Are you ready, Lake Charles? The Arts & Humanities Council of Southwest Louisiana is partnering with the City of Lake Charles to bring the Lake Area a brand new music festival that will celebrate our downtown identity and the newly renovated Lakefront Promenade. Live @ the Lakefront will be held at the Arcade Amphitheater at the Civic Center on three consecutive Fridays on March 16th, 23rd, and 30th, from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Festival-goers can spread a blanket on the amphitheater's grassy hill and listen to great music with the lakeshore scenery and cool weather as the perfect backdrop. Live @ the Lakefront will act as a fundraiser for the Arts Council with the proceeds from all Coke, Budweiser, and Miller sales going towards the Arts Council's efforts to support the arts in Southwest Louisiana.
Bands and musicians from the local music scene and from across the state representing almost every musical genre will take the stage by storm each Friday evening. The line-up includes: Certain Satellites (alternative/new wave), Wendy Colonna (acoustic/soul), and Twangsters Union (Southern rock/country) kicking off the festival on March 16th; Bobcat (indie rock) and Grammy-nominated Steve Riley & the Mamou Playboys (Cajun) on March 23rd; and Iberville High Life (blues) and City Heat (jazz/R&B) closing the festival on March 30th.
"We have an exciting opportunity to give the Lake Area a great music festival that will showcase our local and regional music as well as our local art scene," stated Matt Young, Executive Director of the Arts Council. "We are proud to work with the City of Lake Charles and our concert sponsors Isle of Capri Casino, JPMorgan Chase, and Tobacco Free Living to bring our community a music festival that can become our own JazzFest or Festival International."
The festival will be free to the public, and it will also showcase local artists, children's activities, vendors, and Lake Area food booths. Live @ the Lakefront is co-presented by the Arts Council and the City of Lake Charles and is made possible by Deep South Productions and generous sponsorships from Isle of Capri Casino Hotel, JPMorgan Chase, and Tobacco Free Living. Event partners include Townsquare Media, Gator 99.5, Coca-Cola, 107JAMZ, Cajun Radio, KISSFM, 92.9 The Lake, the Porch Coffee House & Cafe, American Press, Lake Charles Convention & Visitors Bureau, Knight Media, Southwest Daily News, the Jambalaya News, Lagniappe, Thrive Magazine, KPLC, Beverage Sales, Southwest Beverage, and Redfish Rental.
For details about Live @ the Lakefront, call the Arts Council office at 439-ARTS or visit www.artsandhumanitiesswla.org.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
First Friday Reading Series Presents D.B. Grady
The Arts & Humanities Council of
Southwest Louisiana will present a free fiction reading by Louisiana author
D.B. Grady on Friday, March 2nd, 2012, at 7 p.m. at the Porch Coffee
House & Café in Lake Charles. The reading is part of the First Friday
Reading Series which is co-sponsored by the Council and the Porch, and it
offers another reading platform for area writers and poets, both published and
unpublished.
D.B. Grady, a former U.S. Army paratrooper
and a veteran of Afghanistan, is a freelance writer and novelist. His debut
novel, Red Planet Noir, won the 2010
Indie Book Award for Science Fiction, and his newest book The Command: Deep Inside the President’s Secret Army (co-authored
by Marc Ambinder), which is now available on eBook and will be released in
print in October, examines the role of the U.S. Joint Special Operations
Command in foreign policy and the war on terror. Grady is a correspondent for The Atlantic and has written for American Thinker, National Journal, and Real
Clear World, among other periodicals and journals.
The Porch is located at 4710 Common
Street in Lake Charles, and the reading will be followed by live music. For
more information on D.B. Grady, visit his website at www.dbgrady.com,
and for details on the First Friday Reading Series, call the Arts Council at
439-2787 or visit www.artsandhumanitiesswla.org.
Calcasieu Cinema International Screening
“The Hell of ’63,” a 2009 Dutch film generously provided by
the Royal Netherlands Embassy, will be presented free at 7 p.m. Friday, Feb.
24, in the auditorium of the Central School Arts and Humanities Center. Calcasieu Cinema International, a branch of
the Council for International Concerns, will present the film in partnership
with McNeese State University’s Banners Cultural Series and Office of
Diversity, Lake Area Psychiatry, The Arts and Humanities Council of Southwest
Louisiana, Common Ground/Culture Fest Louisiana, and CocaCola.
The film, produced by Klaas and Steven de Jong, centers on
the Netherland’s famed skating marathon – the Elfstedentocht – and the
historical event in 1963 when unusually severe conditions resulted in unprecedented
injuries and other upsets. This film explores the race’s impact on the
lives of a few of the racers and their loved ones, as well as the after
effects. According to producer/director
Steven de Jong, “This is a classic Dutch film, in which a number of things
which symbolize our culture come together.”
The agony of the race and the euphoria of the few who finish the
course: “The Hell of ’63” is an
action-packed “disaster” movie with a Dutch twist!
Charlotte McCallum will host a discussion afterward, and
free drinks and popcorn will be served. For more information, call Corliss Badeaux, secretary of the
Council for International Concerns, at 475-5310.
Friday, February 10, 2012
The Little Mermaid Comes to Central School Theatre
The Children's Theatre Company presents a one-weekend only production of The Little Mermaid at Central School Theatre at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and at 3 p.m. on Sunday. The Children's Theatre Company offers classes and programs for children ages 5-18, and these classes engage the children in all aspects of the theatre experience from costumes and makeup to lighting and scenery. With regular productions held at Central School, the Children's Theatre Company gives children the confidence and experience to pursue opportunities in acting and theatre production later in their lives.
According to the Artistic Director, Kerry A. Onxley, "This season we are thrilled to have CTC alumnus Taylor Simon as our guest director." Simon, a graduate of New York's American Musical and Dramatic Academy, has worked in off-Broadway productions such as "The Revival of Early to Bed." Simon was often seen in lead roles on the CTC stage during his high school years.
In regards to their production of The Little Mermaid, Onxley states, "This is truly a student-generated show. The students are involved in all aspects from set painting to costumes designs to publicity. It is a total learning experience for the children."
To purchase tickets or to find out more information, visit www.childrenstheatre.cc or call (337) 433-7323.
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Imogene Dewey Offers Children's Art Classes
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Imogene Dewey |
Dewey will also begin a six week series of adult watercolor classes in February for beginning and intermediate students. The adult classes will cover everything from introduction to materials to the design and execution of several paintings. Two class times will be offered, Tuesday evening from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. and Thursday afternoon from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Adult classes are $60 each six week session.
Class sizes are limited. Call 337-477-0124 for registration information and availability.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Louisiana's Bicentennial Continues
Southwest Louisiana is steeped in folklore, pirate myths, Cajun and Creole cultures, history, and heritage, and the Arts Council and the Imperial Calcasieu Museum are working to preserve this legendary past within the verse of our Louisiana Poet Laureate, Julie Kane, in honor of the state's bicentennial. The Lake Charles Convention & Visitors Bureau is coordinating with the Museum to commission Kane to write a series of poems specifically about our own identity and its relationship to the state's expansive history.
Kane's acclaimed poetry spans across seven collections, and her work has become the voice of Louisiana through its celebratory imagery of both the raw and rapturous, the beautiful and the obscene within Louisiana herself. Her work, which appears in several prominent poetry anthologies, examines the contrast between her childhood spent up north (she was born in Massachusetts) and her later years in the South. Kane's poetry reflects an influence of the Confessional Poets as she was a student of Anne Sexton at Boston University during the time of Sexton's suicide. With her poems existing at the intersection of landscape and identity, Kane's understanding and perspective of the Louisiana heritage resides at the core of her work, and Lake Charles is proud to become the inspiration for this new series of poems.
On Saturday, May 12th, at 4 p.m., Julie Kane will give a reading of her work, including the commissioned poetry series, underneath the arms of the 375 year-old historic Sallier Oak, which was the site of the winter home of Charles Sallier -- the city's namesake. For details, visit www.artsandhumanitiesswla.org or www.visitlakecharles.org.
Kane's acclaimed poetry spans across seven collections, and her work has become the voice of Louisiana through its celebratory imagery of both the raw and rapturous, the beautiful and the obscene within Louisiana herself. Her work, which appears in several prominent poetry anthologies, examines the contrast between her childhood spent up north (she was born in Massachusetts) and her later years in the South. Kane's poetry reflects an influence of the Confessional Poets as she was a student of Anne Sexton at Boston University during the time of Sexton's suicide. With her poems existing at the intersection of landscape and identity, Kane's understanding and perspective of the Louisiana heritage resides at the core of her work, and Lake Charles is proud to become the inspiration for this new series of poems.
On Saturday, May 12th, at 4 p.m., Julie Kane will give a reading of her work, including the commissioned poetry series, underneath the arms of the 375 year-old historic Sallier Oak, which was the site of the winter home of Charles Sallier -- the city's namesake. For details, visit www.artsandhumanitiesswla.org or www.visitlakecharles.org.
Monday, February 6, 2012
Poetry Out Loud!
For four years now, the Arts Council has partnered with the Louisiana Division of the Arts to present Poetry Out Loud in Southwest Louisiana. This innovative program began in 2005 when the National Endowment for the Arts and the Poetry Foundation came together to yield a program that has revolutionized the role of poetry in high schools. Poetry Out Loud challenges high school students to study and memorize poetry in a competitive setting while building public speaking skills, confidence, and character. Last year, the Louisiana State Champion, David Douglas, came from Washington-Marion High School in Lake Charles, and he will serve as a special guest judge at Regionals.
On Friday, February 17th, at 6 p.m., high school students representing several schools in the Lake Area will compete at the Central School Theater as part of Poetry Out Loud’s Southwest Louisiana Regional Competition. The students who compete at the Regional level have already made it through the first round of competition at their schools or local library. Poetry Out Loud challenges high school students to memorize and recite poetry on stage in a competitive setting.
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From left: Justine Chiappetta of the Poetry Foundation; David Douglas, State Champion; Dana LaFonta of Louisiana Division of the Arts |
Our judges include: Sherry Perkins, president of the Bayou Writers Group; J. Bruce Fuller, widely published poet; Jason Martinez of IberiaBank; Mindy Schwarzauer of O'Carroll Group; and David Douglas, Poetry Out Loud's 2011 Louisiana State Champion.
During this difficult budgetary time for the arts and education in Louisiana, it is important to continue supporting innovative programs such as Poetry Out Loud that produce concrete and beneficial results for both students and education. Matt Young, Executive Director of the Arts Council, stated, “The Arts Council’s camaraderie with the Louisiana Division of the Arts elevates the goals of education by giving students a solid foundation with regional and state organizations that strive to provide area residents with a strong climate for creative thinking.”
The top three students at the Regional Competition will not only win prizes but will also go on to compete with students from across Louisiana at the State Competition in Baton Rouge, and the state winner will receive a cash prize and a stipend for his or her school for the purchase of poetry books. The National Competition will be held in Washington D.C. and will award over $50,000 in prizes and stipends, including a $20,000 cash prize for the National Champion.
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