Wednesday, November 24, 2010

The Christmas Revels

The Washington Revels presents
THE CHRISTMAS REVELS


This year featuring English country music and dance

Enjoyed by 10,000 of your neighbors every year!


Now in its 28th season, one of the Washington area’s most popular holiday celebrations – The Christmas Revels – will play at GW’s Lisner Auditorium, 21st & H Streets, NW for two weekends, December 4-5 and December 10-12, 2010.


Each year Revels explores how the Winter Solstice has been celebrated in a different time or place. This year's show transports us back in time to novelist Thomas Hardy’s beloved Wessex and his fictional village of Mellstock in 19th-century England, with glorious music, rousing Morris dance, and the ever-popular audience sing-alongs!


This year’s holiday celebration features our special guests from England, The Mellstock Band – four extraordinary musicians. Performing on string and wind period instruments – including the haunting “serpent,” a snake-shaped ancestor of the tuba – they capture the genuine sound of a 19th-century village band.

Joining them will be our acclaimed
Revels company (over 75 performers of all ages) as the village “quire,” the Washington Revels Brass, and the Cutting Edge Sword and Foggy Bottom Morris Men providing some exciting traditional dance.

Some of the tunes and carols may seem familiar, but this is a rare opportunity to hear them as they might have sounded in an England all but disappeared now, sung in a robust, even raucous style that drew no distinction between sacred and secular, and with a joy that is inspiring to a modern ear.


Revels’ shows include an unbeatable combination of elements: time-honored rituals, traditional dances, folk plays, holiday music performed by a lively and talented cast of adults and children, and the singing of carols with a brass quintet. This mixture of volunteer choristers with professional actors and musicians helps to create the exuberance and vitality that define a Revels performance.


Professionally staged and directed, Christmas Revels productions create an on-stage community of local adults, teens and children together with professional actors, musicians, and “tradition-bearers.” Open auditions for adults and teens are held every summer, and singers from throughout the Washington Metro area eagerly vie for one of 40 or so spaces to be cast. Separate auditions are held in September for 3rd-5th graders, and as many as 100 children try out for one of 15 or so spaces.


The celebration of the longest night of the year, the Winter Solstice, is at the heart of Revels. Despite “Christmas” in the title, this is not a religious pageant, but rather a unique seasonal celebration that is inclusive and meaningful to the community at large, regardless of background.

Join a lively cast of adults and children for the show that the Washington Post says "should become part of every family's holiday festivities."

WHEN:
Saturday Dec. 4 at 2:00pm & 7:30pm

Sunday Dec. 5 at 2:00pm
Friday Dec. 10 at 7:30pm

Saturday Dec. 11 at 2:00pm & 7:30pm

Sunday Dec. 12 at 1:00pm and 5:00pm


WHERE: Lisner Auditorium, GW University, 21st & H Streets, NW, Washington, DC

Directions & Parking information: http://www.lisner.org/directions.asp


COST: $12-$45 (discounts for Youth under 18 and for groups of 10 or more);

Family Friday: 25% off regular price for youth tickets on Friday Dec. 10.


BOX OFFICE: www.revelsdc.org or call 800-595-4849. Group Sales call 301-587-3835.

ADA SERVICES: ASL and Audio Description, Sunday Dec. 5 at 2pm; Wheelchair spaces, Braille and large-print programs available at all performances. For ADA seating, call 301-587-3835.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

CCS Family Concert 11/14


Capital City Symphony
SYMPHONY MYSTERY!
Annual Family Concert

Sunday, November 14 at 2:30pm & 4:30pm
(instrument petting zoo at 2pm & 4pm for ticket-holders)

Atlas Performing Arts Center
1333 H Street NE, Washington, DC 20002

Tickets for Children 16 and under are FREE for all Capital City Symphony main season concerts! Adults tickets $20/$25; Senior/Student tickets $16/$20.

This concert is recommended for children ages 3 and up (or able to sit through an hour-long program).

These concerts often sell out, so advance purchase is strongly recommended!

BUY TICKETS NOW!
or visit capitalcitysymphony.org
or call the Atlas Box Office at 202-399-7993

Each performance is preceded by an instrument petting zoo, with members of the orchestra displaying their instruments and even letting the children try them! The concert itself includes a special program book just for the younger set and lots of audience interaction.

This year's Family Concert will explore "The Case of the Missing Melody." Maestro Victoria Gau will lead the audience on a search for clues in works by Adolphe, Rossini, Wagner, and Tchaikovsky.

* Adolphe, Three Pieces for Kids and Chamber Orchestra
* Rossini, Barber of Seville Overture
* Wagner, Flying Dutchman Overture
* Tchaikovsky, Sleeping Beauty Waltz

Learn more about the Capital City Symphony at capitalcitysymphony.org.


Saturday, November 6, 2010

Discounts for final performance of PIRATES OF PENZANCE

WASHINGTON SAVOYARDS present THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE

Get 20% off Pirates tix for this weekend's shows with the code ORPHAN!

PLUS...Student rush tickets only $20 at the door (with valid student ID)

Sunday 11/7 at 2:30pm you can catch the final performances of THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE, presented by Washington Savoyards. At the Atlas Performing Arts Center on H Street NE.

Plan your visit at http://atlasarts.org.

Details and Tickets at http://savoyards.org.

"a near-perfect mixture of good singing and choreography leavened by an optimal amount of humorous stage shtick ... an overall sense of fun and lightness" —Terry Ponick in DC Theatre Scene

This "production has no comparison ... as a top theatrical delight. ... It is 140 minutes of smash family fun. Every number gets better than the previous one." —Bob Anthony in All Arts Review 4U

"The staging is bold and fresh; the singing is fine; the costumes are outstanding, and the orchestra is flawless." —Jack L. B. Gohn in Baltimore Broadway World