What's Up!

June 16, 2019

What's Up - Your guide to what's happening in Fayetteville, AR this week!

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F E S T I V A L O R C H E S T R A Corrado Rovaris, Music Director ARKANSAS' ARTS + NATURE FESTIVAL PRESENTED BY WALTON ARTS CENTER Tickets On Sale Now! DOWNLOAD THE ARTOSPHERE APP! Available on Google Play™ or in the Apple® App Store artospherefestival.org | 479.443.5600 Support for Maestro Corrado Rovaris and Dover Quartet provided by Mary Ann & Reed Greenwood. 10x10 concert support provided by 3M/Post-it. AFO concertmaster support provided by Hannah & Greg Lee. More than 90 premier musicians from around the world come together for out-of-this-world orchestral performances. Visit artospherefestival.org for tickets and complete event listing. THE ARTOSPHERE FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA RETURNS JUNE 20, 26 & 29 Live from Crystal Bridges: Mozart in the Museum JUNE 20 | 8pm | Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art | $45 Featuring an all-Mozart program including Eine kleine Nachtmusik, Clarinet Concerto featuring clarinetist Andrea Levine and Symphony No. 29. Listen live on KUAF 91.3 FM. Artosphere Festival Orchestra Celebrates: The Moon JUNE 29 | 8pm | Walton Arts Center | $15-49 Featuring the 1902 fi lm A Trip to the Moon by Georges Méliès and a diverse program celebrating our closest celestial neighbor, the Moon, including works by composers ranging from Strauss, Monteverdi, Bach, Handel, Debussy and Puccini, to the modern likes of John Williams. Romantic Masterworks of Mendelssohn & Brahms JUNE 26 | 7pm | Walton Arts Center | $10 Presenting Felix Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto in E minor featuring violinist Benjamin Beilman and Johannes Brahms' Symphony No. 3 in F major. 6 WHAT'S UP! JUNE 16-22, 2019 Ballet Theatre takes dance to the garden T he NWA Ballet Theatre will present a free pop-up performance at Fayetteville's Botanical Garden of the Ozarks at 5 p.m. June 18 as part of the Dance Beat series. According to their website, the series "takes dance outside the theater and invites community to experience dance as public art." "By taking dance to the streets with our pop-up performance series 'Dance Beat,' we are breaking down the barrier that dance is solely a theater art for theatergoers," says the organization's artistic director, Ryan Jolicoeur-Nye. "Bringing dance outside of the proscenium and into the community creates an accessible way for diverse audiences to experience the art form. We provide palatable introductions to classically based steps by inserting a contemporary, vibrant feel to popular, well-loved songs." The company has already had six performances in the Dance Beat series at Northwest Arkansas venues as varied as Bentonville's Amazeum and Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, the Fayetteville Public Library and Springdale's Arvest Ballpark. "The response has really been fantastic," says Jolicoeur-Nye. "There are two recurring common themes I am hearing from audience-goers: One is that they are surprised to see a ballet company doing such creative and contemporary work. Many people didn't realize how diverse classically trained dancers are, which I believe intrigued them to learn more about what having a professional dance company in the region really means. The other frequent response is that folks are thrilled that we are a local company. With a roster of dancers from eight different states and three countries we are right here, living and working, embedded in the fabric of Northwest Arkansas." After the BGO performances, the company will have two more Dance Beat shows — June 27 at the Gulley Park Summer Concert Series in Fayetteville and June 29 at the Rogers Farmers Market. — LARA JO HIGHTOWER LHIGHTOWER@NWADG.COM FAYETTEVILLE

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