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Archives for July 2012

2 Great Films, Another Great Weekend at THE NEON!

July 12, 2012 By Jonathan McNeal Leave a Comment

Hello Everyone,

This is a short & easy newsletter this week. We had another incredible weekend at THE NEON. People are really liking Woody Allen’s latest film – TO ROME WITH LOVE (some people have been quite vocal about their disgust for the review that appeared in Dayton Daily…and some have said they like the film as much as MIDNIGHT IN PARIS). In addition, MOONRISE KINGDOM continues to draw big crowds. Thank you so much for your support of these films. (You can visit either official site by clicking the titles above.)

Check out this fun “Behind the Scenes Clip.”

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5M_ySP5M1F0′]

We are holding steady this week! That said, we do have a special event on Saturday.

“Allow yourself to be immersed in a world where perception is redefined by a mysterious drug called I Razor. Dr. Gregory Fleer, a once brilliant scientist and the creator of I Razor, is transformed by his own experiment, along with a portion of the male population, into a band of telekinetic freaks who must negotiate their way through a world twisted beyond all recognition by their altered perceptions… Circus Devils (Robert Pollard of GUIDED BY VOICES and Todd Tobias) present: I RAZOR a New Film directed by Todd Tobias, starring Steve Five, Cory Race, and Brad Visker – with music by Circus Devils. Saturday July 14th at 12:30pm. Tickets are $5 each, and there are only a few left! Buying a ticket will enter you into a raffle to win cool I Razor/Circus Devils stuff (I Razor Movie T Shirts, posters) before the movie…” (taken from press release) Word has it that Guided By Voices will be in attendance.

In the coming weeks, I’ll have news about a special event surrounding the film THE INVISIBLE WAR (August 5) and news about a NEON Benefit (Save the date – October 14) to assist with our upcoming digital conversion.

And don’t forget that your movie ticket gets you 15% off your food order at Sa-Bai…located directly behind THE NEON.

Thanks for your continued support.
We hope to see you soon,
Jonathan

SHOWTIMES for
Fri. July 13 – Thur. July 19:

TO ROME WITH LOVE (R) 1 Hr 42 Min
Friday: 12:20, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:45
Saturday: 3:00, 5:10, 7:30, 9:45
Sunday: 12:20, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:45
Monday – Thursday: 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:45

MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 1 Hr 34 Min
Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 12:30, 2:45, 5:00, 7:20, 9:30
Monday – Thursday: 2:45, 5:00, 7:20, 9:30

I RAZOR (NR)
Saturday: 12:30

COMING SOON:
As always, all dates are tentative.
Many of these dates will change.
In some rare cases, titles may disappear.
July 20 YOUR SISTER’S SISTER
July 27 THE INTOUCHABLES
July 27 BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD
TBD WHERE DO WE GO NOW?
LOLA VERSUS

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton Tagged With: bruce willis, Dayton Ohio, edward norton, frances mcdormand, indie films, moonrise kingdom, movies, penelope cruz, The Neon, tilda swinton, to rome with love, woody allen

Loud Shirts & Hula Hoop Skills = FREE Cupcakes!

July 12, 2012 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

Beavercreek’s favorite cupcakery, Cake, Hope and Love at 1490 N. Fairfield Road, is hosting their 2nd annual Tiki Week and if you’re willing to play along free treats are in your future!
On Friday from 10am to 10pm visit the shop  dressed as if you’re a tourist on vacation and snag yourself a free cupcake from the counter! Limit of one freebie per person.

On Saturday they’ll host their  second annual Hula Hoop Contest. For every minute you can hula hoop without stopping you earn yourself a free cupcake (up to six minutes).  They’ll have a couple of hoops on hand, but you serious hoopers are welcome to bring your own.  The  hooping promotion runs from 10am until 5pm on Saturday.

CH & L promises loads of new flavors for to delight you including:
Parrot Bay (pineapple & rum flavors)
Blueberry Breeze (pineapple, blueberry, & coconut flavors)
Cookies & Cream
Raspberry Cream Cheese
Raspberry Mojito
Island sunset (Orange, Blackberry, & Coconut flavors)
Carrot Cake
Paradise Point (Banana, Strawberry, Pineapple, & rum flavors)
Chocolate
Vanilla
Red Velvet
Added bonus:  Post a picture of your wacky tourist outfit or you hula hoping to DaytonDining’s Facebook page and we’ll see if we can’t hook you up with a little something special!

 


Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Cake, Free cupcakes, Hope and Love

The Human Race Theatre Company Presents The 2012 Festival of New Musicals

July 12, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

Todd Lawson

(from The Human Race Theatre Company)

The Human Race Theatre Company, dedicated to the development of new musicals, is pleased to announce the three-play line-up for its 2012 Festival of New Musicals. This marks The Human Race’s fifth annual festival that showcases musicals in development, and the second year of including a new work from Encore Theater Company. Human Race Producing Artistic Director Kevin Moore has selected two musicals that are very close to his heart—Dani Girl and Red-Blooded, All-American Man. The third musical is Encore Theater Company’s production of 33MM: A Musical Exhibition. The festival will kick off with a welcome session on Friday, August 3 at 6:00 p.m. in The Loft Lobby. The productions perform in The Loft Theatre in rotating repertory over the course of the three-day festival. Audiences will have a chance to meet the writers of the shows during a discussion session on Saturday, August 4 at 12:30 p.m.

Dani Girl, a beautiful, touching and unexpectedly humorous story of a 9-year-old girl battling leukemia. Her incredible imagination takes her on a fantastical quest to get her hair back when she loses it to chemotherapy. With the help of a fellow patient, 10-year-old Marty, and her imaginary friend, Raph, she confronts Cancer and asks him, “Why?” Created by the award-winning team of Michael Kooman, music, and Christopher Dimond, book and lyrics, the show has been developed in a number of festivals, including the 2011 National Alliance for Musical Theatre Festival of New Musicals, the Kennedy Center and the ASCAP/Disney Musical Theatre Workshop, and during productions in Canada and Australia. Kooman and Dimond have received the much-coveted Jonathan Larson Award, and most recently became the first recipients of the Lorenz Hart Award presented by the ASCAP Foundation. “The show is a tribute to the children and families dealing with serious medical issues,” said Moore. “It is not a weepy melodrama or a bleak tragedy, but a spiritual journey accompanied by an upbeat, contemporary score that evokes feelings of hope and joy.” Dani Girl is directed by Marya Spring Cordes and music directed by Scot Woolley. The cast includes Abby E. Cates, Brendan Plate, Jamie Cordes and Katie Pees. Performances of Dani Girl are Friday, August 3 at 7:00 p.m. and Saturday, August 4 at 2:00 p.m.

Native Daytonian and Human Race alumnus Todd Lawson and his writing partner, Carter Anne McGowan, have joined with the New Orleans rock n’ roll band Cowboy Mouth (who is playing at the Downtown Dayton Revival Music Fest in September), to create Red-Blooded, All-American Man, the story of a regular guy having a pre-midlife crisis. Tucker, our main guy, has a beautiful fiancée and a good job, but he’s still not happy. His mind wanders—with the help of the rock band in his head that comments on everything he does. Unsure of his life and afraid of his future, he’s ready to throw it all away for the chance to make his dreams come true only to discover that sometimes getting everything you wish for is not as great as you imagine. Originally workshopped at the Penobscot Theatre Company’s Northern Writes New Play Festival, this “coming-of-age” musical “is sure to connect with our new musical audience,” says Moore. “And we are equally thrilled to be working with Todd Lawson again.” Lawson appeared in Three Days of Rain and The Vertical Hour—both directed by The Human Race’s late artistic director, Marsha Hanna. Red-Blooded, All-American Man is directed by Kevin Moore, music directed by Jay Brunner and vocal directed by Scott Stoney. The cast includes Todd Lawson, Amy Leigh, Paige Dobkins, Scott Stoney and Sara Mackie, with band members Jay Brunner, Allison Kelly and Kevin Anderson. Performances of Red-Blooded, All-American Man are Friday, August 3 at 10:00 p.m. and Sunday, August 5 at 7:00 p.m.

Encore Theater Company LogoThey say a picture is worth 1,000 words, but what about a song? Can one picture inspire a song? How about fifteen photos? In 35MM: A Musical Exhibition, each photo creates a different song completely disconnected from the other, creating fifteen different and unique moments frozen in time; a glimmer of a life unfolding, a glimpse of something happening. This stunning new multimedia musical explores a groundbreaking new concept in musical theatre. With music and lyrics by Ryan Scott Oliver (composer of Disney Theatricals’ upcoming stage musical Freaky Friday) and the contemporary photography of Matthew Murphy, this intricately woven collection of stories told through song re-imagines what the modern American musical can be. 35MM: A Musical Exhibition is produced by Encore Theater Company, directed by its artistic director, David Brush, and music directed by Zachary Jordan Steele. The cast includes Elizabeth Wellman, Melissa Hall, Drew Bowen, Zachary Jordan Steele. The band includes Zachary Jordan Steele, Amy Gray, Melissa Hall, Allison Kelly and Jeremy King. Performances of 35MM: A Musical Exhibition are Saturday, August 4 at 7:00 p.m. and Sunday, August 5 at 2:00 p.m.

The 2012 Festival of New Musicals is sponsored by the 25th Anniversary Fund, The Producers’ Circle and a grant from The Dramatists Guild of America.  SEE ENTIRE FESTIVAL SCHEDULE CALENDAR

All performances are at the Metropolitan Art Center’s Loft Theatre, located at 126 North Main Street in downtown Dayton, Ohio. Tickets are $15 in advance and $20 at the door for each production and are available online at www.humanracetheatre.org or by calling Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630, and in person at the Schuster Center box office.

 

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews

DVAC presents 21st Annual Open Members’ Show: No Borders

July 12, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Edd McGatha, Among Us, 2012, inkjet print

The Dayton Visual Arts Center (DVAC) presents the 21st Annual Open Members’ Show: No Borders. Over 170 artist members (including Kollar Anderson, whose work was featured on DMM a couple years ago) will be represented by one work of art each in this exhibition that celebrates the Dayton Region’s diverse community of visual artists.  The opening reception is Friday July 13th 5-8pm and the exhibit runs through August 18th, with a Gallery Talk on Friday August 3rd.

This year’s theme is No Borders, a title that implies far-reaching concepts and out-of-the-box thinking. DVAC hopes this theme will encourage their member artists to delve deeply into their work to explore new ideas that are relevant and complex, reflective of contemporary art-making practices and that push the boundaries of creative thought and discovery.

John Emery, Mackenzie Nor’west, 2012, watercolor construction

While the show is open to all members, it is juried for $1,000 in prizes, including The Lombard Prize for best interpretation of the theme. Charlotte Gordon will be the prize juror. She is currently the Curator of the Springfield Museum of Art, Springfield, Ohio. Presentation of awards will take place at DVAC’s Annual Meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 21.

DVAC is located at 118 N. Jefferson Street in Downtown Dayton.  Gallery hours are 11am-6pm Tuesday through Saturday.

UPDATE (7/17/2012 2:12pm)

The winners of the DVAC 21st Annual Open Members’ Show have been announced:

Lombard Award–Best Interpretation of the Theme

Joseph Karlovec (Centerville), Round Up, 2011, xylene transfer collage

Awards of Distinction

Mark Martel (Oakwood), Portal, 2007, oil on board

Daniel McInnis (St. Marys), Clay, 2010, 2010, chromogenic print

Sherraid Scott (Yellow Springs), Broken Border, 2012, lithograph from stone

Bruce Soifer (Dayton), Of Heaven and Earth, 2011, archival pigment print

Awards of Merit

Jon Barlow Hudson (Yellow Springs), Continuum Uncarved Block XXI:

Mountain, 2012, New Hampshire granite

Scott Dooley (Springfield), Industrial Amphorae, 2009, ceramic

Christina Pereyma (Troy), Remnant, 2012, satin

Stephanie Slowinski (Dayton), Untitled, 2012, charcoal

Andy Snow (Dayton), Dancing Soul, 2011, archival inkjet print

Sharon Stolzenberger (Kettering), New Horizons, 2012, watercolor

Juror’s Statement

This is the first time I have had the opportunity to jury the DVAC Annual Members’ Show. It proved to be a task both gratifying and daunting. This gallery is filled with the creativity and talent of 172 area artists whose originality, quality, and craftsmanship are something to celebrate. I am glad I had the occasion to get lost in every object here.  No Borders is an appropriate theme, as the daily news is filled with border disputes—political, geographical, emotional, and physical. The interpretations of this theme are vast and varied. There are literal interpretations found in Joseph Karlovec’s Round Up and Sherraid Scott’s Broken Border. Christina Pereyma’s Remnant questions interior/exterior borders in the way that the architectural lines outside are continued and repeated in yellow satin hanging just inside the window.

Amy Kollar Anderson’s Map of Ilak transports you to a place of the unfamiliar, while Barb Weinert-McBee takes you back to the tenderly familiar. Ed Charney’s and Bruce Soifer’s landscapes explore the borders of earth and sky. The craftsmanship in the sculpture, glass and ceramics is exceptional. The patterning in Susan Cannon’s glass vessel Diaspora implies different borders all together. The members in this exhibition reflect vitality, ability, and a sense of wonder in their art. The exhibition offers a rich visual experience, adding depth and breadth to the entire Dayton community.

—Charlotte Gordon

Curator, Springfield Museum of Art

 

Filed Under: Visual Arts

Carmen’s Deli Announces New Location

July 12, 2012 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

As many of you know Premier Health Partners recently bought the old Citizen’s Federal Building to make it their headquarters for their 900+ employees.  Which would have been a great addition to the business that Haitham Iman, owner of Carmen’s Deli,  had been building for several years.  But instead Premier decided to terminate the lease for the Deli – read all about it here on Esrati’s blog.

But just yesterday Haitham signed a new lease across the street at Kettering Tower.  His permanent space will be in the Northeast corner of the building at the corner of St. Clair and 2nd Streets. He’ll be starting from scratch to build out the window lined space, but in the meantime, the building owners will allow him to work out of the recently vacated Mr. Hyman’s space, at the base of the elevator tower.

It looks like as of next Wed, July 18th we’ll be able to stop by for a meal and some of the warm hospitality that made Carmen’s Deli such a great place to frequent.  It will be a limited menu until he gets his new space set up, but you can count on being greeted with that same old big smile!   So be sure and stick a note on your calendar to have lunch there next week and welcome Haitham back!

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Carmen's Deli, Haitham Iman, Kettering Tower

Amateur and Professional Photographers – Bring Your Cameras Downtown!

July 11, 2012 By Dayton937 1 Comment

Amateur and professional photographers are invited to participate in Downtown in Focus, a photo contest aimed at finding new and distinctive shots of our downtown. The City of Dayton, Downtown Dayton Partnership, Kaplan College and Dayton Daily News are sponsoring the contest.

"Epcot, Dayton (RTA Hub)" by Robin Feld won 2011's professional "My Downtown Favorite" and "Best in Show" categories.

One amateur winner and one professional winner will be selected in each of the following categories:

  • Downtown Festivals: Images showcasing individuals or unique moments at any of downtown Dayton’s summer events or festivals.
  • Active Downtown: Photographs featuring people participating in active lifestyle activities, such as biking, kayaking, dancing and running in downtown Dayton.
  • Scenic Downtown: Creative images featuring buildings, architecture, skylines, parks, the river or any other picturesque view of downtown.
  • Best in Show (selected by the judges)

Terry Orf's "To Be Young Again" won last year's "My Downtown Favorite" and "Best in Show" in the amateur category.

A panel of judges ― consisting of professional photographers, photography editors and instructors, and community leaders ― will select the winners in each category and award a $250 cash prize to the Best in Show winner in each division. Honorable mentions also will be awarded at the discretion of the judges. In addition, City of Dayton Mayor Gary Leitzell will select one photo that best represents the City’s “Dayton Originals” motto. This photographer will receive a gift basket from the City of Dayton.

Contest winners will be recognized at the Sept. 14 Urban Nights, and all entries will be displayed in a special exhibit during Urban Nights.

From approximately 8 to 11 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 3, during First Friday, many of downtown’s buildings will be lit for photographers who would like to capture night shots of the city.

Debra L. Barnett's "Waiting for Fireworks" garnered the amateur award for "Downtown at Night" in 2011.

The deadline to submit photos is 5 p.m. Friday, Aug. 31, 2012. There is no fee for application or participation. Photographers are not required to be Dayton-area residents, but winners must be age 18 or older. Photos must have been taken in Greater Downtown ― which includes the Central Business District, Oregon Arts District, Webster Station and the ring of neighborhoods that surrounds downtown ― within the past calendar year. Official contest guidelines and entry forms are available at www.downtowndayton.org and www.daytonohio.gov.

Filed Under: Downtown Dayton, The Featured Articles Tagged With: contest, Dayton, downtown, Downtown Dayton, downtown in focus, Photography, Urban Nights

Glenna Jennings: An Artistic Conversation

July 11, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Glenna Jennings

Editor’s Note: The following was written and submitted by Philip Titlebaum – an intern with Blue Sky Project)

Glenna Jennings was born in Alpine, CA, where she navigated a landscape of monster trucks, chaparral and soccer moms that still informs much of her practice.

She holds BAs in Photography (Art Center College of Design), English-Journalism (Pepperdine University) and Spanish (Pepperdine University). She received her MFA in Visual Arts from the University of California San Diego in 2010. Before joining the faculty at The University of Dayton, Jennings served as the U.S. director of the Geneva-Los Angeles based art collective compactspace, where she curated dozens of shows with emerging and established artists and faculty from Southern California art programs, including CalArts, USC, UCSD, UCLA, Art Center College of Design and Otis.

Jennings work includes photography, writing, video and curating, and she has exhibited throughout the U.S., Europe and Mexico. Her work was recently included in the 2010 California Biennial and resides in multiple public and private collections, including the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego and the Winda Cultural Center in Kielce, Poland. Jennings joined the faculty of the University of Dayton’s Department of Visual Arts in 2011.

Serbian mothers, two-buck chuck and taco shop fare collide in Glenna Jennings’ ongoing series At Table, a collection of photographs that investigate and celebrate the everyday act of gathering to eat and drink. Since 2006, Jennings has been documenting her encounters with various social groups throughout the U.S., Europe and Mexico. She turns her lens on a world in which the formalities of the mundane manifest in the common act of food and beverage consumption, portraying the everyday as dramatic spectacle.

For the current installation of the project, Jennings has created a series of wallpapers inspired by Kitsch, popular culture and historical pattern-making. These photo-based designs house her imagery in its own micro-universe, evoking the underlying domesticity, humor and reverence inherent to the At Table experience.

At Table: Rachel's 40th (La Mesa, CA)

At Table is currently on display at the Blue Sky Gallery located at 33 North Main Street, Dayton, Ohio. I recently had the opportunity to sit down with Glenna Jennings and find out a little bit more about her work and experiences.

Philip Titlebaum: How did you get involved with Blue Sky Project?

Glenna Jennings: This past Spring, I met Blue Sky co-creator Peter Benkendorf and he invited me to become part of the Blue Sky community as a collaborating artist. He and artistic director Rodney Veal were very receptive to my ideas and we were off and running! I was impressed by the scope of Blue Sky’s mission and the quality of work produced by its many resident artists over the years. The summer so far in Dayton has been a productive blast! I had the chance to meet and work alongside the amazing artist Katherine Mann and to meet so many like-minded members of the Dayton community. Blue Sky is unique to the other art organizations I have worked with on the West Coast in its generosity and community spirit. I look forward to seeing it grow!

PT: What inspired you to begin your At Table series?

At Table: The Californians, shown on I Mangiatori II (Robert eats.)

GJ: First of all, I love to eat and drink, preferably while seated! However, much of the imagery is not solely about the act of consuming food or beverages. It is loaded with other cultural artifacts and gestures, from beauty products and party favors to Soviet Kitsch and orthodox iconography. The images are really about spaces of common ground and physical engagement. I switched from a film-based to a mainly digital practice in 2006 and the quality and quantity of my imagery changed a great deal. I had been shooting a lot of medium and large format work during my BFA days at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA and (under the constraints of that institution) was very focused on results. The economy of the digital process loosened me up and allowed the images to flow. I became a better editor in that process, as the dramatic moments I cull from hundreds of shots of friends and family are fairly rare – I generally get about 5-12 ‘usable’ images per year. Therefore, what started as a side project to adapt my process has become a lifelong quest for dramatic everyday moments.

Of course, most folks don’t like to be photographed while shoving food in their mouths or indulging in cheap wine, so I had to “shoot” my subjects into submission. At that time, I had been doing some commercial work in Los Angeles and I was extremely turned off by the standard requests to make models skinnier and skin smoother. However, there is still a mode of objectification inherent in the At Table process. Most of my subjects are not thrilled with how they come out in the photos, but they are willing participants who later revel in the results (except for my mother – she still hates the photos of her!). It is perhaps cliché to position the photograph as a receptacle of personal memory, and equally over-academic to stake its legitimacy solely in cultural documentation. But these images are both, and I am not afraid to say I find their drama and chaos beautiful.

At Table: Mom and Mickey (Alpine, CA)

PT: What have you learned through your study of consumption?

GJ: In the 90s and early 2000s “consumption” was a catch phrase in the global art institution (if I can indeed claim one exists!). We had, among others, Andreas Gursky’s uber-photo of a 99-cent store and other spaces of consumer behavior. We also had Martin Parr’s amazing images in Think of England and other bodies of work. I gravitate toward Parr’s humor and humanism, the way he captured both the pride and humility of a nation stubbornly (and cheekily) morphing into the global economy. Of course, there are countless other influences and histories I have discovered throughout this ‘side-project.’ However, I began to see these photos more as celebrations than clinical documents of consumer behavior – so I use the term “consumption” in a more ‘tongue-in-cheek’ manner. Most of us readily acknowledge our consumer status, but “consumption,” with its plurality of definitions, is belittling and frightening. In these images it is the gestures and expressions that immediately draw my attention rather than the brand names that litter the foreground. We are the masters of the table; the goods are mere fodder.

On another note, several of the friends and family in the series are no longer with us, and their photos were deemed appropriate to be displayed at funerals and memorial ceremonies. Those events truly revealed the schism between consumption and celebration. That’s where the pathos entered. At my dear friend Fellini’s wake, I realized this personal archive could have greater significance outside the institution – it served its most important function of catharsis and remembrance while sitting on a short easel at West Hollywood’s Silver Spoon Café.

At Table: Fellini's Eve (West Hollywood, CA)

PT: What led to the decision to create wallpapers for this manifestation of the project?

GJ: The wallpapers were a delusional gift from the muses! Well, Let’s see…

Since moving to Dayton in August 2011, I have been doing research into the history of the National Cash Register, focusing on images of Patterson’s social welfare programs housed within the local NCR archive. I recently received a Peter McGrath Human Rights fellowship from the University of Dayton to more fully realize this project, which will result in a body of multi-media works that mesh archival imagery with current investigations of how we view labor and leisure from a Human Rights perspective. My studio walls are filled with Xerox copies of photos depicting various groups of laborers doing workplace calisthenics in factories and offices. I was drawn to the formal patterns in these images, to the way the bodies made sense of themselves through corporate-imposed repetition and mimicry. These faces and bodies had begun to form a wallpaper within my home, yet I would never meet, interview or know any of the subjects. That is an intense feeling for me and I am sure for many who do archival work!

The connection of that research to kitschy, celebrity-based patterns is tangential, but it was one of those exhilarating studio moments — one minute you are reading about the history of a local economy and the next you are Googling “famous people eating.” I had never made “internet art” and had a longing to do so. I basically turned a rudimentary assignment I had given in class into a personal exercise and enjoyed the results. In a conceptually simple but perceptually accurate sense, any duplicated and manipulated image can become a pattern, which is fun and eerie! Moreover, most people look pretty hilarious when they are eating, and the public loves to see celebrated figures made vulnerable.

I wanted a new context for my existing images, and at the risk of falling into gimmick, I churned out custom “appropriated” wallpapers. I am still looking into the economic and aesthetic history of wallpaper, but mostly I am having a lot of fun. Wallpaper was a good solution because it reinforced the domestic theme of the work and formally separated these charged images from the white cubes they inhabit. The representational aspect is not immediately apparent – you can’t see Betty White eating a hot dog or Mike Tyson shoving a green glob into his mouth until you get really close – and that’s what I want you to do!

At Table: Fellini's Eve and Rachel's 40th, shown on I Mangiatori I (Betty eats.)

PT: Where does the series go from here?

GJ: I’d love to wallpaper the entire state of Ohio! But in the meantime, I am turning my lens on less familiar groups of people. I have begun to document my new friends and visitors in Dayton, as well as the international students from UD’s Intensive English Program who have graciously invited me into their homes. As a newcomer, the At Table series offers me the opportunity to meet new people and continue my research into Dayton’s history. In an “immigrant friendly” city, I should expect to find a great deal of diversity in our everyday operations, but this is not always the case. As a Spanish speaker, I am hoping to forge a relationship with our Latino community and present imagery of diverse groups of Daytonians who don’t often meet around the table. I am available most any time if you have room for a voyeur/guest! This new work will debut at Blue Sky in November, just in time for the holiday season.

PT: What is the best way for people to get a hold of you if they would like to be a part of the project?

GJ: Just send an email to my UD account: [email protected] — and let me know what I should bring!

PT: Could you tell me about your upcoming photo project for Cityfolk?

GJ: The Cityfolk project came along as I was in the midst of researching the ethnographic nature of Dayton for a curatorial project with The Dayton International Peace Museum to open in 2013. Jean Berry invited me to take part in the Cityfolk initiative to bring large-scale photos to public spaces throughout Dayton. As part of my project, I will be running a photo-booth on Courthouse Square during Urban Nights to make portraits of all and any Daytonians who stop by. This event is also supported by the “Dayton, Ohio: You Are Here!” project, initiated by Terry Welker. The final product – large scale portraits – will debut on various city walls this coming winter. It is really exciting to work with yet another organization that supports art and diversity! Oh, and there will be wallpaper!

PT: What is your other work like?

GJ: I have an interesting personal relation to the arts – the first day of my BFA program (which would be my 3rd Bachelor’s) was 9/11/2001. I had left a career teaching English as a Second language to follow this art dream into a cultural, physical and economic explosion. There was a lot of fantasy and escapism in my early work, but it was full of passion and a lusty pursuit of the relevance of Kitsch to a society in the midst of a major representational wake-up call. I began to form lasting professional relationships with other artists, which mainly resulted in compactspace, a Geneve-LA based art collective and gallery that had a nice 6-year run in downtown Los Angeles. That experience fueled my curatorial work and inspires me to stretch myself as thin as possible – after all, there is no such thing as a “solo show” – I love working with other artists and seeing how disparate works create new narratives.

On my first day of Grad School at The University of California San Diego, my father passed away. This devastation was of a far more personal nature, and I had a hard time making new work. The only way through the grief was to create around, in, over and about his death. Inheritance, a collection of works that includes portraits of various women from my life eating and drinking around a table with my father’s prized pistol, was the result of this experience. (My dad left me, a leftie, 17 guns, most of which I still intend to sell to fund art.)

My work since then has been eclectic in terms of subject matter – a conflation of Doestoevsky’s Crime and Punishment with high school cheerleading, the aesthetics of Place and Space in a small Mexican-American border town, and now NCR. What unites these disparate topics is a passionate need to organize chaos while celebrating disorder. Those age-old binaries – Fact/Ficion, History/Memory, Life/Death – they’re all in there! It is probably not surprising that Ira Glass is a personal hero of mine.

PT: Anything else?

GJ: Why, yes! I am currently creating a course titled “Photography as Social Practice.” We will look at the legacy of photo-journalism from a traditional academic standpoint, but we will also collaborate with other community-based groups, including Blue Sky, Cityfolk, The Rivers Institute and The Center for the Environment and Sustainability to locate and/or create projects of Art Activism within our community. I aim to get students of multiple disciplines involved in this initiative. We will get out there and pixilate the Dayton map with possibilities. This is an opportunity for the UD students to get beyond the distant rhetoric they observed this past fall with Occupy Dayton. Basically, I aim to keep that dream alive through an ‘insurgency’ of hope, help and community empowerment.

Blue Sky Project is a summer experience that empowers professional artists from around the world and local youth to collaborate and build community through the creation of ambitious works of contemporary art and performance. Blue Sky also maintains a gallery at 33 North Main Street, Dayton, Ohio where Jennings work is on display through July 27.

 

Filed Under: The Featured Articles, Visual Arts

Dayton Playhouse Presents FutureFest 2012

July 11, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro 2 Comments

FutureFest, an annual festival of previously unproduced plays sponsored by the Dayton Playhouse, will take place July 27-29. This event is nationally recognized as a premier event in the playwrighting community and is the largest effort of its kind sponsored by a community theatre.

“Each year we read hundreds of previously unproduced plays submitted by writers in the United States and often around the world,” said Brian Sharp, chairman of the Dayton Playhouse board. “We narrow the selection to the top 6 plays and we bring those playwrights to Dayton for an in-depth weekend. The plays are produced by Dayton Playhouse volunteers, half as staged readings and half as fully staged productions during the weekend. After each presentation, the writing is critiqued by professional adjudicators from major theatre communities across the country. All of this is shared by our audience members, who also participate in the adjudication. The weekend also includes lots of social interaction with playwrights, actors and adjudicators and makes for a very stimulating theatre event.”

This year’s finalists include:

A Political Woman by Joel Fishbane of Quebec, Canada, also a finalist in 2010 for Short Story Long. This play will be directed by Cynthia Karns and will be fully staged at 8 p.m. on Friday.

As a debate rages in the Canadian parliament over universal suffrage, young Maggie Shand slowly becomes instrumental to her husband’s political life. But she soon realizes that her newfound political influence has a price – one she may not be willing to pay. Inspired by the play “what every woman knows” by J.M. Barrie, a political woman is at once a historical comedy and an exploration of a crucial time in gender politics with echoes that are all too relevant in the modern day.

Provenance by Daniel J. Weber of Great Neck, New York. This play will be a staged reading Saturday at 10 a.m. and will be directed by David Shough.

Provenance – lives and breathes in the world of wine. Yet it is emphatically not a play about wine. Rather, the cultivation of wine serves as an overarching metaphor for the history of change and growth that affects each character on stage. Like the mysterious champagne in question, four characters are trapped inside their own personal histories. The only way out: personal reinvention. Change becomes an act of survival. But how far will a person bend the truth to escape his or her past? What are the consequences? In this explosive examination of history and identity, secrets, like lies, are impossible to contain.

Nureyev’s Eyes written by David Rush of Murphysboro, Illinois whose play Estelle Singerman was the festival winner in 2006. This play will be directed by Annie Pesch and will be a staged reading 3 p.m. on Saturday.

During the 70s, Jamie Wyeth (son of Andrew) painted a series of works of Rudolf Nureyev, the dancer. The play examines what their relationship may have been like, how they passed through good and bad times and ultimately changed each other.

Curve by Sam Havens of Houston, Texas. This play will be directed by Jim Lockwood and will be fully staged on Saturday at 8 p.m.

In this witty, provocative play about truth and illusion, unrelenting rain pours down outside the Connecticut home of Dakin Abernathy. Inside, Dakin and his neighbor, Ted Mueller, engage in a verbal joust where nothing is as it seems. Or is it? Dakin, a noted film noir director, accuses Ted of having killed his own wife. Ted protests, yet as morning spins into afternoon and a thunderous evening, he begins to believe that he might, indeed, be a murderer. Dakin’s wife, Angela, complicates events with her flaky personality, and their daughter, Lana Veronica, comes home for the weekend saying she is in trouble with the law. Events escalate and secrets are revealed until the play itself suggests one of Dakin’s film noir classics, complete with dark music, ominous lighting and swirling fog.

Excavation by Robert Barron of Newburgh, NY. This play will be directed by Nancy Campbell and will be a staged reading at 10 a.m. on Sunday

Excavation – is a journey into the past to unlock the future. A widowed father who works as a security guard at New York’s American Museum of Natural History struggles to reach his mute seven year old son, who is fading away from grief over his mother’s death. Meanwhile, a parallel story takes place on the Southwest corner of England in the 1800s, as one of the first paleontologists, Mary Anning, struggles for her own survival as she scours the shorelines for whispers and vestiges of worlds gone by…

This Rough Magic written by Richard Manley of New York City, who was a festival finalist in 2009 for his play Quietus. The play will be directed by Gayle Smith and will be fully staged at 3 p.m. on Sunday.

I believe that Americans are by and large a lonely people. Our productivity and medication and social media notwithstanding, many of us struggle to make sense of things, to find a sustainable balance between melancholy and hope. Joy, when it comes, is often momentary, and must be savored. In my work, I celebrate those who fight to maintain equilibrium. This Rough Magic takes place a few years from now, when overcoming loneliness and feeling loved are no less of a problem, but when technology offers more solutions to those who can afford them.

Adjudicators for FutureFest 2012 are returnees David Finkle, writer for the Huffington Post; playwright and dramaturg at Chicago Dramatists, Rob Koon; Helen Sneed, president Helen Sneed Consulting; and Eleanore Speert, past publications director at Dramatists Play Service, Inc. They will be joined by playwright and Ohio regional representative to the Dramatists Guild, Faye Sholiton, whose play The Interview won the festival in 1997.

Weekend passes for the entire festival are available for $95. Tickets to individual performances are $18. All tickets may be purchased at www.daytonplayhouse.org, or by calling the Dayton Playhouse box office at 937-424-8477. The Dayton Playhouse is located at, 1301 E. Siebenthaler Ave., Dayton, OH 45414.

(submitted by Dayton Playhouse)

 

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Previews

Coming Up in Cincinnati Theatre: July 9-15

July 11, 2012 By Rob Bucher Leave a Comment

…BLINK AND YOU’LL MISS

LEGALLY BLONDE THE MUSICAL

Theatre in the Loop Entertainment

The Story: When Delta Nu’s president Elle Woods gets dumped, she decides to get “serious” to win her boy back. But once at Harvard Law, she discovers the true power behind being legally blonde. Based on the MGM motion picture starring Reese Witherspoon. Summer Youth Theatre featuring the talents of performers from 13 area high schools.
The Dates:
 July 11-14, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Theatre in the Loop Entertainment | BTC page |

PIPPIN

Middletown Lyric Theatre

The Story: Once upon a time, a young prince longed to discover the secret of true happiness and fulfillment. He sought it in the glories of the battlefield, the temptations of the flesh and the intrigues of political power (after disposing of his father King Charlemagne the Great). In the end, he found it in the simple pleasures of home and family.
The Dates:
 July 12-14, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Middletown Lyric Theatre | BTC page |

THE SOUND OF MUSIC

Union Community Theatre

The Story: Maria is a sweet young postulant whose love of freedom makes it obvious to her superiors that she is not suited for religious life. Thus, she is sent off to be the governess to Captain von Trapp’s seven troublesome children. Unlike previous governess’, Maria becomes friends with the children due to their mutual love of music. Soon, even the strict Captain begins to admire Maria. Eventually, the Captain and Maria fall in love and are married. Unfortunately, when the Nazis invade their homeland, Austria, the whole family is forced to flee over the alps to escape.
The Dates:
 July 12-14, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Union Community Theatre | BTC page |

…NEW THIS WEEK

Marypat Carletti as Nellie Cohan, Matt Dentino as George M & Eileen Earnest as Josie Cohan. Front: Brent Alan Burginton as Jerry Cohan in GEORGE M!

GEORGE M!

The Showboat Majestic

The Story:
The Dates:
 July 11-29, 2012
Tickets and More Information: The Showboat Majestic | BTC page |

HOW DO YOU SPELL M-U-R-D-E-R?

Falcon Theatre

The Story: This 1920s caper rolls into action when two couples arrive on a paddlewheel steamboat, headed for Cincinnati. An unexpected guest also arrives on the levee, and one of the guests turns up dead! How is this group of strangers connected to the murder? During each performance, the audience gets to play detective, review all the clues, interrogate the suspects, and with five possible endings, decide who committed the crime. If you enjoy solving the mystery, we want you!
The Dates:
 July 13-Aug. 4, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Falcon Theatre | BTC page |

…CONTINUING

FIDDLER ON THE ROOF

Kincaid Regional Theatre

The Story: FIDDLER ON THE ROOF is set in the little Russian village of Anatevka, where a poor dairyman, Tevye, lives with his wife and five daughters. Tevye is trying to teach his daughters to hold on to the traditions of this tight-knit Jewish community in the face of changing social ideas and the growing hostility toward the Jews in Czarist Russia.
The Dates:
 July 7-28, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Kincaid Regional Theatre | BTC page |

Roderick Justice as Charlie Baker & Kyle Imbronyev as Ellard Simms. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

THE FOREIGNER

Commonwealth Theatre Company

The Story: While accompanying his friend, “Froggy” LeSeuer on a weekend fishing trip in Georgia, Charlie soon finds himself in way over his head in this non-stop, hilarious play. Due to Charlie’s overwhelming shyness, his fellow lodgers assume he must be a foreigner who doesn’t understand or speak a lick of English. Thinking Charlie must be totally harmless, he becomes privy to some very dastardly and sinister plans, none more devious than those made by a two-faced minister and his redneck associate. How will Charlie navigate these uncharted waters? 
The Dates:
 July 5-22, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Commonwealth Theatre Company | BTC page |

…COMING SOON

ALL SHOOK UP

Rivertown Players

The Dates: July 19-21, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Rivertown Players | BTC page |

THE BEST INTENTIONS

Cincinnati Playwrights Initiative

The Dates: July 19-21, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Cincinnati Playwrights Initiative  | BTC page |

DAMN YANKEES

Mason Community Players

The Dates: July 19-22, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Mason Community Players | BTC page |

HAIRSPRAY

Fairfield Summer Theatre

The Dates: July 19-22, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Fairfield Summer Theatre | BTC page |

Jeremy Dubin as Sherlock Holmes. Photo by Jeanna Vella.

THE HOUNDS OF THE BASKERVILLES

Cincinnati Shakespeare Company

The Dates: July 20-Aug. 12, 2012
Tickets and More Information: Cincinnati Shakespeare Company | BTC page |

Filed Under: Cincinnati, On Stage Dayton Previews

Volunteer Box Office Coordinator Wanted

July 11, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

The Dayton Playhouse is seeking a volunteer Box Office Coordinator. The ideal candidate will possess basic computer skills, good telephone skills and an understanding of Microsoft Word. This volunteer candidate would work at The Playhouse Box Office on Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 2:00 pm until 5:00 pm with some additional hours on opening nights of shows. This is a perfect position for someone with a love for the theatre arts. The Coordinator will receive season tickets for all shows.

Interested candidates should contact the Playhouse box office via email at [email protected] for consideration.

Filed Under: Volunteer Opportunities Tagged With: Dayton Playhouse

Bake A Difference

July 11, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Springboro’s Cooks’ Ware will host their second annual Bake-Off this Sat, July 14th to benefit Cookies for Kids’ Cancer.  Founded by parents inspired by their son Liam’s battle with cancer, they were shocked to learn that the main reason over 25% of kids diagnosed with cancer do not survive is because of a lack of effective therapies. And the reason for the lack of therapies was very simple: lack of funding. They pledged to support the development of new and better treatments by giving people a simple way to get involved

 

Cookies for Kids’ Cancer is not about one child or one type of pediatric cancer. It is about changing the facts of pediatric cancer for the better, forever. Important statistics to know:

 

  • Cancer claims the lives of more children annually than any other disease.
  • 46 children per day are diagnosed with cancer totaling nearly 13,000 new cases per year.
  • Cure rates have improved dramatically and advances in childhood cancer research has provided seminal insights into the cancer problem in general. Today, 4 out 5 children diagnosed with cancer can be cured.
  • While long-term goals for the pediatric cancer community will focus on securing more federal funding for childhood cancer research (more than the 1-2% of the National Cancer Institute budget that is current expended), philanthropy plays a critical and essential role in the ongoing battle against childhood cancer. 

Want to help?  Call the store to register and then bake up your favorite sweet treats and donate them to the big sale on Sat, July 14th at the Settler’s Walk store. If you think you make the best cookies or cupcakes enter your sweets into the Bake Off by registering by Thurs, July 12th.

 

Bake Off Guidelines: 
Categories are Cookies and Cupcakes: enter just one or both categories.
Reserve 3 servings of each entry for the judges, you may package and donate the remaining servings from your recipe for the bake sale that benefit Cookies For Kids Cancer.
Drop off your entry no later than 8pm. Fri, July 13th at Cooks’ Wares.  Judging will begin at 1pm on Sat, July 14th

Contest winners names and recipes will be published in Cooks’ Wares newsletter and prizes will be awarded in each category.

If you’re not a baker, you can still support this event by shopping the Bake Sale on Sat, July 14th.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Cookies for Kids Cancer, Cooks-Wares

Social Cheat Sheets for Social Newbies

July 10, 2012 By Michelle Ton Leave a Comment

If you are new to social media networking, you know how overwhelming it can be.  Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Google+ – the list goes on and on!

Fear no more, Mashable has assembled a list of 12 Essential Social Media Cheat Sheets that covers everything from Facebook timeline to Twitter etiquette.

 

Here are a couple of my favorites.

Facebook Sizes and Dimensions – this one is seriously awesome for any web developers out there.  I know there have been many times when I’ve been asked to create photos for a client and I have to search through multiple sites to get all the info I need on pixel sizes.  This cheat sheet sums it all up.  And for non developers, this can help you make sure you always have perfectly sized or cropped photos.

Twitter Newbies need to have this one bookmarked.  It contains the absolute essential twit-terms for new tweeters.  There is nothing more frustrating to a seasoned user than seeing hashtags (#) in a Facebook post.  This cheat sheet tells you what it’s used for, which hopefully will make those of you who do that understand why it makes no sense on Facebook – unless you have your two accounts linked (then in which case you can’t help it).

 

 

And when confused about what each social network’s purpose is, please view this fun infographic of social media explained in donuts.

Filed Under: One Social Ton

Stacker Subs & Grub Now Open

July 9, 2012 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

Local beer guru Mike Schwartz has been incredibly successful as the operator of Belmont Party Supply on Smithville.  His love of beer, homebrewing and sharing his knowledge with others turned into a second business next door, BrewTensils.   When Grandma Virgis Pie Shop moved out of her space at the end of the strip mall, Mike started storing his wine making supplies into that spot.  After about a year and a half, Mike’s wife Donna put her foot down and said that he needed to start paying rent or find a tenant that would.  Which lead to the idea for a sub shop.

Partnering with Mike’s cousin Doug Magoch, a 25 year veteran of the restaurant business from

Chef & Manager Doug Magoch

Bob Evans and New Carlisle’s Studebaker’s Country Restaurant, the plans began this past winter.  A concept that would include Mike’s homemade marinara, freshly made sausage, options for vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free customers and a deep commitment to the community, and hence Stackers Subs & Grub is now open.

As I attended the sneak peek event this past Saturday, Doug was busy on the grill, training his new staff of 8 and Mike shared with me that the shop was decorated in blue and red, the colors of the local high schools.  He went on to share his excitement about plans to start a high school student of the month program that would feature local youth who excelled in academics and community service.

Ellie and Mike Schwartz on opening day

The first sandwich served up off the grill at Stackers was the Rockin’ Reuben– Corn beef, sauerkraut, thousand island dressing & Swiss cheese on marble rye.  It was served up to Mike’s mom, who couldn’t have beamed any more as she wished her son good luck on the new venture, while sporting a t-shirt promoting Mike’s beer business.

The Byron Bomb

The menu features over 20 choices of subs, wrap’s and paninis, with the option for all to be served up as a salad for the same price, which ranges from about $6 to $9 dollars.  An array of appetizers including cheese sticks, pretzels, fried pickle chips and veggies are also on the menu.  Kid’s can order up The Mini, served on a slider roll with their choice of ham, roast beef or turkey, chips and a soda for $4.99.  I sampled The Byron Bomb– a grilled chicken breast with a honey chipotle sauce with grilled onions & habanero jack cheese on an Italian roll and it had a great tangy flavor and was served up with housemade chips that could easily become addictive.  Adding a sweet treat to the menu- Deep Fried Oreo’s- dipped in a sweet batter, fried and then sprinkled with powdered sugar!

As a grand opening special this week, all soda’s (Pepsi products) will be just $1.  The shop is carryout and you can phone ahead to place your order, and the register system will que it up in the kitchen based on your desired pick up time.  Schwartz shared that a mobile app for ordering is in the works.  Stackers Subs & Grub is open daily at 2615 Smithville Road at 11am and will close at 10pm Sun- Thurs and at midnight Fri & Sat.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles

Fifth Street Brewpub Taps its 250th Member in Only 10 Days!

July 9, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro 1 Comment

Fifth Street Brewpub’s membership drive is off to a blazing start. Ohio’s first cooperatively owned brewpub, which will open in the historic inner east district of downtown Dayton, signed its first member via its website  on June 26th and its 250th less than two weeks later. The community-minded, volunteer group that founded the brewpub has created a co-op business model that offers one share per person for $100 each. All owners, including the founders, own an equal share of the brewpub.

“Two hundred member-owners in 10 days with minimal promotion shows that beer lovers like the co-op concept and the idea of owning their own brewpub,” said Maureen Barry, Membership Director, Fifth Street Brewpub. “This is an idea that is sweeping the nation. Based on this pace of 20 new members per day, we have upgraded our goal to 500 members by July 31.”

All member-owners that join by July 31 are considered “Charter Members” and receive perks including 20-ounce pours for the price of a 16-ounce beer. In addition, their membership card will say Charter Member and they will have their names memorialized on the walls of the pub.

The 200th member of Fifth Street Brewpub is Erin Flanagan, an associate professor in the Department of English Language and Literatures at Wright State University. “I grew up in the 1980s watching the television show Cheers. Owning this neighborhood bar is like a dream come true,” said Flanagan, who recruited four other member-owners including her sister and brother-in-law who live in California. Flanagan and her sister, Kelly Hansen, also purchased a gift membership for their father, Ken Flanagan who lives in Winter, Wisconsin.

Gift memberships have been very popular and the Fifth Street Brewpub Board of Directors expects that to continue. Brian Young, Founding Board Member says, “Everyone has a friend or family member that loves beer. Buy a membership for them as a gift and since we are one of only four co-op brewpubs in the country, there’s a very good chance it will be the most unique gift they have ever received.”

The July charter membership drive includes two beer socials and marketing via Facebook, Twitter and the Fifth Street website. Buy personal or gift memberships at www.FifthStreet.coop. You may either download an application to mail with a check, or use PayPal to buy a membership online. You can also purchase a membership in person by attending a beer social July 14 from 3-5 pm or July 21 from 6-8 pm at 1600 East Fifth Street, Dayton.

To compliment the membership drive, Fifth Street Brewpub also has an investor’s initiative, with investment levels as low as $1000. Higher levels of $3000 and $5000 are available and bring other benefits, including naming your own beer at the $5000 plus level.

Fifth Street Co-op was formed in June by a group of community-minded beer lovers to open the Fifth Street Brewpub in the St. Anne’s Hill historic district of Dayton to beautify the neighborhood, provide jobs and create a friendly restaurant and pub. Become a member-owner now or learn more at www.FifthStreet.coop.

Filed Under: Dayton On Tap, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Fifth Street Brewpub

VTA’s Cool Films Series

July 8, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Each summer, Victoria Theatre Association takes a break from live theatre and for a few weeks features the silver screen with their Cool Films Series at the Victoria Theatre. This season they have a new line-up of eight old classics that many will enjoy seeing again or for the first time.  Tickets are $5 a piece, or you can get a 10-ticket pass book for $28 at Ticket Center Stage.   And Dayton Most Metro has FOUR PASSBOOKS to give away, courtesy of Victoria Theatre Association!  Just fill out the form at the bottom of this article and we’ll draw winners on Tuesday July 10 at 3pm.

Here is the complete list of films and showtimes:

Birdman of AlcatrazBirdman of Alcatraz

Friday 7/6 at 7:30pm | Saturday 7/7 at 7:30pm | Sunday 7/8 at 3:00pm

When you have a life sentence in prison, you probably don’t have much hope of pursuing a career, much less of becoming a leader in a field you didn’t pick up until after your sentence. This fascinating portrayal by Burt Lancaster will give you the inside story on the “Birdman of Alcatraz” and how he managed to achieve fame from behind bars.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4zlb22lfVM’]

 

CleopatraCleopatra

Friday 7/13 at 7:30pm | Saturday 7/14 at 7:30pm | Sunday 7/15 at 3:00pm

Winner of multiple Academy Awards®, this film transports you back in time to watch the infamous Queen of Egypt Cleopatra (played by the equally infamous Elizabeth Taylor), as she schemes and seduces to keep her iron grip on the throne.

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

 

The Great EscapeThe Great Escape

Friday 7/20 at 7:30pm | Saturday 7/21 at 7:30pm | Sunday 7/22 at 3:00pm

Come see this war drama about the escape plans of a group of POWs in WWII–you will be amazed by the real life story (and exhilarated by all of Steve McQueen’s awesome motorcycle chase scenes)!

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkwmIDx9RwQ’]

 

Guess Who's Coming to DinnerGuess Who’s Coming to Dinner

Friday 7/27 at 7:30pm | Saturday 7/28 at 7:30pm | Sunday 7/29 at 3:00pm

When Joey brings her new African American fiancé, John (Sidney Poitier), to her 1960s hometown, they make a whole lot of waves. A political statement at the time, this film promotes respect and love between races and won director Stanley Kramer a United Nations Award.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4a56FnhtuGI’]

 

Murder on the Orient ExpressMurder on the Orient Express

Friday 8/3 at 7:30pm | Saturday 8/4 at 7:30pm | Sunday 8/5 at 3:00pm

Agatha Christie’s best-selling novel is brought to life flawlessly. This is a star-studded film, with Academy Award® nominees Albert Finney and John Gielgud and Academy Award® winner Ingrid Bergman as the leads in this murder mystery that will keep you on the edge of your seat.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTYA01glGqo’]

 

Mary PoppinsMary Poppins

Friday 8/10 at 7:30pm | Saturday 8/11 at 7:30pm | Sunday 8/12 at 3:00pm

From the moment Julie Andrews floats in on those changing winds, you can’t help but become completely and totally entranced with her supercalifragilisticexpialidocious ways! Come see the astonishing film version of the magical tale before you see the Broadway musical this season at the Schuster Center!

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

 

The Godfather TrilogyThe Godfather Trilogy

Friday 8/17 at 7:30pm | Saturday 8/18 at 7:30pm | Sunday 8/19 at 3:00pm

THE GODFATHER August 17

Winner of over 20 various prestigious awards (including seven Academy Awards®), this classic film about the New York-Italian Mafia and their need for revenge is 175 minutes of mesmerizing cinema work you won’t want to miss on our big screen.

THE GODFATHER PART II August 18

This continuation of THE GODFATHER is the first sequel to win an Academy Award® for Best Picture. Need we say more?

THE GODFATHER PART III August 19

Michael Corleone wants redemption, but the Mafia is a force to be reckoned with, and they aren’t letting Michael go without a fight.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAfWMr26KQk’]

 

Calamity JaneCalamity Jane

Friday 8/24 at 7:30pm | Saturday 8/25 at 7:30pm | Sunday 8/26 at 3:00pm

Come see sweet little Doris Day transform into a rootin’, tootin’, shootin’ cowgirl in this classic musical tale full of comedy and romance in the Old West!

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXSkVK4sFLQ’]

 

 TICKET CONTEST

DMM has FOUR PASSBOOKS to give away ($28 value courtesy of Victoria Theatre Association)!  Simply fill out the form below and then comment below telling us which of these films you’re looking forward to seeing.  We’ll draw four random winners on Tuesday July 10 at 3pm – GOOD LUCK!

CONTEST CLOSED

Congratulations to our winners!

Rebecca Woodward
Teri Lussier
Ben Adams
Robert Heckman

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton

Springboro’s first Cash Mob is July 11

July 8, 2012 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

 The Springboro Chamber of Commerce announced it will host southwest Ohio’s first registered Cash Mob on Wednesday July 11.This Cash Mob concept started in Cleveland Ohio, a new trend of “buy local” which is now sweeping the nation in small town and cities like Springboro, as well as some larger cities.  Downtown Dayton hosted a cash mob in the Oregon District this past March that was quite successful.

This is how it works – an organized group of business owners and members of the community, who have all pledged to spend at least $20, gather in the parking lot at the designated date and time, and then “mob” the selected local business. The majority of Chamber membership is made up of small businesses in Springboro, and the surrounding communities; the Springboro Chamber of Commerce is looking for “mobbers” who have a vested interest in saving the mom & pop stores and making an investment of their time and cash on a specific day, to show their support.

The first Cash Mob location will be the Springboro IGA on Wednesday July 11 between 5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. – it was chosen by the Chamber Cash Mob committee because it is a locally owned and operated retail location with ample parking, great visibility, and multiple items under $20 to purchase for men and women. Located at 15 North Main Street in the heart of Springboro, the IGA, a family tradition and local staple in town for over 60 years, meets all the criteria for a Cash Mob and also has shown great community spirit and continually gives back to the community.

The first 100 “mobbers” will receive a FREE green Bandana to wear during the Cash Mob. The Springboro Community Assistance Center will also be present to receive donated goods if people wish to donate their purchases. The Springboro IGA will donate $2 for every $20 spent during the Cash Mob to the Assistance Center to show their continued support. Join in the fun of Springboro’s first Cash Mob on July 11!

For more information about this Cash Mob, or future Cash Mobs, call the Springboro Chamber office at 937-748-0074.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: Cash Mob, Springboro Chamber of Commerce, Springboro IGA

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June 10 @ 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm Recurring

Trivia Night at Alematic

Grab some friends and join us every Wednesday night at the brewery for a pint of your favorite ALEMATIC brew...

June 11, 2026 11:30 am - 12:15 pm Recurring
Art Start Pre-School Storytime
June 11 @ 11:30 am - 12:15 pm Recurring

Art Start Pre-School Storytime

Art Start Pre-School Storytime 2nd Thursday of the month 11:30 AM - 12:15 PM Rosewood Arts Center 2655 Olson Dr....

Free
June 11, 2026 12:00 pm - 5:00 pm Recurring
Open Coworking
June 11 @ 12:00 pm - 5:00 pm Recurring

Open Coworking

Join us in The Hub for open co-working from 12pm to 5pm. Ever wonder how The Hub could work for...

June 11, 2026 12:00 pm - 8:00 pm Recurring
Launch Pad
June 11 @ 12:00 pm - 8:00 pm Recurring

Launch Pad

Meet the people you need to move your business forward This monthly LaunchPad event series brings you opportunities to expand...

Free
June 11, 2026 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm Recurring
Fun Trivia! Prizes!
June 11 @ 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm Recurring

Fun Trivia! Prizes!

Please join us every Thursday from 7-9 for trivia at Bock Family Brewing!  Prizes available for 1st and 2nd place...

Free
June 13, 2026 8:00 am - 5:00 pm
Dayton Air Show
June 13 @ 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Dayton Air Show

The U.S. Navy Blue Angels are expected to headline both days. • Possible flyover: Show organizers said they may apply...

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