein and himself.

Kahane set Little Sleep’s Head to the eponymous poem by Galway Kinnell, from his monumental work The Book of Nightmares. The work expresses a dialogue between movements for cello and piano and song-like settings of Kinnell’s poem. Twin Cities premiere: Little Sleep’s Head Sprouting Hair in the Moonlight, Gabriel Kahane.

Co-commissioned by Stuart and Linda Nelson and the Southern Theater.

Information.  

Friday
Feb182011

Feburary 18, 2011, Friday - Artist Talk with Rosemary Williams at The Soap Factory

Time: 7:00pm

Location:  The Soap Factory, 518 Second Street SE

Rosemary Williams’ work examines the notions of power and consumption as well as the “overlooked aspects of our everyday life.” Belongings, Williams’ most recent installation at The Soap Factory, uses video to document each and every physical aspect of her home. No stone is left unturned and no single toothpick is un-catalogued. Belongings is a catalogue of physical possession, a series of seemingly endless video loops of Williams’ identifying and recording each and every physical object within her home. The ideal effect of Belongings, according to The Soap Factory Executive Director Ben Heywood, is to consider the “futility of possession.”

While Williams' past work, such as Supermarket (2008) and Wall of Mall (2006), acted more as commentaries on society, allowing her to remain detached from the viewer. Belongings departs from this, engaging the artist herself in the final product. Williams is a visible part of Belongings, as she goes through her home and facilitates the codification and documentation of each object. Williams literally picks apart her entire private living space and challenges her audience to consider the roles each physical object plays in her home- from the intended function it may serve to the way it may have assisted in the “building of her own personal world and identity.”

About the artist:
Rosemary Williams currently lives in St. Paul Minnesota. Williams' work is exhibited regularly in New York City, and has also been shown recently in galleries in London, Minneapolis, and the Czech Republic, with a recent project in Berlin. She was a Jerome Foundation Emerging Artist Fellow in Visual Arts for 2007-8.

Thursday
Feb172011

February 17, 2011, Thursday - Historic Resource Survey Meeting at Our Lady of Lourdes

Brian Schaffer, Senior City Planner for the City of Minneapolis, recently announced the schedule of locations, dates and times for public meetings to introduce the Historic Resources Survey project.

The purpose of the survey is to:

- Identify unknown historic properties.
- Recommend properties for further study.
- Make informed decisions about the significance and protection of historic resources.
- Develop goals and strategies for preservation as well as neighborhood planning.

The city has been divided into several Survey Areas, and the Mill District is included in the Central Core Survey.   The meeting for our neighborhood will be held Thursday, February 17, from 6:00pm-7:30pm at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church.

Residents can also tell the City what's historical in their neighborhoods by completing an online survey.

The City was first surveyed for historic resources in the 1970s, and many of todays designated landmarks and historic districts are a result of the original survey.  Since 2001, CPED has conducted a re-survey of historic resources in Minneapolis that has been funded by grants from the Minnesota Historical Society and matched by City dollars. The City has undertaken the re-survey because the aging of properties, changing attitudes about which types of historic resources need to be identified, e.g. historic landscapes, cultural and ethnic group resources. The survey will help achieve the Citys goal of documenting historic resources throughout the entire city over a ten-year period, which is scheduled for completion in 2011.

Thursday
Feb172011

February 17, 2011, Thursday - McKnighty-Nights II at The Loft

Time: 7pm

Location: Target Performance Hall, Open Book, 1011 Washington Avenue South

Admission:  Free

McKnighty-Nights II: The Filmmakers

Filmmaking Fellows Dawn Mikkelson and Dan Schneidkraut talk about and show their work.

What dark visions float behind the unassuming visages of your friendly neighborhood McKnight Fellows? Let’s see, there’s deception, cruelty, despair, corruption, indifference, and, luckily, the occasional redemption. Though their styles couldn’t be more dissimilar, 2010 McKnight Filmmaking Fellows Dawn Mikkelson and Dan Schneidkraut both work to transform the irredeemable through the art of cinema. Mikkelson will screen selections from her award-winning documentary about the Northwest Airline mechanics’ strike, The Red Tail, as well as scenes from her work in progress, Smooch. Schneidkraut will test the audience’s mettle with clips from Seeking Wellness: Suffering Through Four Movements, and let us in on his latest dramatic film ventures. Award-winning indie producer Christine K. Walker will referee the discussion, in case things get too crazy.

Dawn Mikkelson’s documentaries are used as grassroots organizing tools around the world, from international conferences to house parties, on the topics of globalization, environmental justice, water rights, human rights, and LGBT rights. Her most recent film, The Red Tail (co-directed with Melissa Koch), is the story of a NWA mechanic who loses his job to outsourcing and goes to China to meet his replacement. Her latest project, Smooch, is a documentary film that illuminates stories of reconciliation and healing from around the world, as participants are photographed through the international effort to collect 10,000 photos of people kissing one another called “The Smooch Project.”

Dan Schneidkraut’s films have been reviewed as “uncomfortable to watch,” “sublime yet terrifying,” “disturbing,” “stunningly depraved,” and “the kind of thinky/sadistic exercise that even the dark prince of psychological horror Michael Haneke might find difficult to watch.” Seeking Wellness: Suffering Through Four Movements had its official world premiere in England at Filmstock International Film Festival and won the Special Jury Prize at The Melbourne Underground Film Festival. He is working on a feature, to be shot on BetaMax, about physical fitness and the obsolescence of traditional masculinity. His recent short, Victory, is a simple narrative exploration of the psychology of coping in a post-traumatic environment.

Moderator Christine Kunewa Walker is an award-winning producer of artist-driven independent film. She is producer of Life During Wartime, a Todd Solondz film; Howl, starring James Franco as poet Allen Ginsberg; and The Convincer with Greg Kinnear and Alan Arkin. Walker also co-wrote and produced Older Than America starring Adam Beach and Bradley Cooper, produced Factotum starring Matt Dillon, Lily Taylor and Marisa Tomei, and line produced American Splendor. Christine’s awards and recognitions include the Producer’s Guild of America Diversity Award, an Independent Spirit Award nomination, and the Sundance Institute’s Producer’s Fellowship.

Wednesday
Feb162011

February 16, 2011, Wednesday - Performance And Discussion With Gabriela Lena Frank And Nilo Cruz at Open Book

Time: 7:00pm
 
Location: Target Performance Hall, Open Book, 1011 Washington Avenue South

Free Admission

In collaboration with Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, the Loft presents a performance and discussion with composer Gabriela Lena Frank and poet and playwright Nilo Cruz, the first Latino recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
Cosponsored with Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra

Award-winning composer Gabriela Lena Frank and playwright Nilo Cruz join musicians of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra for a special discussion and performance event at the Loft Literary Center. In anticipation of the SPCO’s forthcoming world premiere performances of Frank and Cruz’s song cycle La centinela y la paloma, the composer and playwright will discuss their work and unique collaboration. The evening will feature readings from Cruz’s work and performances of Frank’s music by members of the SPCO.

Identity has always been at the center of Gabriela Lena Frank’s music. Born in Berkeley, California, to a mother of mixed Peruvian/Chinese ancestry and a father of Lithuanian/Jewish descent, Frank explores her multicultural heritage most ardently through her compositions. Inspired by the works of Bela Bartók and Alberto Ginastera, Frank is something of a musical anthropologist. She has traveled extensively throughout South America and her pieces reflect and refract her studies of Latin-American folklore, incorporating poetry, mythology, and native musical styles into a western classical framework that is uniquely her own. She writes challenging idiomatic parts for solo instrumentalists, vocalists, chamber ensembles, and orchestras.

Nilo Cruz, winner of the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for drama, came to the United States on a Freedom Flight shortly before his tenth birthday; he grew up in Miami and attended Miami-Dade Community College's Wolfson Campus. Later, Cruz earned an MFA in playwriting at Brown University and has since held teaching posts at Yale University, New York University, Brown University, and the University of Iowa. Cruz won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for Anna in the Tropics, becoming the first Latino so honored. For the same work he also won the American Theatre Critics' Association/Steinberg New Play Award. Other honors include the Alton Jones Award, Kesselring Prize, AT&T Award, Kennedy Center Fund for New American Plays, Rockefeller Grant, and Theatre Communications Group Artist in Residence Grant.

The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, now in its 52nd season, is the nation’s only full-time professional chamber orchestra and is widely regarded as one of the finest chamber orchestras in the world. In collaboration with five artistic partners—Roberto Abbado, Edo de Waart, Dawn Upshaw, Christian Zacharias and Thomas Zehetmair—the thirty-four virtuoso musicians present more than 130 concerts and educational programs each year and are regularly heard on public radio’s Performance Today, which reaches 1.5 million listeners each week on 243 stations, and SymphonyCast, reaching 480,000 listeners each week on 125 stations nationwide. The SPCO has released 67 recordings, commissioned 127 new works, and performed the world premiere of 49 additional compositions. The SPCO has earned the distinction of 15 ASCAP awards for adventurous programming. Renowned for its artistic excellence and remarkable versatility of musical styles, the SPCO tours nationally and internationally, including performances in premier venues in Europe, Asia and South America. Launched in 1995, the SPCO’s award-winning CONNECT education program reaches 6,000 students and teachers annually in 16 Minneapolis and St. Paul public schools. For more information, visit www.thespco.org

Sunmi Chang began her study of the violin at the age of seven with Professor Nam-Yun Kim in her native South Korea, where she won several national competitions before going to England to study at the Yehudi Menuhin School (YMS) in 1995. While at the YMS, she performed regularly in concert halls including Wigmore Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Royal Albert Hall and the Purcell Room, as well as at the UNESCO Headquarters in Paris. Sunmi continued her studies at the Hanns Eisler Musikhochschule in Berlin with Professor Eberhard Feltz. In 2006 she won the Woolsey Hall Concerto Competition at the Yale School of Music, and has performed the Bartók Violin Concerto No. 2 with the Philharmonia Orchestra of Yale. In the summer of 2008, as part of the cultural prelude to the Olympics, she performed the Beethoven Violin Concerto with the Yale Philharmonia in Asia. She earned her master of music and artist diploma degrees from Yale under Peter Oundjian and Ani Kavafian. Sunmi has performed with renowned artists such as Kim Kashkashian, Donald Weilerstein, Ani Kavafian, Marcy Rosen, and Edward Arron. She is the laureate of the 2007 International Markneukirchen Violin Competition in Germany and the 2007 International Sion Valais Violin Competition in Switzerland.

Elsa Nilsson joined The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra in 1977. Prior to her appointment with the SPCO, she served as concertmaster of the Pennsylvania Ballet Orchestra, and was a member of the Pittsburgh Symphony and the Pittsburgh Chamber Players. Nilsson has appeared as soloist many times with the SPCO. Also active on the Twin Cities chamber music scene, she has appeared with the Minneapolis Artists Ensemble, Ensemble Capriccio, and the Musical Offering. Between SPCO seasons, she has performed with the Minnesota Orchestra and at the Grand Teton Festival in Wyoming, and the Symphony Orchestra of the Pacific in British Columbia. Nilsson graduated from the Curtis Institute of Music, where she studied with Paul Makanowitzky, Jaime Laredo and Ivan Galamian. She served as Galamian’s assistant at Curtis for three years and at the Meadowmount School for four years.

Winner of the Stradivarius International Violin Competition, Yoonshin Song has earned many prestigious prizes throughout her career, including prizes in the Young Concert Artists International Competition in New York, Lipizer International Violin Competition in Italy, Henry Marteau International Violin Competition in Germany, Wieniawski International Violin Competition in Poland and Ima Hogg International Competition in Houston. In her native South Korea, Song has won virtually all the major national competitions. Most recently, Song received the David G. Whitecomb Foundation Award and gave a recital in Germantown, New York, which was well received by critics and audience members.

David Huckaby joined The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra at the start of the 2009-2010 season. A recent graduate of The Juilliard School, where he received a master’s degree studying with Joel Krosnick, David has performed live on National Public Radio’s From the Top young artists program and has also performed chamber music on the television program. He has toured in Italy and France playing with the North Carolina International Music Program Chamber Orchestra and in China as principal of the Juilliard Orchestra. An advocate of contemporary music, David has often worked with new music groups including the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, the Axiom Ensemble, and the Callithumpian Consort. From turntable concertos in Carnegie Hall to string quartets in local bars, he is continually searching for new and interesting ways to connect with audiences. David has studied with Richard Aaron, Andres Diaz, and Martha Gerschefski, received his bachelor’s degree studying with Paul Katz, and a graduate diploma studying with Laurence Lesser, both at the New England Conservatory. He has also participated in the Aspen Music Festival and the Orford Arts Center in Quebec. Once the cello goes in the case, David enjoys reading and watching movies. Always interested in trying new things, his project for this winter is finally learning how to ski!

Sunday
Feb132011

February 13, 2011, Sunday - Winning Recipes from the Pillsbury Bake-Off at Mill City Museum

Location: Mill City Museum, 704 South Second Street

Time: 2:00pm

Fee: Programs included with museum admission of $10 adults, $8 seniors and college students, $5 children ages 6-17; free for MHS members.

Get Valentine’s Day baking ideas and see how history is revealed in a demonstration of Chocolate Cherry Bars, a Bake-Off winning recipe from 1974. Learn about the 60-year history of the Pillsbury Bake-Off, sample treats, get baking tips and take home a copy of the recipe.

Saturday
Feb122011

February 12, 2011, Saturday - Phyllis Root and Eileen Beha Reading at The Loft

Time: 11:00am

Location: Target Performance Hall, Open Book, 1011 Washington Avenue South

Admission:  Free

Second Story, the Loft’s reading series for writers of young adult and children’s literature, curated by Swati Avasthi and Heather Bouwman, presents authors Phyllis Root and Eileen Beha.

Eileen Beha spends summers vacationing on Prince Edward Island, where she has a cottage near the quaint village of Victoria-by-the-Sea. A former middle school principal, Eileen lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with her husband and two terriers, Tango and Louise. Tango: The Tale of an Island Dog (Bloomsbury, 2009) is her first book for middle grade readers.

Phyllis Root has been writing for children for thirty years and has published over forty books, including picture books, middle grade novels and non-fiction, including Big Momma Makes the World, which won the Boston Globe Horn Book Award.  She teaches in the Hamline University Master of Fine Arts in Writing for Children and Young Adults program.

Saturday
Feb122011

February 12, 2011, Saturday - Washburn A Mill Tour at Mill City Museum

Time: 1:00pm

Location: Mill City Museum

Fee: $12 adults, $10 seniors and college students, $8 children ages 6-17 and MHS members. Tour includes museum admission.

Reservations: required, call 612-341-7555

Get an in-depth look at the historic Washburn A Mill complex and the award-winning Mill City Museum building. A museum interpreter will take visitors into the building's many nooks and crannies, highlighting the lives of the men and women who worked there, how the building functioned during its peak flour milling years and the many changes to the building over time. Also covered will be the challenges of preserving the 120-year-old, fire-damaged building; its art, architecture and interior design; and the St. Anthony Falls Historic District.

Although many parts of the mill can be explored during regular museum visits, this is the public's only opportunity for a guided tour through the entire museum building.

Saturday
Feb122011

February 12, 2011, Saturday - Talking Image Connection at the Soap Factory

Time: 8:00pm

Location: Soap Factory, 518 Second Street SE

A spoken word event in conjunction with Belongings.

More details soon to come.

Saturday
Feb122011

February 12, 2011, Saturday - How'd They Do That Workshop at the Guthrie - The Winter's Tale

Location: Wurtele Thrust Stage

Guests to be announced

What was the inspiration for the set? Was the play rewritten in rehearsals? Aren't those wigs itchy? Through this eye-opening workshop, you can learn how the Guthrie's artists and staff create a production - from early development and designs to rehearsal, costume fittings and staging of the play.

Time - Workshop begins at 9am

Cost - $15 per person

Click to Register