Tag Archives: Cincinnati Arts Association

Student Art Show | May 2-10 | Aronoff Center‏

STUDENT ART SHOW
Local Students Display (UNDER, BY, IN) THE SEA“(Under, By, In) Artwork

May 2-10, 2015
Aronoff Center – Fifth Third Bank Theater

CAAHow do the children of Greater Cincinnati see and interpret the world around them? The Cincinnati Arts Association (CAA) explores this question through its annual Student Art Show, which exhibits artwork by local students. This year’s theme is “(Under, By, In) the Sea.” The exhibition will be on display in the Aronoff Center’s Fifth Third Bank Theater (7th & Main Streets in downtown Cincinnati) from Saturday, May 2 – Sunday, May 10, 2015. Exhibition hours are Friday, 4:00 – 8:00 PM, Saturday, 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM, and Sunday 11:00 AM – 4:00 PM. The Student Art Show is free and open to the public.

Representing students from grades K – 8, the diverse collection of two-dimensional artwork will include mediums from pencil drawings to printmaking to textiles. Now in its 13th year, the Student Art Show is organized and presented annually by CAA’s Department of Education & Community Relations, with the assistance of the Weston Art Gallery.

“CAA is excited to continue to present the Student Art Show annually. Every year students create a unique interpretation of the theme,” says Kathleen Riemenschneider, CAA’s Assistant Director of Education & Community Relations. “The program has been a wonderful opportunity for students to creatively express and share their views with their friends, family, and the public.”

The 2015 Student Art Show has 200 entries; the largest number of entries since its inception. Student artwork from the following schools will be on display: Berry Intermediate (Lebanon, OH), Central Montessori Academy (Springfield Township, OH), Delshire Elementary (Delhi, OH),Eden Grove Academy (College Hill, OH), Erpenbeck Elementary (Florence, KY), Fairfield North (Fairfield, OH), Gray Middle School (Union, KY),Holy Trinity (Bellevue, KY), Mariemont Elementary (Mariemont, OH), Mercy Montessori Center (Walnut Hills, OH), New Miami Local School Elementary (New Miami, OH), Newport Primary (Newport, KY), Our Lady of the Visitation School (Bridgetown, OH), Springer School and Center (Hyde Park, OH), Springmyer Elementary (Bridgetown, OH), St. Ann’s Catholic School (Hamilton, OH), St. Boniface (Northside, OH), St. Ignatius School (Montfort Heights, OH), St. Joseph School Crescent Springs (Crescent Springs, KY), St. Louis School (Batesville, IN), St. Margaret of York (Loveland, OH), Sts. Peter & Paul (California Crossroads, KY), Summit Country Day School (Hyde Park, OH), Terrace Park Elementary (Terrace Park, OH), Winton Woods Middle School (Greenhills/Forest Park, OH), and Woodland Middle School (Taylor Mill, KY).

The student artwork includes such titles as “Shark Attack in the Bermuda Triangle,” “Happy by the Sea,” “Party by the Sea,” “The Big Fat Fish,” “A Dark Night of Fishing,” “ A Journey through the Sea,” “Taking in the Rays,” “The Wonders of the Sea,” and “Eight Legged Mystery.”

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DANCING FOR THE STARS 2015 Announces Winners

CAA_Dancing for the StarsPresented by UC HEALTH

Northern Kentucky Restaurateur Johnny Chu
and Dance Pro Doreen Beatrice
Crowned Dancing for the Stars 2015 Champs

Doug Bolton named ‘Fundraising Champion’

CINCINNATI, OH – Johnny Chu (owner, KungFood Chu’s AmerAsia restaurant) and his dance pro Doreen Beatrice (Step-N-Out Dance Studio) received a near-perfect score of 38 (out of 40), taking first place at the Cincinnati Arts Association’s (CAA) ninth-annual Dancing for the Stars on Saturday, April 11, 2015 at the Music Hall Ballroom. Doug Bolton (managing principal, DTZ, formerly Cassidy Turley) took home the ‘Fundraising Champion’ Award, as the celebrity who raised the most money for the event through ticket sales and donations.

With an audience this year of nearly 900 guests (a new attendance record), the sold-out event reached its projected net revenue goal of $95,000 in support of CAA’s acclaimed arts education programs, including the Overture Awards – the nation’s largest locally-run high school arts scholarship competition.

Diana Maria Lara (corporate director of media & public relations, UC Health) and Jozsef Parragh (independent dance instructor) took second place; and Doug Bolton and Leigh Bradshaw (Cincinnati Ballroom Company) placed third.

The remaining four dance pairs included:

  • Mary Bettman (owner, Chef’s Café – Sharonville) and  Jeremy Mainous (Arthur Murray Dance Studio – Cincinnati)
  • George Foster (former member of the Cincinnati Reds’ ”Big Red Machine”; Cincinnati business owner) and Desiree Mainous (Arthur Murray Dance Studio – Cincinnati)
  • Barbara Hauser (manager, Ohio Government & Community Relations, Procter & Gamble) and Brian McNamee (Cincinnati Ballroom Company)
  • Devinder Mangat, MD, FACS (founder, Mangat-Kuy-Holzapfel Plastic Surgery Centers) and Bonita Brockert (independent dance instructor)

Inspired by the hit ABC-TV show Dancing with the Stars, Dancing for the Stars 2015 featured seven Cincinnati celebrities paired with some of the area’s finest professional dancers in a competition program, at which the audience vote and judges scores propelled the winners to victory. The competitive dance for the evening was Salsa, and each dance pair had 90 seconds to woo the crowd and the judges.

Event emcees were Chris O’Brien & Janeen Coyle (“Married With Microphones,” 103.5 WGRR-FM). The four competition judges were Douglas Beal (independent dance instructor), Drew Lachey (98 Degrees, ABC’s Dancing with the Stars Season 2 champion), Joe Rigotti (creative director, Accent on Cincinnati; event planner; Dancing for the Stars 2012 alum), and Britney  Ruby-Miller (director of operations, Jeff Ruby Culinary Entertainment; Dancing for the Stars 2014 alum).

Currently in its ninth year, Dancing for the Stars has become one of the most-anticipated fundraising events of the season.  Since the event’s debut in 2007, sixty-four local celebs have ‘danced for a cause’, and the impressive list of past champions includes:  2007 – Dr. O’dell Owens (president, Cincinnati State Technical and Community College; former Hamilton County coroner); 2008 – Jenell Walton (local news personality; former reporter, The List; former WCPO-TV9 anchor and reporter); 2009 – Phil Schworer (president – Cincinnati Bar Association / environmental lawyer); 2010 – Donna Speigel (owner, The Snooty Fox); 2011 – Dr. Tracey Skale, M.D. (chief medical officer, Greater Cincinnati Behavioral  Health Services), 2012 –  Regina Russo (chief of communications, Contemporary Arts Center; former director of marketing and communications, Cincinnati Art Museum; former anchor/reporter, WXIX-TV19), 2013 – Chris Seelbach (Cincinnati City Councilman), and 2014 – Neal Schulte (founder & president, Schulte Financial Group, LLC).

In addition, Dancing for the Stars 2015 featured:

  • Dinner-by-the-bite provided by A Catered Affair, Alfio’s buon cibo, Eddie Merlot’s, Funky’s Catering, Jeff Thomas Catering, Kroger, Lala’s Blissful Bites, Oriental Wok, Palomino Restaurant & Bar, Prime 47, Ruth’s Chris Steak House, Skyline Chili, Tres Belles Cakes, Vonderhaar’s Catering, Inc., and Whole Foods Market
  • Raffle of upscale gift packages and a diamond ring from Philip Bortz Jewelers
  • Popular DJ and 103.5 WGRR personality Rockin’ Ron Schumacher
  • Pre-event wine tasting and meet-and-greet with the stars
  • Open dancing before and after the competition

Event highlights included:

  • An athletic and inspiring contemporary dance performed by talented 2015 Overture Award dance winner, Joseph Harrington.

An encore dance by last season’s champions, Neal Schulte and Leigh Bradshaw, featuring a cha cha cha to James Brown’s “Get Up Offa That Thing.”

  • Two big screens that featured live video of the competition and engaging video introductions of the stars and pros (interviews and rehearsal footage) before their dances.
  • Charming champs Johnny Chu and Doreen Beatrice scored the night’s only perfect 10s (from two of the four judges) with a hip-hop infused salsa to “Uptown Funk” (Mark Ronson, featuring Bruno Mars), punctuated at the end of the dance by the signature moves to Psy’s “Gangnam Style,” during which the couple was joined by ‘back-up’-dancer friends.
  • An emotional salsa from Diana Maria Lara and Jozsef Parragh, who were dancing for Diana’s Dad, who passed away last year, loved dancing, and was a veteran of WWII. Diana slipped and fell in the beginning of her dance, but valiantly picked herself up, started again, and placed 2nd in the competition… wearing her Dad’s WWII dogtags around her neck. Diana’s competition mantra:  #dancingfordad.
  • A high-scoring and sensual salsa by Fundraising Champ Doug Bolton and dance pro Leigh Bradshaw brought cheers from Bolton’s many fans, who in support, held up VERY LARGE posters of his face after the dance.
  • The warm smile of Mary Bettman lit up the room (and the judges’ hearts) during her traditional salsa with Jeremy Mainous.
  • P&G’s Barbara Hauser wowed her many fans with a Latin-flavored salsa to Shakira’s “Te Aviso, Te Anunico.”
  • Reds legend George Foster proved he could swing more than a baseball bat with some swinging hip action and smooth moves to Lionel Ritchie’s “All Night Long” with dance pro Desiree Mainous.
  • An entertaining salsa to Madonna’s “Going Bananas” danced by Devinder Mangat in a bright-blue zoot suit and Bonita Brockert in a Carmen Miranda-inspired fruit headdress and umbrella bedecked with dangling bananas – two of the best outfits of the night.
  • Humorous, astute, and supportive comments from the Dancing for the Stars panel of judges.
  • The sold-out event had an exceptionally responsive, raucous, and energetic audience, which included large cheering sections holding signs with various messages.
  • After the competition, the dance floor at the Music Hall Ballroom filled with the evening’s guests who danced the night away to music by DJ Rockin’ Ron from 103.5 WGRR.

Dancing for the Stars 2015 Presenting Sponsor: UC Health

Dancing for the Stars 2015 Event Sponsors:  Accent on Cincinnati – Joe Rigotti, The Alleen Company, Arthur Murray – Blue Ash, Bonita Brockert, Carey Digital, Cincinnati Ballroom Company, Doreen Beatrice, Heidelberg Distributing Company, Jeff Thomas Catering, Kroger, Jozsef Parragh, Pebble Creek Group, Pepsi, and Step-N-Out Dance Studio – Covington.

Dancing for the Stars 2015 Committee:  Dr. Tracey Skale, chair (Dancing for the Stars 2011 champ), Christina Bolden, Terry Foster, Sue Gilkey, Jim Howland, Rosemary Schlachter, and Phil Schworer.

CAA’s OVERTURE AWARDS AND ARTS EDUCATION PROGRAMS
Cincinnati Arts Association’s Education and Community Relations programs promote life-long engagement in the arts, while contributing to individual, organizational, and community success.  With a mission to educate, inspire, and engage the Tri-state region, these accessible arts programs ignite the imagination of students of all ages.

The Overture Awards is one of several programs (which also include Artist on Tour, SchoolTime, Emerging Arts Leaders, and more) that have served more than 1.3 million children and adults since the inception of CAA’s Education and Community Relations programs nearly two decades ago.  CAA is proud of its newest initiative, “Arts in Healing,” that will promote wellness through the arts.

The Overture Awards – the largest locally-run, high school arts scholarship competition in the country – recognizes, encourages, and rewards excellence in the arts among Tri-State students in grades 9-12.  It also provides students an opportunity to share their talents and interests among their peers in a supportive environment outside of their individual schools.

Each year, more than 450 students are nominated by their schools to compete, and this year’s competition awarded $42,000 in scholarships for excellence in Creative Writing, Dance, Instrumental Music, Theater, Visual Art, and Vocal Music. To date, The Overture Awards has awarded $584,000 to support artistically-talented students in pursuit of their dreams.  Now in its 19th year, The Overture Awards was launched in 1996 by the Cinergy Foundation and Leadership Cincinnati (a Greater Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce program).

For more information about CAA’s Education and Community programs, visit www.cincinnatiarts.org/education-community.

CINCINNATI ARTS ASSOCIATION
Founded in 1992, the Cincinnati Arts Association (CAA) is a not-for-profit organization that oversees the programming and management of the Tri-state’s finest performing arts venues – the Aronoff Center for the Arts and Music Hall – and is dedicated to supporting performing and visual arts. Each year, CAA presents a diverse schedule of events; serves more than 600,000 people in its venues; features the work of talented local, regional, and national artists in the Weston Art Gallery (located in the Aronoff Center); and supports the work of more than one dozen resident companies.

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KINGS OF SILENT COMEDY WITH THE MIGHTY WURLITZER | Tue., May 12 | Music Hall Ballroom

CAA_Kings of Silent ComedyDon’t miss Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Laurel & Hardy
on the BIG SCREEN at Music Hall’s historic Ballroom

CINCINNATI, OH – Experience the joy and genius of silent movies at KINGS OF SILENT COMEDY WITH THE MIGHTY WURLITZER, presented by The Society for the Preservation of Music Hall (SPMH) on Tuesday, May 12 at 10:30 AM and 7:00 PM at the Music Hall Ballroom. The popular theatre organ concert series is presented in cooperation with the Ohio Valley Chapter of the American Organ Society.

Tickets are on sale now at www.CincinnatiArts.org, (513) 621-ARTS [2787], and the Aronoff Center or Music Hall Ticket Offices. For groups of ten or more, call (513) 977-4157.

Join the Society for the Preservation of Music Hal for a fun-filled, laugh-out-loud good time with the Kings of Silent Comedy – Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Laurel & Hardy – on the BIG SCREEN at Music Hall’s historic Ballroom. Nationally-acclaimed ‘Organist of the Year’ Clark Wilson will accompany classic silent movies on the original Mighty Wurlitzer Theatre Organ from downtown Cincinnati’s long-departed Albee Theater with his own original score written especially for this event. With all the free popcorn you can eat, this is a chance to relive old memories or create new ones. Bring the entire family for an experience of ‘the good old days’ that they won’t soon forget.

Clark Wilson     
Clark Wilson is one of the most prominent and recognized scorers of silent photoplays in America today. He works exclusively with the Organ in developing accurate and historic musical accompaniments as they were performed in major picture palaces during the heyday of the silent film era.

Wilson began his scoring career in 1980 and has successfully toured North America with hundreds of film presentations at schools and universities, performing arts centers, theatres, film festivals, and conventions. His work has led to performances for UCLA; the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, where, in addition to other pictures, he has re-premiered Wings for Paramount Studios’ 100th Anniversary; the Atlanta premier of the restored Metropolis; and annual presentations at the Atlanta Fox Theatre and for the Los Angeles Philharmonic Society at the Walt Disney Concert Hall organ. He is the organist of choice for many of the American Theatre Organ Society’s  (ATOS) international convention silent film presentations, and his performances have received the highest marks from colleagues and professionals, one commenting that his was “the finest use of a theatre pipe organ that I have ever heard.”

Clark has been organ conservator and Resident Organist at the Ohio Theatre for the Columbus Association for the Performing Arts (CAPA) since 1992.  He is responsible for all music during CAPA’s annual classic movie series, which features one or more major silent films each season. In addition, he has led courses in theatre organ styling and silent film accompaniment at the Indiana University School of Music, and he is heavily involved in the development of a similar degreed program at the University of Oklahoma, the first such program to exist since 1929. In addition to several articles published in Theatre Organ magazine, he has recently authored an article on film scoring for The American Organist magazine, the periodical of the American Guild of Organists.

Wilson has been named in numerous Who’s Who and Men of Achievement editions and was presented with the ATOS Organist of the Year award in 1998. An acclaimed organ technician and consultant, he has also been professionally involved with over 200 pipe organ installations to date and has earned the ATOS Technician of Merit award, the only person to receive both ATOS distinctions.  Visit Clark’s website at www.clarkwilson.net.

The Mighty Wurlitzer
The Mighty Wurlitzer was installed in the ornate Albee Theater on Fountain Square in December 1927 – one of only 2,200 theatre-organs produced at that time to accompany silent feature films.  When talkies took over in 1929, the theatre organ was mainly silenced.  The Albee organ was donated to the Emery Theater in 1969 (where it played for movies and other events) and was partially rebuilt by the Ohio Valley Organ Club. It was removed from the Emery in 1999 and put into storage.

The leadership at SPMH thought the historic Music Hall Ballroom would be an ideal location for the instrument, and in June 2007, Ronald F. Wehmeier, Inc., Pipe Organ Service in Cincinnati was contacted to completely rebuild and install the Wurlitzer. A donor foundation funded the entire project in the amount of $1.41 million.  Only a small number of Wurlitzers of this size still exist, and Cincinnati (the home of the Wurlitzer Company) is one of the few cities in the country to have an instrument of this quality.

The Wurlitzer was expanded in tonal colors and effects, from 19 ranks of pipes to 31 ranks (a rank is made up of 61 pipes, and represents orchestral sounds, such as trumpets, flutes, tubas, strings, etc.).  A full array of percussion effects is also present – xylophone, marimba, glockenspiel, chimes, and even a large Steinway grand – all playable from the giant three keyboard and pedal console, decorated in 22-karat gold leaf.  Wind for the pipes is provided by a 15 HP high pressure turbine, the electrical switching is controlled by computer, and pipes range in size from 16 feet to the size of a pencil.  In addition, the Wurlitzer is now fully computerized, so that it can be played without an organist through a digital input system.

The Society for the Preservation of Music Hall
The Society for the Preservation of Music Hall (SPMH) is a non-profit organization that provides ongoing financial and volunteer support toward maintaining and improving Cincinnati’s historic Music Hall. SPMH members are volunteers from all walks of life who are dedicated to the continuing preservation of Music Hall as a national historic monument and promoting it as one of the world’s foremost performing arts, entertainment, and rental facilities. For more information, visit www.spmhcincinnati.org.

Kings of Silent Comedy with the Mighty Wurlitzer  Radio Partner: WMKV-FM

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RAIN: A Tribute to The Beatles | Mon., May 11, 2015 | Aronoff Center

“The next best thing to seeing The Beatles!”
– Associated Press

CAA_Rain

EXPERIENCE AN ALL NEW SHOW!
Featuring New Songs and High Definition Imagery for the 2015 Tour! 

Returns by Popular Demand for One Night Only!
Monday, May 11, 2015
Aronoff Center

CINCINNATI, OH – Experience an all-new show when the internationally-acclaimed Beatles concert, RAIN: A Tribute to the Beatles, returns to the Aronoff Center for one night only on Monday, May 11, 2015 at 7:30 PM.  The much-anticipated concert is part of the Cincinnati Arts Association’s 2014-15 Season.

Tickets are on sale now at http://www.CincinnatiArts.org, (513) 621-ARTS [2787], and the Aronoff Center Ticket Office.

As “the next best thing to seeing The Beatles!” (Associated Press), RAIN performs the full range of The Beatles’ discography live onstage, including the most complex and challenging songs that The Beatles themselves recorded in the studio, but never performed for an audience. In addition to the updated sets that include brand new LED, High-Definition screens and multimedia content, new songs have also been included with the launch of the 2015 Tour. Together longer than The Beatles, RAIN has mastered every song, gesture, and nuance of the legendary foursome, delivering a totally live, note-for-note performance that’s as infectious as it is transporting. From the early hits to later classics (“I Want To Hold Your Hand,” “Hard Day’s Night,” “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” “Let It Be,” “Come Together,” “Hey Jude,” and more), this adoring tribute will take you back to a time when all you needed was love, and a little help from your friends!

“The audience is enraptured. They get a chance to sing along, twist and shout!” – The New York Times 

“Just turn off your mind, relax, and float downstream for a quick fix of nostalgic cheer!” – Entertainment Weekly

“A fun-filled family crowd-pleaser!” – Toronto Star

“A two-hour homage to pop music’s most brilliant gem.” – Los Angeles Times

“On their feet, with arms raised high above their heads, all in the audience were swaying and singing along in blissed-out, nostalgia-powered unison!” – Chicago Sun-Times

“The enraptured audience relives the soundtrack of its life!” – Chicago Tribune

“RAIN creates musical nirvana…makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up! A thrilling bit of time warping nostalgia…Boomer Heaven!” – Fort Worth Star-Telegram           

“Uncanny! RAIN are a quartet of fine musicians in their own right…as The Beatles, they triumph!” – The Boston Herald

“An adoring Valentine to The Beatles!” – The Washington Post

“RAIN is a spectacular extravaganza…did the audience love it?  Yeah, yeah, yeah!” – The Philadelphia Inquirer

“Parents (and grandparents) and kids were on their feet bopping like crazy!” – The Courier Post

Like The Beatles, the onstage members of RAIN are not only supreme musicians, but electrifying performers in their own right.

For more information, visit www.raintribute.com.

Become a fan of RAIN on Facebook and follow RAIN on Twitter @raintribute

CINCINNATI ARTS ASSOCIATION SPONSORS

SEASON SPONSORS:  AMERITAS (Founding Season Sponsor), FIFTH THIRD BANK (Lifetime Endowment Partner), FURNITURE FAIR, LOCAL12 WKRC, The P&G FUND of The Greater Cincinnati Foundation

SEASON PRESENTING SPONSORS:  21C Museum Hotel, Cincinnati Herald, CityBeat, Garfield Suites Hotel, Heidelberg Distributing, Hilton Cincinnati Netherland Plaza, Pepsi, Skyline Chili

RAIN: A TRIBUTE TO THE BEATLES PERFORMANCE SPONSORS:  TriHealth, Ultimate Air Shuttle, Wells Fargo Insurance

RAIN: A TRIBUTE TO THE BEATLES MEDIA PARTNER:   103.5 WGRR- FM

Founded in 1992, the Cincinnati Arts Association (CAA) is a not-for-profit organization that oversees the programming and management of the Tri-state’s finest performing arts venues – the Aronoff Center for the Arts and Music Hall – and is dedicated to supporting performing and visual arts. Each year, CAA presents a diverse schedule of events; serves upwards of 600,000 people in its venues; features the work of talented local, regional, and national artists in the Weston Art Gallery (located in the Aronoff Center); and supports the work of more than one dozen resident companies. Since the inception of its acclaimed arts education programs in 1995, CAA has reached more than 1.3 million students.

For more information, visit www.CincinnatiArts.org.

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MEN ARE FROM MARS – WOMEN ARE FROM VENUS LIVE! | May 29-30, 2015 | Aronoff Center – Jarson-Kaplan Theater

MEN ARE FROM MARS – WOMEN ARE FROM VENUS LIVE!
RETURNS TO THE ARONOFF CENTER’S JARSON-KAPLAN THEATER

FRIDAY, MAY 29 AT 8:00 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 30 AT 2:00 PM & 8:00 PM

“You’ll leave the theatre with the intent to live in harmony with your partner.
Not to be missed!”– Elle Magazine

Tickets On Sale Now!

Peter Story.

Peter Story.

[Cincinnati, OH] – MEN ARE FROM MARS – WOMEN ARE FROM VENUS LIVE!, the one-man fusion of theatre and stand-up starring Peter Story, is a light-hearted theatrical comedy based on the New York Times #1 best-selling book of the last decade by John Gray. The show returns by popular demand to the Aronoff Center’s Jarson-Kaplan Theater on Friday, May 29 at 8:00 PM and Saturday, May 30 at 2:00 PM & 8:00 PM. Moving swiftly through a series of vignettes, the show covers everything from dating and marriage to the bedroom.

Tickets are $54 and are on sale now at www.CincinnatiArts.org, (513) 621-ARTS [2787], and the Aronoff Center Ticket Office.The show is being presented by the Cincinnati Arts Association as part of its 2014-15 Season.

MEN ARE FROM MARS – WOMEN ARE FROM VENUS LIVE! is more than just the book.

After beginning in Paris in 2007, MEN ARE FROM MARS – WOMEN ARE FROM VENUS LIVE! has been seen by more than one million people around Europe. It debuted in the United States in February 2013 in Raleigh, North Carolina and will be playing to audiences around the United States and Canada throughout the year.

This hysterical show will have couples elbowing each other all evening as they see themselves on stage. Sexy and fast paced, this show is definitely for adults, but will leave audiences laughing and giggling like little kids!

Starring in this theatrical comedy is PETER STORY. Peter has appeared in prime-time shows on all three major networks – some of his favorite credits include CSI (directed by Quentin Tarantino), Without a Trace, Ugly Betty, and recurring roles on Jay Leno’s The Tonight Show and Rob Lowe’s The Lyon’s Den.  He stars opposite Steve Guttenberg in the cheesy horror film, Cornered, and can be seen opposite Weed’s Elizabeth Perkins in the hilarious short, Le Chat Est Mort.  He is proud alum of the New Harmony Project and an avid storyteller with The Moth.

Peter’s story of how he and his wife won a dream wedding competition was just featured nationally on NPR’s The Moth Radio Hour, a show featuring the country’s best storytellers.

Commenting on MEN ARE FROM MARS – WOMEN ARE FROM VENUS LIVE!, Peter said, “It’s a great recipe for a night out: a little storytelling blended with some comedy and a dash of sage wisdom from the book. A delicious evening of entertainment.”

When Mars and Venus collide, the adventures are earth-shatteringly hysterical.

Since being published in 1992, John Gray’s “Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus,” exploring the differences between the sexes, has sold in excess of 50 million copies, been translated into 40 different languages and is one of the most recognizable titles in the world. Gray has written 17 books and become one of the most trusted relationship authors today, appearing on the national lecture circuit and on such TV shows as Good Morning America, Oprah, and Larry King Live.

Producer, St. Louis-based Emery Entertainment, has produced or promoted thousands of events around the globe, including superstar attractions Blue Man Group, David Copperfield, and James Taylor.

The talented team assembled for this production continues with the award-winning playwright Eric Coble, direction by Broadway veteran Mindy Cooper, and animation & video production by the talented animators at Bazillion Productions.

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