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Archives for August 2011

Be A Part of Dayton’s Party of Parties!

August 31, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

Masquerage is the signature annual event of AIDS Resource Center Ohio, raising critical unrestricted funding for individuals infected, affected and at risk of HIV/AIDS.  Since Masquerage’s  inception in 2002,  “Dayton’s Party  of Parties” for a cause has become the fastest growing, must-attend event in Dayton, bringing people together to have a great evening, generate greater awareness of HIV/AIDS issues and raise much needed funds to benefit client services and people living with or affected by this disease.

It takes hundreds of volunteers to pull off an event this size.  From artists and designers that can help with the decor, to bartenders and servers to keep the smiles on everyones faces.  We’ll need folks to work event check in, coat check and even first aid.  A crew is needed to work the silent auction area and so many other behind the scenes jobs that help keep the party going for an expected 1000 guests this year.

We’ll spend the week of Oct 11th transforming the RoundHouse at the Montgomery County Fairgrounds into a decadent venue for the 10th anniversary Masquerage, to be held on Sat, Oct 15th.

So if you’re willing to pitch in and help ARC Ohio by volunteering, sign up here, or contact [email protected] or by phone at 937-461-2347 x 2029.

Filed Under: Volunteer Opportunities Tagged With: ARC Ohio, Dayton Party of Parties for a Cause, Masquerage

Breaking News: 6 ft. White Rabbit on the loose in Beavercreek!

August 31, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Beavercreek Community Theatre - HARVEY by Mary ChaseHarvey

BEAVERCREEK COMMUNITY THEATRE

Beavercreek Community Theatre continues the run of it’s opening production of the 2011-2012 season with Mary Chase’s “Harvey,” directed by Jim Lockwood of Huber Heights.

The big invisible rabbit, in the title role, and his eccentric friend, Elwood P. Dowd, played by John Bukowski of Washington Township, will “appear” on the BCT stage through this weekend with 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday performances and 3 p.m. Sunday matinees.

THINGS TO DO IN DAYTON. THEATRE: Beavercreek Community Theatre - HARVEY by Mary Chase - l-r, John Bukowski as Elwood P. Dowd rehearses a scene with Deborah Sasser as Mrs. Chauvene, Ellen Ballerene as Myrtle Mae and Terry Larson as Veta Louise.Dowd’s invisible friend, an over six foot white rabbit, is a social embarrassment to Dowd’s sister and niece, who live with him. They are portrayed by Terry Larson of Beavercreek and Ellen Ballerene of Yellow Springs, respectively.

His sister’s attempt to get Dowd committed to a mental institution leads to a comedy of errors, which in turn leads to a mending of some family wounds and some unexpected romance.

The cast also includes Deborah Sasser of Beavercreek, Rick Johnson of Centerville, Cathy Long of Oakwood, Nathan Hudson of Dayton, Carly Porter of Fairborn, Averio Perugini of Kettering, Donald McKenny of Tipp City and Bill Reagle of Enon.

The show’s producers are Anne Heitker and Linda McLarty, both of Beavercreek. Heitker is also the costumer and Hans Unser, of Beavercreek, is the stage manager. The set designer is Chris Harmon of Beavercreek and the lighting designer is John Falkenbach of Dayton. Tony Fende of Dayton is the sound designer.

THINGS TO DO IN DAYTON. THEATRE: Beavercreek Community Theatre - HARVEY by Mary Chase - John Bukowski, as Elwood P. Dowd, has a conversation with the mentalnstitution's Dr. Sanderson, played by Rick Johnson of Centerville, and Nurse Kelly, played by Carly Porter of Fairborn, in a scene from "Harvey."

-BCT Press Release

We encourage local theatre companies to submit calendar items HERE, and official press releases to [email protected].

Tickets & Performance Information:

Beavercreek Community Theatre LogoMary Chase’s HARVEY – through September 4th

8pm on Fridays & Saturdays / 3pm on Sundays

Tickets are $13 for adults and $11 for BCT members, students, and senior citizens.

A group discount of $1 per ticket is available to groups of 10 or more purchased at the same time for the same performance.

Tickets can be reserved by calling (937) 429-4737 and leaving a message or by e-mailing [email protected]. For more information, visit the theater’s Web site at www.bctheatre.org where tickets can also be purchased online with a credit card.

Credit cards are not accepted at the theatre.

Beavercreek Community Theatre is located within the Lofino Adult Enrichment and Cultural Arts Center at 3868 Dayton-Xenia Road in Beavercreek.

The Dayton Power & Light Foundation is BCT’s season sponsor.

BCT offers a Flex Pass, a season ticket for 3, 5 or all 7 shows. Three shows, of the patron’s choice, are $37 for adults and $30 for seniors and students; five shows are $59 and $44 respectively. For all seven shows, the season pass costs $78 for adults and $60 for seniors and students.

Win Free Tickets

DaytonMostMetro.com has three free pairs of tickets to lucky readers – just fill out the form below to enter (no purchase necessary, not that we sell anything here anyway).  Good luck!

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Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews Tagged With: arts, Beavercreek Community Theatre, Theater, Things to Do

“The Oldest Profession” has found it’s way to Wayne Ave.

August 31, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

The Oldest Profession by Paula Vogel - Dayton Theatre Guild - through September 11

The Oldest Profession by Paula Vogel

The Oldest Profession

THE DAYTON THEATRE GUILD

NOTE:  Audition Info for “Lost In Yonkers” below!

The Dayton Theatre Guild run of The Oldest Profession by Paula Vogel, continues through Sunday, September 11, 2011, with Friday performances at 8:00 p.m., Saturday shows at 5:00 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 3:00 p.m.  It is directed by Greg Smith and produced by Barbara Jorgensen.

Once the toast of Storyville, the infamous red-light district of New Orleans, five very senior ladies of the night have transferred their talents to Reagan-era New York City.   They now find both their clients and their own appearance slipping away with time.  But every girl has a right to go out in her own style, doesn’t she?  Don’t miss the laugh-filled chronicle of five very special ladies – how they lived the life and how they say goodbye.  Warning: This production contains strong language and adult content.  (Raunchy, racy and fun!)

The Oldest Profession by Paula Vogel - Dayton Theatre Guild - through September 11

L to R: Marcia Nowik, Ellen Finch, (back) Jackie Engle, Marcella Balin, Patty Bell

The cast includes Jackie Engle from Dayton (Wallis, Pygmalion), Ellen Finch from Kettering (Kimberly Akimbo, Fuddy Meers, Hallelujah Girls), Marcia Nowik from Yellow Springs (Independence, God’s Favorite, and Octette Bridge Club at Beavercreek Community Theatre), Patty Bell from Dayton (Brooklyn Boy,) and Marcella Balin from Xenia, who makes her acting debut with The Oldest Profession.

-DTG Press Release

We encourage local theatre companies to submit calendar items HERE, and official press releases to [email protected].

Tickets & Performance Information:

Dayton Theatre GuildPaula Vogel’s THE OLDEST PROFESSION – through September 11 (Fri/Sat/Sun)

(Times Vary:  Click HERE)

Tickets Prices: $10 student / $15 senior / $17 adult

Location:  Dayton Theatre Guild at The Caryl D. Philip’s TheatreScape – 430 Wayne Ave. Dayton, Ohio  45410 (MAP)

No one under the age of seven will be admitted.

Tickets are on sale now through DTG’s Online Box Office, or via phone at (937) 278-5993 (due to a volunteer staff, phones are not monitored continually).

For more information about Dayton Theatre Guild’s entire 2011-12 season, visit www.DaytonTheatreGuild.org

Dayton Theatre Guild at the Caryl D. Philips TheatreScape

Dayton Theatre Guild at the Caryl D. Philips TheatreScape

AUDITION INFORMATION: Lost In Yonkers by Neil Simon

September 6 & 7, 2011

The Dayton Theatre Guild will hold open auditions for Lost in Yonkers by Neil Simon on Tuesday and Wednesday, September 6 and 7, at 7:00 p.m.  It is directed by Fran Pesch and produced by Deirdre Bray Root.

The Lost in Yonkers production dates are October 21 through November 6, 2011.
Simon’s Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning laugh-filled piece tells the tale of two young boys left by their widowed father in a strange world called Yonkers.  Their father must travel to pay back loan sharks, so the boys are entrusted to a tough-minded grandmother and a child-like aunt.  The aunt, now in love with a man who is just as unable to cope with the boys’ care as she is, tries to figure out the next step in this funny, touching and unforgettable drama.

The director is looking to cast seven actors of varying ages:

  • JAY KURNITZ – mid-teen or older, able to play 16
  • ARTY KURNITZ – mid-teen or older, able to play 13
  • EDDIE – 41, Jay and Arty’s father
  • BELLA – mid-30’s, Eddie’s sister
  • GRANDMA KURNITZ – 70+, Eddie’s mother
  • LOUIS – 36, Eddie’s brother
  • GERT – mid-late 30’s – Eddie’s sister

Lost in Yonkers is a dialect play.  Grandma Kurnitz speaks in combination Yiddish/NYC dialect.  All other roles speak in NYC/Yonkers dialect.  Actors will be asked to read from the script (with dialect.) Head shots & résumés are not required but are encouraged.  PLEASE NOTE:  If this is your first time auditioning for the director, be prepared to present a one-minute contemporary monologue.  Dialect not required for monologue.
The cast meeting and read-through will be Thursday, September 8th at 7 p.m.

Additional casting information may be found on the website at www.daytontheatreguild.org or by calling (937) 654-0400.

ABOUT THE DAYTON THEATRE GUILD:

The Dayton Theatre Guild opened with “Outward Bound” at the Dayton Art Institute in 1945.

The 1963-1964 season opened with “Night of the Iguana” at 2330 Salem Avenue, the Guild’s home for over 45 years, where “Outward Bound” was performed as a part of the final season at that location.
The 2009-2010 season opened with “Les Liaisons Dangereuses” at the Guild’s new home at the Caryl D. Philips TheatreScape at 430 Wayne Avenue in Dayton’s historic Oregon District in August 2009. Over 400 plays have been produced, utilizing all-volunteer casts, crews and administration. You may reach the Dayton Theatre Guild at 937.278.5993 or www.daytontheatreguild.org.

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews Tagged With: arts, Dayton, Dayton Ohio, dayton theatre guild, downtown, Downtown Dayton, Theater, Things to Do

Urban Nights Entertainment Schedule Announced

August 31, 2011 By Juliet Fromholt 1 Comment

Can you believe this week marks another First Friday?  That means that September 16th and the return of Urban Nights are right around the corner.  We’ll have more on downtown’s biggest party next week here on DaytonMostMetro.com, but in the meantime, check all of the great performances you’ll be able to experience:

Main Stage
Courthouse Square
Sponsored by: DP&L

5 to 5:45 p.m.                     Jasper the Colossal
6 to 6:45 p.m.                     Jake Speed & the Freddies
7 to 7:45 p.m.                     Dayton Gay Men’s Chorus
8 to 10 p.m.                        U.S. Air Force Band, Systems Go

Community Stage/Karaoke
Second & Jefferson streets by the Kettering Tower

5 to 7 p.m.                           Performances by a variety of local artists and community groups
7 to 10 p.m.                        Karaoke

World Music Stage
Dave Hall Plaza, Fourth Street between Main and Jefferson streets

6 to 6:45 p.m.                     Jerry Gillespie
7 to 7:45 p.m.                     Jim’s Red Pants
8 to 8:45 p.m.                     Norman Conquest
9 to 9:45 p.m.                     Chazz

Wright Dunbar Stage
Southwest corner of Third & Williams streets

6 p.m.                                   Gospel
6:45 p.m.                             Chey Butta Band
7:45 p.m.                             Audio Show Band

Live on Five
Oregon Arts District next to the Trolley Stop

6 to 6:45 p.m.                     SMAG Dance Collective
7 to 7:45 p.m.                     Ape the Ghost
8 to 8:45 p.m.                     Al Holbrook
9 to 9:45 p.m.                     Bottoms Up

Taste of Miami Valley
RiverScape MetroPark Pavilion

Stage 1 –
5 to 8 p.m.                           Debonte Brothers
8 to 11 p.m.                        Spungewurthy

Stage 2 –
5 to 8 p.m.                           Blind Karma
8 to 11 p.m.                        Uncle Rico

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Things to Do, Urban Nights

Olive Wants to Sweeten Your First Friday

August 31, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

Here’s your chance to grab a sweet treat this First Friday night as Olive- an urban dive opens from 5 -9pm to serve up dessert and a beverage for $7.  Whether it’s some of the homemade cheesecake or a serving of Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream, you’ll be sure to enjoy the fresh ingredients and friendly service that Olive is fast becoming know for.  And in keeping with the artsy feel of First Friday’s, you can check out featured artist Melissa Esmond works displayed in the restaurant.

While you’re there, you may want to pick up a ticket to their Friday, September 16th Urban Nights Pre Fixe Dinner as well.  Last we checked there were about 18 seats left.


Filed Under: Dayton Dining

Your Chance To Support Our Troops

August 31, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

Operation Show Our Love, a non-profit operation that sends tons and tons of supplies to the Troops, needs your help. Cindy Millikin, who runs Operation Show Our Love, has received many requests from the troops themselves and they need these items IMMEDIATELY.

There’s a complete list on the website www.operationshowourlove.org but some of the more requested items (or current items we have requests for right now) are:
ground coffee, powdered creamers, sweeteners
toilet paper
Campbell’s cup a soup (soup in hand) in the cups you just heat up in the microwave
Any dry soup mix in a cup that you add boiling water to
Slim Jims/Beef Jerky/beef sticks
Drink flavorings in the little packets that you add to a bottle of water
Any candy not chocolate
any and all snack items that are individually packaged so they can take them on missions with them like nuts, trail mix, dried fruit, power bars, cookies, crackers, candy, granola bars, gum, mints….again, ANY individual snack items not chocolate.
Vienna sausages (non pork) , tuna pouches
DVD movies
Baby wipes
eye drops (for dry eyes)

Deck The Walls will be accepting the donated items at their location at 4015 Far Hills Avenue, Dayton, Ohio through Saturday, September 3, 2011.

At that time, Operation Show Our Love WILL pick up the items and ship.

Please feel free to log onto http://www.operationshowourlove.org/ to see what is needed.

Our Mission is to improve the morale of our Military Personnel who are overseas fighting for our freedom and to let them know that those of us at home care about them and support them! We do this by collecting and shipping donations of snacks and toiletries to allow our troops to have a ‘part of home’ in a foreign land, and humanitarian items to distribute to the local population to build relationships that will help now as well as in the future.

Filed Under: Getting Involved

Celebrate the start of September with First Friday

August 31, 2011 By DowntownPartnership 1 Comment

Whether you are in the mood to explore downtown or you just want to kick back and listen to some live music, the Sept. 2 First Friday has all the entertainment you need from 5 to 10 p.m.

All summer the local bands have been rocking out at the RiverScape MetroPark, 111 E. Monument Ave. This Friday, Human Cannonball will perform at the free First Friday @ 5 concert from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Beer will be sold from 5 to 7 p.m. and the concession will be open. Free bike parking provided.

First Friday also is a chance for visitors to win a $1,000 travel gift certificate from AAA Miami Valley by completing a First Friday Passport. Each month, AAA will award two prizes of one-year classic AAA memberships, with free renewals for existing members. Everyone who enters for the monthly prize now through Dec. 2 also will be entered into a drawing for a grand prize of a $1,000 travel gift certificate.

Visitors can pick up a First Friday passport at participating locations (click here for a list). The passport must be stamped by at least four locations, and once visitors have all four stamps, they fill out their contact information and drop their passports in any of the First Friday Passport boxes that will be at all participating locations.

Starting at 8 p.m., numerous First Friday locations will blast Rev. Cool’s Around the Fringe radio show, which features lively dance music from around the world and your own backyard and airs on WYSO-FM 91.3. A variety of roaming performers also will provide entertainment (weather permitting).

See the Sights

For those looking for a unique way to tour downtown, check out Courteous Mass. This community of bike-minded individuals will meet at Don Crawford Plaza in front of Fifth Third Field at 5:15 p.m. for an urban street cycling ride through the city and First Friday action.

Another great way to stretch your legs while seeing the city is with Gem City Circle Walking Tours, which will host two tours highlighting local history. A tour of the Oregon Arts District will meet in the Jay’s Seafood parking lot at 5 p.m., and the Ghosts, Cemeteries and Murders Walk of Downtown Dayton tour will meet at Courthouse Square at 7 p.m. All walks are $10 per person, and advance reservations are required. Contact Leon Bey, tour guide, at 274-4749 or email [email protected].

Channel Your Inner Artist

First Friday is a great chance to interact with art. Press, 257 Wayne Ave., will host a kids’ art event in which children ages 4 to 10 are invited to explore their creative side by creating works in a variety of mixed media.  SMAG Dance Collective will perform in front of Boulevard Haus, 328 E. Fifth St., at 7 p.m. with painter Mike Elsass and musician Al Holbrook. Elsass will apply paint to a canvas and four dancers, each representing a different color and mood, will spread the paint with their bodies. The group also will perform its Homeless Series, which features solo and duet performances, throughout the Fifth Street corridor.

Additionally, K12 Gallery for Young People/TEJAS, 510 E. Third St., will host its first “Collaborative First Fridays for Families” sculpture-making event. First Friday visitors are invited to stop by and help create a collaborative sculpture around the theme “Junk It, Funk It.” Work alongside artists Cindi Remm and Michele Devitt to turn recyclables and junk into a community sculpture.

Dayton is filled with a variety of art exhibits.  Open until 8 p.m., Dayton Visual Arts Center, 118 N. Jefferson St., will feature “Coming to a Waterway Near You.” This exhibit by Virginia Burroughs examines the effects of blue-green algae on waterways across the country, and includes demonstrations by Burroughs on applying mixed media to photographs.

In the Orgeon Arts District, Color of Energy, 16 Brown St., will display works of pastel artist Daniel Wise and a preview of the “Sedona Vortex” exhibit by Mike Elsass. Down the street, Gallery 510 Fine Art, 510 E. Fifth St., will feature a variety of gallery artists will demonstrating their techniques, including painting, drawing, beading and Zentangle. The Cannery Art and Design Center, 434 E. Third St, will feature the “crazy quilt” paintings of Carol Stoops and the oil paintings and printmaking of Kathryn Pitstick, along with live jazz and refreshments.

Here’s what’s cookin’
After you’ve visited the galleries, grab a bite to eat or stop to watch the entertainment at numerous restaurants downtown.  Boulevard Haus, 328 E. Fifth St., will offer $1 off tap beer for those who mention First Friday. Deaf Monty’s Wine, 22 Brown St., will feature a discount on rose, $5 for a 6-ounce glass. Lucky’s Taproom & Eatery, will tap a firkin tapping of Left Hand Brewery’s 400 Pound Monkey at 5:30 p.m.

Newly opened Olive, an urban dive, 416 E. Third St., will offer dessert and a beverage for $7 and will feature the art of Melinda A Esmond. De’Lish Cafe, 139 Main St., will feature live music and the “downtowner” specialty cocktail. Blind Bob’s, Dublin Pub, Garden Station, Jay’s Seafood, Omega Music, Oregon Express and Trolley Stop will feature live music.

. . .and there’s more!

District Antiques, 122 Van Buren St., will offer 15 percent off any purchase of new items and 10 percent off consigned items. Newly opened Clash Consignment Co., 113 E. Third St., will host live DJs and a raffle for store gift certificates.

Restaurants, retail shops, bars and clubs, and other establishments throughout downtown will be open during First Friday. For regular updates about this event, follow First Friday on Facebook or text “FirstFridayDayton” to 90210. First Friday is presented by the Downtown Dayton Partnership with support from AAA Miami Valley, the Oregon District Business Association, and WYSO-FM 91.3.

The Downtown Dayton Partnership’s website has a complete list of downtown’s arts and cultural amenities, as well as a dining guide, parking map and much more. Click here for a complete list of events taking place downtown.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, The Featured Articles Tagged With: art, art hop, entertainment, First Friday, First Friday @ 5, food, live music

Looking Back at a Dayton Dragons Internship

August 30, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Brooke with Dayton Dragons Staff

As a little girl I always remember my mom talking about how when she was a little girl she loved to go watch “The Big Red Machine” in Cincinnati. Her fond memories of Johnny Bench and Pete Rose always peaked my interest in the sports industry and inspired me to study marketing. Little did I know that some day, Dayton would have its very own piece of sports history and that I would have the honor and privilege of being a part of it for two historic seasons.  While completing my masters degree and Sports Management Certificate at Wright State University, I was very lucky and blessed to have the opportunity to work for such a great staple in the Dayton region, the Dayton Dragons.

I have learned so much over the past two seasons and have gotten to do things I thought were only possible outside of the Dayton city limits. Meet Archie Griffin, check. Meet Ervin “Magic” Johnson, check.  Chauffeur Hall of Fame sports writer Hal McCoy around, check. Witness sports history being made as the Dragons break the streak for most consecutive sell outs in ANY sport, double check!

Brooke with Archie Griffin

My experience there is beyond words. The perception and intended purpose of the function of an intern sometimes has a stigma attached to it. When I told people I had quit my job to pursue higher education and to be able to do this internship, I was perceived as crazy, especially in the current economy. However, the invaluable knowledge and experience I received by being a part of the Dragons team was priceless beyond words. I started in an intensive learning process which involved learning the core values of what makes this team so successful and supported by the Dayton community. I was able to assist in planning and executing various events at the park, give VIP tours to various sponsors and guests, researched ways to make various programs better, learn outside of the box marketing techniques and directly provided unsurpassed customer service to our fans.  All of this while being 15 minutes from home right here in Dayton.

Brooke with Hal McCoy

The Dayton Dragons are just one of the many things I love about Dayton. My experience at Wright State University, another priceless gem of Dayton, the ability to be able to afford to raise a family here some day, coupled with the ever changing and growing amount of shops, restaurants, music and arts is why I chose to make Dayton my home.

This article was submitted by Brooke Johnson-Leppla, who interned with the Dayton Dragons as a student at Wright State University where she is currently an academic advisor.

Filed Under: Community

God of Carnage coming to the Loft Theatre

August 30, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

The Human Race, Dayton’s own professional theatre company, opens its 25th Anniversary Season with the wickedly funny God of Carnage, winner of the 2009 Tony Award for Best Play.

Written by Yasmina Reza in French and originally set in Paris, this comedy of absolutely no manners was translated by Christopher Hampton and set in London (where it won the Olivier Award for Best Play), then Americanized and set in Brooklyn for its Broadway run. Its success in three countries shows that bizarre parents who behave worse than their children are instantly recognizable and worthy of raucous laughter in all of them.

God of Carnage begins as two sets of parents get together to talk about their 11-year old sons’ schoolyard scuffle. It is all very civil. At first.  For a moment or two. Then civilization disappears.

The Human Race production, directed by Margarett Perry (last in Dayton for Painting Churches), is sure to provide what the NY Times called “laughter that comes from the gut.” The cast is composed of four local favorites – Human Race Resident Artists Jennifer Joplin (Doubt, Proof) and Tim Lile (Twelfth Night, Lend Me a Tenor) and real-life Indianapolis couple Jennifer (Twelfth Night, A Christmas Carol) and Rob (Wait Until Dark, A Christmas Carol) Johansen.

To put a little twist on relationships – which is very much in the spirit of the play – the Johansens aren’t married to each other in the show. Instead, Jennifer Johansen is married to Lile, to whom she was about to be wed at the end of the recent production of Twelfth Night. “In the next production, maybe we’ll be divorced,” says Lile.

The Broadway production was very much a star vehicle, with four big names, as is the upcoming movie version, just titled Carnage – in the Broadway case Jeff Daniels, Hope Davis, Marcia Gay Harden and James Gandolfini; in the movie, Jodie Foster, John C. Reilly Christoph Waltz and Kate Winslet.

Perhaps the most instantly recognizable of the bunch, thanks to “The Sopranos,” is Gandolfini, and Lile has the challenge of taking over his role. He says the character has a little Tony Soprano in him, but “it would be a pitfall to think of James Gandolfini as the character. I’ll be more influenced by the other three people on the stage, and they’re a powerhouse group.”

The entire play takes place in a living room. That makes the intimate Loft Theatre a perfect venue, with every seat close enough that the audience feels right at home.

For its 25th Anniversary, The Human Race commissioned five prominent local artists to each create a piece for one of the shows of The Eichelberger Loft Season. Marsha Pippenger created a collage for God of Carnage, one depicting the characters as collapsed paper dolls.

God of Carnage opens with a preview night September 8, with opening night September 9 and performances through September 25. Tickets are available via humanracetheatre.org, by calling Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630, or at the Schuster Center Box Office.

As part of the celebration of its 25th season, The Human Race has created a “25-for-25” ticket option, with the 25 seats at each end of The Loft available for just $25 at every performance.

Production sponsors for God of Carnage are Marion’s Piazza, Morris Home Furnishings, Maryann & Jack Bernstein, Penny Profitt and Rand Oliver, and The Flower Shoppe.

The Human Race Theatre Company was founded in 1986 and moved into the Metropolitan Arts Center in 1991, taking up residence at the 219-seat Loft Theatre. In addition to the Eichelberger Loft Season, The Human Race produces for the Victoria Theatre’s Broadway Series, the Musical Theatre Workshop series, and special event programming. The Human Race, under the direction of Producing Artistic Director Kevin Moore, also maintains education and outreach programs for children, teens and adults, as well as artist residencies in area schools, The Muse Machine In-School Tour, and summer youth programs. Human Race organizational support is provided by Culture Works, Montgomery County Arts and Cultural District, Shubert Foundation and the Ohio Arts Council. The Ohio Arts Council helped fund this organization with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans. The Human Race’s 25th Anniversary Season is sponsored by the Miriam Rosenthal Memorial Trust Fund.

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews

Life Is So Strange When It’s Changin’ – A Look At Life, Liberty And Lucidity With Lynyrd Skynyd

August 30, 2011 By J.T. Ryder Leave a Comment

A Look At Life, Liberty And Lucidity With Lynyrd Skynyd

We may view our lives as a linear passage of time, as if we were tiredly gazing through a car window as the lackluster landscape as our lives flew by, a vista of relatively repetitive sameness that is only occasionally broken by the intermittent roadside sign or mildly interesting landmark or two. We make stops along the way, from mildly significant sojourns to epochal events that change the course of our lives. There are very few things that can bring back the memories from the past with any clarity. It’s like trying to remember the innocence of your first kiss and, the more desperately you try to bring it into focus, the quicker is blurs and skitters away into an aching sense of loss.

Conversely, the wafting scent of perfume, a distantly echoed giggle or the chorded melody from a long lost song can drag you backwards in time, suddenly forcing you to relive that moment. Most of our lives are lived with a barely audible soundtrack, a constant companion that etches itself within the furrows of our minds and, when a song from our past comes on the radio, we remember with utter clarity the first time we heard it, maybe coiled beneath the covers with a transistor radio drawn close to our ears allowing a world bigger than our own to enter our consciousness.

I remember the fist time I heard Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Free Bird. I was sitting on the porch of an abandoned farmhouse near my home with a Realistic AM/FM radio echoing past the nonexistent front door and inside the vacant structure. I had previously been occupied with doing a good amount of nothing and had planned on extending that agenda far into the afternoon. The sun was high and the day’s warm breeze caused the chest high (to me…I was like nine years old) bearded grass to brush against the rusted remnants of discarded washers and dryers that had been unceremoniously dumped in the overgrown driveway, resulting in a sound not unlike a brushed high hat…nature was accompanying my musical selections. Free Bird came on with no announcements or warnings: just a stark, churchlike organ slicing through the midday haze, sounding ominous and comforting all at once. The building of sporadic percussion and straying strums of the guitar ended suddenly with the moaning slide of a Coricidin cough medicine bottle along the neck of a guitar. I was hooked. I listened raptly, through the pining lyrics, past the pressure cooker build up and all the way through the violent release of triple lead guitars, all the way to the fade and into the hissing open dead air of real radio. I sat through an interminable amount of commercials, waiting for the DJ to come back on and tell me what I had just experienced. Of course he didn’t and I was left clueless until I sat in a friend’s basement and he handed over the still glossy cover of an album mysteriously titled Pronounced ‘Lĕh-‘nérd ‘Skin-‘nérd, which I still managed to mispronounce because I suck at phonetics.

Over the years, that song will come on the radio and, regardless of what I am doing, I will crank it up and listen to it until the fade out (unless some industrious DJ manages to put on the version from Skynyrd’s Innyrds, which has a more bombastic ending altogether). The keening wail of the guitars, the simplicity of the message and the organic way in which it all fits together seems to take me back to a time of innocence. Not necessarily my own, but a more overall innocence. A time before record companies created cookie cutter hit makers and allowed their artists to create. A time when AOR (Album Oriented Rock) radio stations ruled the airwaves and would allow the DJ’s and the listeners to dictate what was played, as opposed to being spoon fed the latest popular pabulum. It was a time of originality and exploration, instead of following a format or a formula to dispense with the next grandstanding standard.

I was able to talk to Rickey Medlocke (one of the original drummers for Lynyrd Skynyrd, guitarist in the current line-up as well as creator, guitarist and lead singer of yet another monster Southern rock group, Blackfoot) several times over the years, which has been both daunting and exhilarating. One of the things that I wanted to ask him was whether or not I was romanticizing the era, extrapolating my own innocence onto a whole decade or if there has been a shift within the music industry.

“You gotta realize I was there for some of the stuff because I was one of the original drummers, so I was there and saw how stuff went down, and it went down so innocently and so pure. We just wrote songs, and had a magic about ourselves.” Expounding on the music scene now, Medlocke said, “Nowadays you’d be hard-pressed even find a band that even practices their instruments on their own. I’m a guitar player and I’ve had a love affair with my instrument ever since day one, and that’s what it’s all about. I didn’t get into this business to become a rock star; it just happened because we had great music, you know what I mean?”

Running with that line of thought, Medlocke went on to say that:

“Well, you’ve gotta understand, when we decided to do what we did for a living, it was two-fold. Record companies signed bands to create two careers; the record company’s and the band’s. They signed bands to build us up, which in turn built the record company’s career.” Comparitively, Medlocke said, “Nowadays, it’s not about that anymore. First of all, you don’t have near as many record labels as you used to;  everything is Internet. People want self-satisfaction right away. I look at it like this, back when I got signed and the band was formed, we looked forward to a good record company.  Now, the only thing that you sell records for anymore is for tickets and merchandising.”

In speaking with people worldwide, it has surprised me somewhat that Lynyrd Skynyrd is regarded as the definitive American sound, along with other genres created by the surf groups and country and western. Lynyrd Skynyrd has always had a prideful side when it came to their roots and country of origin, which comes out not only in their music, but in the core beliefs. Like the lyrics in their songs, Medlocke’s views on the country he loves are very direct and to the point.

“I mean, the one thing that I do know that’s going on in this world today is everything is so polarized, you know? It’s a damn shame, you know? It seems like our country is being pulled completely apart and, for Lynyrd Skynyrd, we’ve been the American band for all these years and it’s really sad for us to see how this country is being so polarized and pulled apart. When in reality a few short years ago, you couldn’t break this country apart…I mean, it’s interesting. Now, it’s like everybody’s losing their damn balls man, and nobody wants to stand up and do anything. So, you know, that’s the whole thing about it; instead of getting stronger, instead of having some damn balls about ourselves, the country’s getting softer, being weaker.” Medlocke went on to say that, “Myself, I don’t like to use the band as a platform to talk about politics, because I think that entertainers should definitely stay the hell out of politics. You know what I mean? Because, entertainers…we got our own kind of gig and a lot ofHollywood… those people don’t know what the hell they’re talking about when they get into politics. But the point of what I’m getting at is instead of pulling this nation apart, we should be pulling it together, you know? Whether you’re a Republican or a Democrat or an Independent or whatever, we’ve got one of the best countries in the damn world, and guess what? It seems like the damn thing’s being ripped in two.”

Paradoxically, the image of an airplane factors into the separation of bothAmericaand Lynyrd Skynyrd: a division of time wherein there is that hardscrabble climb out of the rubble to rebuild the icon that once was. In Lynyrd Skynyrd’s case, this epochal event came in the form of a Convair 240 passenger airplane ill-fatedly nicknamed Free Bird, which plummeted out of the Mississippi skies in 1977, killing Ronnie Van Zant, Steve Gaines, Cassie Gaines, assistant road manager Dean Kilpatrick, pilot Walter McCreary and co-pilot William Gray. The remaining street survivors of Lynyrd Skynyrd chose to stay the course in spite of their grave losses. For a long period of time after the death of lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, a lone, empty microphone stood, speared in the spotlights as the rest of the band played an instrumental version of Free Bird. This tradition lasted until 1989 when Ronnie Van Zant’s brother, Johnny stepped in to quell a near riot almost caused by fans needing the words to be sung, for the role of a leader to be filled.  Since then, arenas have been filled, records recorded and an homage paid to the creators of the most emblematic music to be pressed into vinyl and into the public’s consciousness. At the end of each concert, Lynyrd Skynyrd plays Free Bird and the audience erupts in unity. Lighters (or cell phones) are held aloft and one wonders if it is to pay tribute to the musicians, to guide those who are lost or who we have lost, or perhaps to try and light the image of our innocence, so that we may see it in utter clarity one more time.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VX3cbFJ3lYU’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, Freebird, J.T. Ryder, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Rickey Medlocke, southern rock, Van Zant

Reserve Your Free Breakfast Entree at Chick-fil-a

August 30, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby 2 Comments

Chick-fi-A is inviting you to start your day with breakfast on them.  To get your free breakfast you’ll need to visit their website  www.chick-fil-aforbreakfast.com to reserve the free Chick-fil-A® breakfast entrée of your choice. Reservations may be redeemed Sept. 6 – 10 during breakfast hours (6:30 to 10:30 a.m.) at the selected restaurant by presenting a printed copy of the personal invitation received upon making a reservation on the website. The offer is limited to one free breakfast entrée per customer, per restaurant during the five-day period.

Customers will have up to nine breakfast entrées to choose from, including the Chick-fil-A® Chicken Biscuit, Spicy Chicken Biscuit, Sausage Biscuit, Chick-fil-A Chick-n-MinisTM (three-count), Chicken, Egg & Cheese Bagel, Bacon, Egg & Cheese Biscuit, Chicken Breakfast Burrito, Sausage Breakfast Burrito and the new Multigrain Oatmeal. Entrée choices may vary by restaurant.

There are 6 Chick-fil-a’s in the Dayton area including in the Fairfield Commons Mall and  Dayton Mall, one on  Miamisburg Centerville Road in Washington Township, another on Fairfield Road in Beavercreek and at the Benchwood exit off I-75.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining

September Starts With “The Taste”

August 29, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

This Thurs, Sept 1st from 5-9pm  Lincoln Park Commons will be filled with the sweet and savory smells of over 3 dozen area eateries, as they host the 23rd Annual The Taste festival!

Local jazz guitarist Chris Bowman will play a combination of jazz, R&B and rock music to keep the crowds swaying as they line up for samples from the 30+ eateries scheduled to appear.

Advance tickets run $20, buy at the event and they’ll add on $5.  Children under 10 are $10.  As with any Fraze events, expect lines and remember you can’t bring outside drinks and purses are subject to searches.

Kettering-Moraine-Oakwood Chamber of Commerce presents this annual event as a fundraiser for the Chamber, and every year I’m amazed at the number of restaurants that show up for this event. Here’s the most current list of participants:

10 Wilmington Place Fresco
Amicis Gordon Food Service Marketplace
Atrium Grille & Deli Kohler Catering/Presidential Banquet Center
Baskin Robbins LaRosa’s Pizzeria Kettering
Belmont Catering MCL Restaurant & Bakery
Bellyfire Catering McCormick & Schmick’s
Brio Tuscan Grille Moore Dessert Please!
Butter Cafe Ovations Food Services
Cake, Hope & Love Panera Bread
Chef Jeff’s Culinary Company SideBar
Cheryl’s Cookies Tacqueria Mixteca
Christopher’s Restaurant That Crepe Place
Creatif Catering The Artichoke Grill
Crocodile Louie’s The Hawthorn Grill
Dixie Dairy Dreem The Oakwood Club
Donatos Pizza The Rusty Bucket Corner Tavern
Elsa’s on the Border Trader Joe’s
Figlio Italian Bistro and Bar W.g. Grinders
Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Fraze Pavilion, The Taste

Can Dayton’s newest mall push the northern suburbs to new Heights?

August 29, 2011 By Teri Lussier 1 Comment

Here’s one of the lessons that the current residents of the Rustbelt have learned in the past few decades: Cities are fluid. They change, they morph, they grow and they stagnate, they change, they morph, they grow again and again. It’s kind of the beauty of the pulse of a city- what’s new becomes old and everything old is new again. For the past few years we’ve been watching quite a bit of decay and deconstruction in the Dayton area, but there’s been growth, too.

Austin Landing gets a lot of attention, but north of the river is a residential development called Carriage Trails, and its proposed anchor shopping mall, The Heights, has potential to bring a new interest, money, and energy to the Montgomery/Miami County border. Development in this part of Dayton is a healthy, thing and the timing is good. We’ve watched the demise of the Salem Mall, and retail pull out of downtown- what were once the two most convenient locations for shopping for Dayton north of I-70. So the northern Dayton area could use a bold plan. Today’s Dayton Daily News has a comprehensive look at The Heights, you can read that here.

Contractor meeting at Carriage TrailsI’ve heard mixed opinions from northern residents. With limited northern retail options, some of the comments I’ve heard suggest that finally we don’t have to drive to Beavercreek, Kettering, or Centerville to shop at a mall. I’ve also heard that Huber has seen some tough times recently so why would anyone put in upscale shopping here? Someone expressed the sentiment that we already have bus service so it could fill a void that the Fairfield Commons is unwilling to address.

This mall is likely to attract residents from all over the northern Miami Valley- residents from Brookville or Greenville to the west, Piqua, Troy, Sidney to the north, and Springfield from the east. It’s just off I-70 and 5 minutes east of I-75 so it could be destination for a largely under served area. The real estate side to this is that for homes in the area, this will make them more attractive and bring renewed interest and energy to the area, because the truth is that most people like to live in a somewhat concentrated area, not far from their jobs and retail, and this development will compliment a prime real estate combination- we have variety. The Huber Heights/ Bethel Twp/ Tipp City area has a wide range of older and newer housing stock, and a wide range of home prices, making for a nicely diverse selection for home buyers to choose.

With all the changes Dayton has seen in the last few years, growth is good to see, but this isn’t everyone’s idea of positive growth. I’m curious what you think? Are you looking forward to seeing a new mall in northern Dayton?

Filed Under: Real Estate, The Featured Articles

An Extra Ordinary Food Adventure with The Big Ragu & Crew

August 26, 2011 By Dayton937 3 Comments

We have been hearing “You should try “E.O.” Burgers,” for the last several months.  E.O. burgers stands for Extra Ordinary.  Being burger connoisseurs, we set out to The Greene Outdoor Mall in Beavercreek to give it a shot.

E.O. Burgers restaurant is not a chain.  Their meat is free range, 100% USDA Prime Beef — a standard only met by 2% of all restaurants in the U.S.  All of their burgers can be served on an Arnold brand “skinny bun” which is a low carb, low calorie thin multi-grain bun or on whole wheat or regular buns.  Your Food Adventure, your choice…

Our so-called “food runner” told us we could “cluck it” to make any burger on the menu chicken.  They also have portabello burgers, veggie burgers and a turkey burger option.

E.O. offers 2 sizes of burgers: regular 6 oz burgers, or large 9 oz burgers.  We thought it would be best for our belts to go with the smaller burger since we were also delving into the fries.

Try the Bourbon Street burger on a skinny bun.  This came with 2 toppings: grilled onions and hot peppers.  The burger also features a homemade Cholula mayo sauce which gave the sandwich an extra kick.  We loved the fact that no grease was dripping down our hand while indulging in this burger.  We also ordered a side of Parmesean Fries which we enjoyed dipping in the Cholula mayo.

The Big Ragu ordered the E.O. Classic Cheeseburger that he topped with various sauces from the condiment caddy.  The foodie purists ridicule him for desecrating the burger with so many sauces.  Ragu skipped the onion rings served with “sassy sauce” and instead ordered herb-rubbed fries with rosemary and thyme.  We think Ragu needs to be rubbed down with herbs as well, next Food Adventure.

Herb Rubbed Fries

The fries are hand cut daily. You can also get a “ring fry” which is half fries, half onion rings.  E.O Burgers also has a full bar with several offbeat draft beer options.

One of the curious things about this place is that there was a custard machine with an “arm” of custard hanging out.  They use the custard for shakes, cones, and sundaes.  All of their kids’ meals come with a cone!  Also, with any adult meal, you can buy one half price ticket for the movie theater across the street.

The E.O. Classic Cheeseburger

The restaurant’s atmosphere is comfortable and casual with great music.  The staff was friendly and there is an outdoor patio area.  It was a nice break from the bustle of The Greene.  To all of our friends who recommended this place, you were right, it is great!  We enjoyed every bit.. whoops, BITE of this Extra Ordinary Food Adventure.

Please visit FOOD ADVENTURES: “like” us on FACEBOOK by clicking here to become an official fan

Have you been to E.O. Hamburgers?  Please post your comments below !

[album: http://www.daytonmostmetro.com/wp-content/plugins/dm-albums/dm-albums.php?currdir=/wp-content/uploads/dm-albums/E.O. Burgers/]

Filed Under: Food Adventures, The Featured Articles

Enjoy an Urban Nights Dinner at Olive!

August 25, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby 1 Comment

Opened in July, Dayton’s hottest new restaurant has been offering lunch and Saturday brunch to raving fans.  But owner Kimberly Collett has postponed adding dinner service for a couple of reasons.  First, her lunch has been busier than planned, exceeding her predictions of how much product she’d need – area farmers supply most of the ingredients for for their fresh, made from scratch and locally sourced menu.  Secondly,  due to a rainy planting season and low harvest Olive has had to enlarge their buying circle and spend a lot of time picking up product or as Kimberly describes it, “meeting farmers in parking lots to make an exchange.”

But wait no longer- Olive, an urban dive (at the old Wympee on the corner of Third and Wayne) is offering a Prix Fixe menu for Urban Nights, Friday, September 16th! The 6:30pm seating still has seats left, but you’ll want to reserve quickly, the later seating is already sold out. You can purchase your tickets on their website.  According to their website “we’ll get you off to adventure downtown in an hour and 30 minutes!”

Here’s the menu:

warm bread with cinnamon spun honey
house salad with choice of dressings
tiropita triangles and salt cod fritters
marinated shish kabobs: vegetable & tofu or vegetable & steak
over a bed of our indian basmati rice and black beans
pastry chef’s choice cheesecake & our urban press coffee

house beverages and tax included
cash tip for staff appreciated

please arrive on time. we will begin dinner promptly!

*vegetarian options on all courses*
BYOB in an insulated bag or small cooler ~ no corkage fee
community style seating for the evening

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: olive an urban dive, Urban Nights

Beer Week Concludes With AleFest Saturday

August 24, 2011 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

It seems only fitting that the proper way to conclude beer week is with a huge beer bash and that’s exactly what Joe Waizmann, organizer of the 13th annual AleFest is planning.  Over 4000 beer fans are expected to take over Carillon Historical Park this Sat, Aug 27th from 2-6pm.  According to Waizmann, the event will be “bigger and better than ever with more than 350 beers from about 140 breweries – an all time high,”  listed here if you want to look.

One of the highlights of the fest will be the Cask Ales being tapped. These beers are  brewed from traditional ingredients and matured in the cask from which it is served. As Chappy’s co-owner Lori Yanko  explains, “these beers have a different mouth feel because they are self carbonated as opposed to poured with co2.  Breweries will often release variations on their specialty brews, for instance the Great Lakes  we’re pouring this Friday night is a special cask of dry-hopped Commodore Perry,  as opposed to their regular IPA.”

Look for the following Cask Ales- and expect them to disappear quickly:

  • Heavy Seas Loose Canon IPA Dry Hopped in Cask
  • Left Hand Milk Stout
  • Thirsty Dog Belgian Tripel with Cherries
  • Thirsty Dog Druid Farmhouse Ale
  • Two Brothers Resistance Oaked IP
Tips from Making the most of AleFest  from Fest Veterans

“A designated driver would be a good idea,” suggests Peter W, Dayton’s Premier Event Photographer (AleFest does offer a $10 designated driver ticket- if you have a friend that is really patient, better yet- arrange to have a sober driver await your call for a ride home).

“Get there early – the lines fill up fast, so if you wait until later to arrive you’ll be waiting in long lines and wasting precious beer drinking time,” shares Elise H, who biked 10 miles for the beer of it on Tues and highly  recommends the event for next year!

“Wear something cool and comfortable.  Plan out what you really want to try first. You never know what could be on a very limited supply, so you don’t want to miss out. Try the stuff you have never had before first,” advises Brain A, a local homebrewer.

“Take notes of the beers you like and those that, God forbid, you don’t.  If you don’t like something it will save youfrom buying a whole 6-pack down the road. Have a great time seeing friends! Check out the beer gear too,”says Marty B, Beer Week Committee Member

“Don’t worry about running out of tickets. As the afternoon wears on, some of the vendors get more generous with their pours,” offers Steve S, a veteran of early AleFests.

Budget conscious beer drinkers will want to get their AleFest ticket in advance for $35, you can pick it up at over 60 area bars and fine beer merchants, or purchase online or you can buy it at the park for $40.  Your ticket includes a cute little sampling glass, but don’t beg the volunteers pouring to fill it up.  Their is a sample line printed right on it  Bring extra money for snacks which will be available from 5th Street Deli, Chappys Tap Room & Grille, & Dorothy Lane Market and to pick up a cool beer collectible, if that’s your thing.   Phat Like Dad will be playing tunes in the gazebo and you may want to bring a portable chair and set up a home base for when you need a break.

Filed Under: Dayton On Tap, The Featured Articles

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