Skip to main content

SanTan Sun; 2-7-15: Arts

Page 1


Eat Your Art Out for the CCA

Chandler foodies are in for a culinary treat as the Chandler Center for the Arts sponsors the fourth annual Eat Your Art Out Chandler Tuesday, Feb. 24. The community event brings together the best of Chandler’s food establishments, art patrons and corporate sponsors to show their support for the arts in the city.

Local participating restaurants will donate a minimum of 25 percent of their proceeds on that day, with all the funds supporting the various programs the CCA sponsors throughout the year. That includes the Connecting Kidz program, the Free Summer Concert Series and the center’s headlining acts. Last year the event raised $12,500.

“Each year it’s had little different spin, we try a new idea, but it’s been successful due to the generosity of these restaurants who are the locations making the donations,” explains Michelle Mac Lennan, general manager of CCA.

Mayor Jay Tibshraeny lauded the event.

“Eat Your Art Out is a great event that connects our community by bringing together great food, great people and a great cause,” Tibshraeny says in a statement. “The arts have a strong impact on the quality of life in our community—but also on our economy and I encourage everyone to dine out on Feb. 24.”

CCA ambassadors will be on-hand at each of the participating eateries to host and discuss the performing arts center’s various programs. This year, patrons can

enter a free raffle that include tickets to upcoming CCA events, art from the Vision Gallery and a stay at the Hyatt Place.

“People can support us without writing a check,” Mac Lennan says. “You just go out to eat. It’s pretty simple.”

Mac Lennan, who will greet guests at one of the locations, is committed to filling the restaurants and sharing information about the center.

“We’ve made a lot of new connections in the community and met a lot of great people who are interested in what the center is doing for our youth programs, performances and everything else.”

Two eateries that have committed to the event are Floridino’s and Serrano’s, each in its fourth year of support.

Floridino’s will offer a lunch and weekly night specials, says the restaurant’s catering and banquet manager, Sarah Converse. The whole menu will be available.

Converse says Floridino’s likes to participate in anything it can help with in the community. “We feel like we’re the center point of the fund raising community. We’re so close to downtown Chandler...We love the center for the arts.”

The mom- and pop-style restaurant, and its sister restaurant Dilly’s Deli, will be serving lunch and dinner on the event night.

“It’s always fun on nights like this when people say, ‘We came to support the Eat Your Art Out, but we’ve never eaten here,’ and that’s like our favorite thing, to see customers come in that have never eaten here before and they get to help a great

cause and try new food.”

Ernie Serrano, owner of Serrano’s, served on the CCA board for seven years and chaired it for three. He says the arts are very important to the Serrano family.

“It’s a win-win,” he says of the event. “If we can get more customers to come out that just means that we can donate more to the center.”

He adds he’d like to see more people coming out for the event, versus just to dine

and not knowing anything about it.

Floridino’s and Serrano’s diners are not required to mention the event for proceeds to be donated.

Mac Lennan encourages the community to schedule the night out with friends and family to be part of the event.

“It’s an awesome way to raise so much money for our youth program and all that stuff, just by doing what you would normally

EAT YOUR ART OUT CHANDLER: Jeanne Forbis welcomes diners to Floridino’s. Submitted photo

Retrospective of Eye Lounge artwork at Vision Gallery

The collective exhibit “Self-Made: 15 Years of Eye Lounge” is showing through Saturday, March 7, at The Vision Gallery, located at 10 E. Chicago St., Chandler.

The display looks back on work created by members of the downtown Phoenix artist collective. Eye Lounge, which is a contemporary art space run collectively by artist members and dedicated to supporting emerging and established visual artists in downtown Phoenix. The group was

founded in 2000 and has hosted numerous group exhibitions. The collective moved to its permanent location in December 2001, and participates as a shuttle stop for Artlink First Fridays and is a founding member of Roosevelt Row.

The Vision Gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. For more information, call (480) 782-2695 or visit www.visiongallery.org.

Paintings show off diverse visions in ‘Beholder’ exhibit

do,” she says. “Mark your calendar and think outside the box about how you can get people to come out. Ultimately, I think the message is how much we work on those contributed revenues to make the center operate—it’s our 25th anniversary season, we’ve been at this for 25 years and we really count on the community to keep our doors open and keep the programs rolling.”

CCA is a nonprofit organization owned jointly by the City of Chandler and the Chandler Unified School District. A list

of participating restaurants is available at www.bit.ly/1LO0rFu. For more information about the Chandler Center for the Arts visit, www.chandlercenter.org. Chandler Center for the Arts is located at 250 N. Arizona Ave., Chandler.

Tracy House is a freelancer for SanTan Sun News. She can be reached at news@ santansun.com.

An exhibit on display through Saturday, March 7, at the Chandler Center for the Arts Gallery, located at 250 N. Arizona Ave., Chandler, “Through the Eye of the Beholder,” looks at watercolor and acrylic paintings in a variety of ways and through several artists’ eyes and approaches. The exhibition looks at beauty through the diverse strengths and visions of the different painters.

The paintings are by the local art group The Waterworks Artists, a group of watermedia artists that counts as members award-winning and nationally and locally acclaimed artists such as Carol Bentley from Scottsdale, Donna Eastman from Phoenix, Nancy L. Herbst from Tempe, Diane Kent from Glendale, Lois Meyer from Peoria, Marilyn Schutzky and Laurie Sokiveta from Scottsdale, and Hazel Stone and Jane Underhill from Phoenix. For more information, call (480) 7822695 or visit www.chandlercenter.org. To learn more about The Waterworks Artists, visit www.waterworksartists.com.

AMBASSADOR: Michelle Mac Lennan, Chandler Center for the Arts general manager, dines out with Shannon S. Bradley during a previous Eat Your Art Out Chandler event. Submitted photo
Photo courtesy of Waterworks. Artist: D. Eastman

Jewish Film Festival returns

Featuring a rich lineup of independent Jewish cinema, the 19th annual Greater Phoenix Jewish Film Festival is returning to three Valley cities from Sunday, Feb. 8, to Sunday, Feb. 22.

The films highlighted in the festival will travel from the cobblestone streets of Paris to the dusty hillside of Bethlehem; from the million-dollar yachts moored in SaintTropez to the sound stages of Hollywood; from the farms nestled deep in the Black Forest to the military airspace 65,000 feet above us and more in a sampling of some of the best that Jewish cinema has to offer. Thirteen films from eight countries, including nine area and state theatrical premieres, will screen at three Harkins theaters in Scottsdale, Chandler and Peoria.

“The quality of our film slate is exceptionally strong this year,” says GPJFF Executive Director Bob Segelbaum. “I’m very excited that during this time of heightened tension around the world, especially in the Middle East, we can present films reflective of the rich and diverse Jewish people, culture, and faith. The Greater Phoenix Jewish Film Festival stands as a point of pride for the Jewish community and as a point of understanding, awareness and acceptance for the community at large.”

The festival kicks off with “24 Days,” a drama based on the 2006 kidnapping of Parisian Jew Ilan Halimi. The powerful and provocative film sheds light on contemporary European anti-Semitism. Miriam Weisman, national board member of the Anti-Defamation League, will attend

and speak after the screening.

Special guests will include legendary singer, musician and actor Theodore Bikel (“The Sound of Music,” “Fiddler on the Roof”), who will receive the GPJFF’s inaugural Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award. Bikel will accept the award in person following the Valley premiere of his new film, “Theodore Bikel: In the Shoes of Sholom Aleichem” at Harkins Theatre Camelview 5 in Scottsdale on Feb 15.

Bikel is the world’s foremost interpreter of Tevye the Dairyman from the musical “Fiddler On the Roof,” having performed the role more than 2,000 times over 40 years. Kicking off the event will be Scottsdale Mayor Jim Lane who will present Bikel with the City’s official proclamation of “Theodore Bikel Day.” Following the award presentation, the 90-year-old performer will take audience questions about his 65year career in stage and screen.

Other premiers throughout the festival will include dramas, documentaries, thrillers and more from award-winning filmmakers and featuring a diverse range of intriguing and engaging topics.

Other guest speakers include Bill Goodykoontz, Arizona Republic and Gannett Newspapers film critic, and Craig Weiss, co-author of “I Am My Brother’s Keeper: American Volunteers in Israel’s War for Independence 1947-1949.”

To purchase tickets to the festival or for more information, call (602) 753-9366 or visit www.gpjff.org

World-renowned harpists to play in Gold Canyon

The largest harp ensemble in the world, HarpFusion, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 13, at Gold Canyon United Methodist Church, 6640 S. Kings Ranch Rd., Gold Canyon in a concert presented by the Gold Canyon Arts Council.

The ensemble, led by University of Arizona Distinguished Professor of Harp Carol McLaughlin, blends various styles and cultures in its repertoire, including folk, jazz and new age.

The group is based out of the university

PULLING AT THE HARP STRINGS: HarpFusion, the world’s largest harp ensemble, blends musical styles and cultures for a unique performance. Submitted photo

and arranges its own musical pieces. It has been featured around the world, including around Europe and in Russia, Korea, Brazil and Japan, as well as at the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai.

The council will also bring vocals, horns, accordion and strings to Gold Canyon Friday, Feb. 27, as it hosts a performance by Quartetto Gelato at GCUMC.

The award-winning quartet performs a wide variety of music, including romantic tenor arias, classical music and tangos. The group is known for its humor, stage presence and easygoing demeanor.

Quartetto Gelato was named NPR’s “Performance Today’s” Debut Artist of the Year early in its career, and has won Best Classical Ensemble at the Canadian Independent Music Awards. The group’s first DVD, “Quartetto Gelato in Wine

Country!” was broadcast by PBS.

Advance tickets for performances by HarpFusion and Quartetto Gelato are $25 for adults and $5 for students. Tickets are available at Canyon Rose Storage, 6405 S. Kings Ranch Rd., Gold Canyon, and at the Apache Junction Chamber of Commerce, 567 W. Apache Trail, Apache Junction.

Tickets are also available via PayPal at www.gcac1.com/cynsnds.html. Adult tickets at the door are $30.

The Gold Canyon Arts Council promotes the performing and visual arts through its Canyon Sounds Artist Series.

The council is supported in part by grants from the Arizona Commission on the Arts, Western States Arts Federation, the National Endowment for the Arts and local businesses.

For more information visit www.gcac1.com.

Childsplay presents ‘Monsters and Peas’

The culmination of a script playwright Jonathan Graham began workshopping nearly two years ago at Write Now in Tempe, “The Boy Who Loved Monsters and the Girl Who Loved Peas” will premier Sunday, Feb. 8, on the Childsplay Stage at Tempe Center for the Arts, 700 W. Rio Salado Pkwy., Tempe.

Performances will run on weekends from Sunday, Feb. 8, to Sunday, March 8. Showtimes are 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. Saturdays and 1 p.m. Sundays, with a special Storybook Preview performance at 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 8.

A MONSTROUS, PEAS-FUL TIME: When pea-hating 8-year-old Evan wishes up a monster, he and his sister have work to hide it from their parents in this imaginative production.

Submitted photo by Tim Trumble

“Over the course of a few days—writing in the morning, rehearsing in the afternoon, and talking about the play at night—an incredibly generous, funny and smart group of artists helped the play stretch and grow,” says Graham of the Childsplay-sponsored Write Now Initiative and his play. “They helped me clarify what I wanted to write: a play about the importance of imaginative play for children and their parents.”

The play features 8-year-old Evan, who hates peas. To make matters worse, his younger sister, Sue, loves them. When forced to remain at the table until his plate is clean, Evan makes a wish for a monster to come eat his family. Soon, Evan and Sue find themselves

trying to hide a 6-foot-tall green monster named Pea from their parents. In today’s modern world, it’s sometimes hard to unplug and in this hilarious adventure, Evan and his family learn the importance of putting technology down to play together.

Childsplay Associate Artist and Playwright-in-Residence Dwayne Hartford is directing, and brings the world of Graham’s story to life with whimsical shapes and colors for the furniture, setting and costumes, all inspired by a child’s imagination to capture a young child’s perspective of the world.

“This play is totally serious in its intent and joyously silly in its execution,” says Graham.

The play features Katie McFadzen as Pea, Tyler Eglen as Evan, Michelle Cunneen as Sue, Debra K. Stevens as Mommy and Mel Glotfelty as Daddy.

The show Sunday, Feb. 8, is a special $12 Storybook Preview performance, sponsored by The Steele Foundation. Each family who attends this performance will receive a free children’s book.

Single tickets start at $15 and are on sale at www.childsplayaz.org or at the Tempe Center for the Arts Box Office (480) 350-2822 (ext. 0). This play is recommended for ages 3 and older.

PULLING AT THE HARP STRINGS: HarpFusion, the world’s largest harp ensemble, blends musical styles and cultures for a unique performance. Submitted photo

“The Midtown Men,” Saturday, Feb. 7, CCA. Watch four stars from the original cast of Broadway’s “Jersey Boys” reunite as they establish themselves as rock stars in their own right, bringing to life their favorite tunes from The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Motown, The Four Seasons and more.

Dan Hicks and the Hot Licks, Saturday, Feb. 7, MIM. Since the early 1960s, Dan Hicks has deftly blended elements of swing, jazz, folk and country music to create the appealing sound he sometimes calls “folk jazz.” The lyrics of his songs range from the simply sublime to the sublimely ridiculous, all presented with his uniquely skewed and inscrutable touch.

New York Polyphony, Sunday, Feb. 8, MIM. Co-presented with Arizona Musicfest, New York Polyphony is regarded as one of the finest vocal chamber ensembles in the world.

“Hardcore Legend: An Evening with Mick Foley,” Sunday, Feb. 8, SUL. The WWE champion, speaker, author and stand-up artist gives a performance that is by turns uproariously funny, simply surreal and surprisingly sensitive.

“Of Legends and Lovers: Doc and Kate,” Sunday, Feb. 8, CCA. A performance of the story of the West’s most famous dentist, a man who went, as he likes to

put it, “from the one who heals to the one who keels (kills)” and his life with Mary Katherine Haroney Cummings.

ABBAFab, Sunday, Feb. 8, WHP. ABBAFab performs the greatest hits of legendary Swedish pop/rock group ABBA. “Dancing Queen,” “Mamma Mia,” “Fernando” and many more bring ABBA back to life.

Marcia Ball, Thursday, Feb. 12, MIM. Grammy-nominated Marcia Ball’s groove-laden New Orleans boogie and rollicking Gulf Coast blues have made her a one-of-a-kind favorite with music fans all over the world.

Robin Spielberg’s “American Tapestry,” Friday, Feb. 13, MIM. This trio delights audiences with the music that, over generations, has become woven into the fabric of American culture.

“Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana: The Soul of Flamenco,” Saturday, Feb. 14, CCA. One of the nation’s premier flamenco and Spanish dance companies celebrates its 30th anniversary season with innovative music, exotic movement, passionate dancing and more.

Chinese New Year Show, Sunday, Feb. 15, CCA. The Eastern Art Academy hosts the 2015 Chinese New Year Show in a lively and unique show that the entire family will enjoy. The year of the ram is welcomed with song, dance, instrument and martial arts performances and more.

HAPA, Sunday, Feb. 15, MIM. Musical duo from Hawaii performs hypnotic, liquid guitar runs woven around clear, tenor Hawaiian vocals and immaculate harmonies, driven by poetic lyrics exulting the rapture of the Hawaiian landscape, history and mythology.

Jorma Kaukonen, Monday, Feb. 16, MIM. Performing with special guest Larry Campbell, Jorma Kaukonen is a blues, folk and rock guitarist, best known for his work with Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna.

Eric Bibb, Tuesday, Feb. 17, MIM. Grammy nominee Eric Bibb draws listeners in with his beautifully realized and deftly accomplished, soulful folk-blues, inviting comparisons to legendary greats Ry Cooder and Taj Mahal.

Over the Rhine with special guest William Fitzsimmons, Friday, Feb. 20, MIM. This critically acclaimed husbandand-wife duo perform “post-nuclear, pseudo-alternative, folk-tinged art-pop.”

Kutless singer Jon Micah Sumrall, Friday, Feb. 20, CC. Jon Micah Sumrall will perform an acoustic set to raise awareness and funds for Ambassador Christian Academy.

Pavlo, Saturday, Feb. 21, MIM. Incorporating the world’s most exotic instruments into his classic Mediterranean sound, Pavlo’s sizzling performance combines elements of flamenco, classical

and Latin music, accentuated by the presence of the Greek bouzouki.

Paul Thorn, Saturday, Feb. 21, MIM. Paul Thorn has been pleasing crowds for years with his muscular brand of roots music: bluesy, rocking and thoroughly Southern, yet also laden with universal truths.

Lily Tomlin, Saturday, Feb. 21, CCA. Lily Tomlin, one of America’s foremost comediennes, takes the stage with her classic

The World Famous Glenn Miller Orchestra, Sunday, Feb. 22, CCA. This performance, with Natalie Angst, features over 40 hit songs from four decades of jukebox chart toppers like “Tuxedo Junction,” “In the Mood,” “Pennsylvania 6-5000,” “Chattanooga Choo Choo” and “Moonlight Serenade.”

David Cook, Sunday, Feb. 22, MIM. The rock singer-songwriter and winner of the seventh season of “American Idol” performs.

Billy Childs, Monday, Feb. 23, MIM. In a performance featuring Becca Stevens, the Grammy-winning jazz pianist performs music from his new album, “Reimagining Laura Nyro.”

MIM Musical Interludes Series featuring ASU Contemporary Percussion Ensemble, Wednesday, Feb. 25, MIM. Presenting a program of exotic rhythms and vibrant colors, drawing from the formative repertoire of the

Jacquie, Khloe, Dr. Salem, Ania, Karen

20th century and new works by student composers.

“Love, Sex and the IRS,” Wednesday, Feb. 25, through Wednesday, March 4, TPT. Laughs, mistaken identities and multiple plots take the stage when two out-of-work musicians pose as a married couple, only to be investigated by the IRS.

“Menopause the Musical,” Thursday, Feb. 26, through Saturday, March 28, TPT. This hilarious PG-13 musical parody staged to classic tunes from the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s has had audiences cheering, dancing and laughing for over 10 years.

“Strait Country,” Sunday, March 22, TPT. The Strait Country Band featuring Kevin Sterner brings audiences the

ON STAGE VENUE INDEX

CC—Calvary Chapel, Queen Creek 19248 E San Tan Blvd. Queen Creek Tickets: (480) 387-0902, http:// conta.cc/1yLnt73

CCA—Chandler Center for the Arts

250 N. Arizona Ave., Chandler Tickets: (480) 782-2680, www.chandlercenter.org

MIM—Musical Instrument Museum

4725 E. Mayo Blvd., Phoenix Tickets: www.mimmusictheater.themim.org

virtual experience of attending one of George Strait’s concerts.

“Pump Boys and Dinettes,” Wednesday, April 15, through Sunday, May 24, TPT. Fresh off a hit Broadway revival, this fun and energetic musical about life on the roadside tells the story of four gasstation attendants (the “Pump Boys”) and two waitresses (the “Dinettes”) and the country, rock and pop music that gets them through the day.

“Greater Tuna,” Thursday, April 16, through Sunday, April 26, TPT. Take a trip down south to Texas’ third smallest town, Tuna, and meet its quirky and ever-expanding cast of characters hosted by Thurston and Arles on their talk radio show, and all played by two actors.

SUL—Stand Up Live

50 W. Jefferson St., Phoenix Tickets: (480) 719-6100, www. standuplive.com

TPT—The Palms Theatre 5247 E. Brown Rd., Mesa Tickets: (480) 924-6260, www. thepalmstheatre.com

WHP—Wild Horse Pass

5040 Wild Horse Pass Blvd., Chandler Tickets: (800) 946-4452, www. wingilariver.com

Art at the Lakes

Valley artists have until Feb. 10 to apply to display their work at the seventh annual Art at the Lakes Show set for Saturday, March 7, at 25630 S. Brentwood Dr., Sun Lakes.

The Sun Lakes Watercolor Club, Oakwood Artists League and Desert Artists Club will select from applicants, who can obtain applications in the Oakwood and Sun Lakes art rooms and the Cottonwood/Palo Verde Homeowners Services office at 25219 E. J. Robson Blvd., Sun Lakes, as well as by emailing ArtAtTheLakes@aol.com.

Pastels, mixed media, paintings, photography, handmade jewelry, sculpture and gourd art will be represented in the show, which will take place around Cottonwood Lake on Brentwood Drive in the Cottonwood subdivision. Bluegrass musicians, country artists and other live performers will provide entertainment at the event.

Participation in the show requires a $40 entry fee, which will cover the show expenses and the cost of an 8-foot table and two chairs for each artist. Artists may share a table, but each will be responsible for the fee.

The art show benefits the Sun Lakes Firefighters’ Emergency Relief Fund; which helps citizens who have faced emergency situations; and the 100 Club of Arizona, which provides assistance to first responders, emergency workers and their families. The Sun Lakes Firefighters will serve donuts, burgers, hot dogs, chips, coffee and soda during the show. Past shows have brought in approximately $8,000 for the Relief Fund.

Organizers are also requesting raffle item donations. Raffle items may include; but are not limited to; artistic items, gift baskets, gift certificates and dinners out. Donors may call Diane Hitt at (480) 802-7080.

Volunteers are also welcome to work all or part of the show, as well as to solicit donations in the weeks prior to the show. Anyone interested in volunteering is asked to call Marylouise Widmaier at (970) 518-5811.

If you have any questions, contact Beverly Walter at bevwalter@msn.com or call (480) 802-4680.

ART AT THE LAKES: The art show benefits the Sun Lakes Firefighters’ Emergency Relief Fund. Submitted photo

PERFORMING SOON: Backed by talented musicians, Ballet Folklórico Quetzalli de Veracruz recreates the dances and music of several regional festivals across Mexico. Submitted photo

Council to host ballet troupe

Ballet fans will have the opportunity to watch a world-renowned troupe at 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 27 as the Gold Canyon Arts Council presents “Fiesta Mexico,” a performance by Ballet Folklórico Quetzalli de Veracruz, at the Gold Canyon United Methodist Church, 6640 S. Kings Ranch Rd., Gold Canyon. Backed by talented musicians, the troupe recreates the dances and music of several regional festivals across Mexico. Fiestas featured will be from the states of Guerrero, Nayarit, Michoacan, Nuevo Leon and the group’s home state of Veracruz. While recreating the pageantry, spectacle and color of each fiesta; the choreography of each dance represents a unique facet of life, culture, history or nature. The rhythms and music are a synthesis of Spanish, European, indigenous and Afro-Caribbean influences. The troupe is named after the quetzal, a striking regional bird of southern Mexico. With costumes that echo the bird’s plumage; they tap their heels, twirl their

skirts and thoroughly entertain an audience.

One of their best-known performances is “La Bamba,” originally a folk song, then converted to a dance and later made famous by Ritchie Valens’ 1958 adaptation which, became a top 40 hit in the United States.

Ballet Folklórico Quetzalli was founded in 1985 by maestro Hugo Betancourt after spending years learning the artistry of dance and passion for these traditions. Since 1986, the dance company has been the official representatives for the Secretary of Tourism and Economic Development for Veracruz, giving hundreds of performances across the world.

Purchase advance adult tickets for $25 and students for $5 at Canyon Rose Storage, 6405 S. Kings Ranch Rd., Gold Canyon and at the Apache Junction Chamber of Commerce, 567 W. Apache Trail, Apache Junction. Adult tickets at the door are $30. Tickets are also available via PayPal at www. gcac1.com/cynsnds.html.

Blues Blast hits Phoenix March 7

The Phoenix Blues Society will celebrate the sounds of blues music Saturday, March 7, at the 24th annual Blues Blast Music Festival at Margaret T. Hance Park, 1202 N. Third St., Phoenix.

The gates will open at 10 a.m. with music starting at 11 a.m. The headliners this year are Rick Estrin and the Nightcats, followed by the Plateros, the R.D. Olson Blues Band, the BluesHounds and Steve Rush. Rush will also provide entertainment between acts.

Food, beverage and merchandise from vendors will be available for purchase, and all attendees will be welcomed to add to a large community art mural. Arizona Lindy Hop Society’s Steve Conrad will offer free blues and swing dance lessons during band breaks. There will also be a free kazoo, along with lesson and performance, for all children guests in the afternoon.

Admission is $25 in advance and $30 the day of the show. Children 16 and younger are free when accompanied by an adult. Tickets may be purchased online until the day of show.

No ice chests or coolers will be allowed at the festival. One sealed bottle of water will be allowed per person. Pets and weapons are also not permitted. Pop-ups are allowed at the rear of the audience. Reentry to the park is prohibited.

The park is easily accessible from Interstate 10 or by exiting the Light Rail at the Roosevelt station and walking two blocks east to the park. Free parking will be available south or east of park. Motorcycle parking is provided.

For more information visit www. phoenixblues.org or email info@ phoenixblues.org.

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook