OCR Text |
Show Page 8 Repertory Dance Theatre To Present 'Firestorm' - .... An evening of serious and satirical modern dance is in store for those who attend the Repertory Dance Theatre's "Firestorm" presentation February 17, 18, 24 and 25 in Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus at 8:30 p.m. The dancers, who return this week (Feb. 4) from a three-week tour of arts centers cen-ters and campuses between Denver and Southern Arkansas Arkan-sas have selected three repertory pieces which provide a balance of serious and light entertainment for the audience. "Firestorm" begins with a piece inspired by an ancient Sumerian poem about loss and frustration as the result of war and death, "When Summoned." Choreographed by former company member Bill Evans, the work was last performed in Salt Lake in 1972, having been originally created for the Deutsche Opera Ballet in West Berlin. "Snack Pack," a satirical piece commenting on the attitudes at-titudes of people toward food, diet and exercise, was choreographed in 1973 by company member Linda Smith. The work is complemented com-plemented by large soft sculptures of food created by F. Anthony Smith of the University of Utah Art Department. The final piece drawn from repertory and choreographed by Richard Kuch, "The Brood," deals with the sensitive subject of life and death. It was created in 1968 through the Doris Humphrey choreographic fellowship at the Connecticut College American Dance Festival. The characters, suggested by Brecht's play "Mother Courage and Her Children," communicate the conflict of death's finality and the affirmation af-firmation of life. Tickets for "Firestorm" are available through the Kingsbury Hall box office from noon to 5:30 p.m. beginning February 6. can not tell a lie! (LADtEWDDAK 9 KAC Navarro Exhibit Elks 8 p.m., Elks Hall Winters Community Council 9 a.m., high school multi-purpose room High School wrestling Park City vs. No. Summit, away, 6:30 p.m. Children's Cancer Study Group Learning Lear-ning Center 10 KAC Navarro Exhibit University Race Resort Children's Cancer Study Group Learning Lear-ning Center r fop s.M If If i-' 1 an ' I. 11 KAC Navarro Exhibit Equitable Family Race, 11 :30 a.m., Resort Racquet Club Mixed doubles program with pros Bob McBroom and Jim Anderson, 10 a.m. 12 12 KAC Navarro Exhibit NASTAR 11:30 a.m.. Resort 13 Women's Athenaeum 8 p.m.. Memorial BIdg. Kimball Art Guild meeting, Nepal, 7:30 p.m., KAC 14 KAC Navarro Exhibit County Commission meeting 10 a.m., County Courthouse, Coalville County Planning Commission, Com-mission, County Courthouse, Cour-thouse, Coalville, 7:30 p.m. School Board meeting 7:30 p.m., high school multipurpose multi-purpose room Employe Race 3 p.m., Resort 15 KAC Navarro Exhibit Fire District meeting 7 p.m., Memorial Bldg. Church Services St. M ary's Saturdays 5:30 p.m. Sundays 9:00 a.m. 11:00 a. m Sundays (at St. Laurence in Hpber) Weekdays 8:00 a.m. L.D.S. Sundays Priesthood 8:00 a.m. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Sundays Sacrament 5:30 p.m. Sundays Fast meeting In Snyderville Sundays Priesthood 11:00a.m. Sunday School 12:30 p.m. Sacrament and Fast meeting 2:00 p.m. Com munity Church Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Church Services 11:00 a.m. School Community Council 7:30 p.m., high school multipurpose multi-purpose room High School basketballPark basket-ballPark City vs. Dugway, away, 5:15 p.m. NASTAR 11:30 a.m., Resort By Jay Median KPRQ Radio Good news for country music radio fans. Dan Wilcox, a Texan who migrated to the streets of Park City back in 1970, has returned to radio after af-ter a three or four year hiatus. A veteran of radio in Texas, Utah and Montana, Wilcox is now handling the 7 p.m. midnight shift on KSOP-FM in Salt Lake City. His air Name is T.J. (or T.G. ) Swann. Due to a translator in the area, KSOP-FM KSOP-FM reaches into both Summit and Wasatch counties. It's good to see someone with something to say getting back on the airwaves. All right Dan'l. 'i had the extreme good fortune to catch one of Max Applespeed's sets at the Car 19 last week. The foursome picked bluegrass, country and rock n' roll as if they had invented the idioms. The instrumentation was varied and always tasty. Featured were guitars, mandolin, piano, bass and banjo, and it seemed that they just rotated them for each song. As much as their music, it was their stage presence that captivated cap-tivated the audience. I'm sure the Car 19 is planning plan-ning on booking them for further engagements, so next time be sure you don't snooze or you'll lose. And then there was Tarwater. After four years of pickin' around Idaho, Wyoming, Oregon, Washington and Montana, they finally got around to Utah. Ever since the members of "Cow Jazz" met them in Jackson Hole, the empathy em-pathy that developed has been growing into something resembling mutual fanaticism. With Cow Jazz having other bookings last week, "Tarwater" was booked into Salt Lake's "Judd's Frontier Lounge," a watering hole favored by the young which features, in the main, both pro and retrogressive country music. "Tarwater" advertises themselves as purveyors of "hard country music," which translates on stage into hillbilly jazz dance music of the highest order. Led by ex-"Whitewater" fiddler Teddy Jones, Tarwater demonstrates an instrumental and vocal capability much more advanced than their regional fame would indicate. A couple-dozen honky-tonkers from Park City, Heber, Midway, Kamas and Wanship made the trip down last Saturday night and, needless to say, "tickled them tiles." Guitar buffs will be glad to find out that Larry Jackstein of the Hotel Utah has booked in the great Joe Pass for this Friday night. Pass is the major-domo of the improvisional guitar technique, a talent which makes him almost always first choice at either recording or jam sessions. The very same riffs that blew everyone away at last summer's already famous Mon-treux Mon-treux Festival in Switzerland are to be put on display for those Utah folks with enough musical and historical awareness not to be among the absent. ab-sent. That's Friday evening at the Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Utah. Showtime 8 p.m. One last triskaidekaphobia reminder for this coming Monday evening. Concerts by Waylon Jennings, Vassar Clements, and Tom Waits will be getting underway at three different locations at the same time (8 p.m.). If it's too much for you hyperthalmus, stay in town and catch the return of "Lightning Leroy and the Badland Band" at the Car 19. Which reminds me, if you have to miss Joe Pass, check out J.D. Moffat and Kevin Johansen when they are joined by Terrel Dugan Friday night at the Car 19. Remember No Parking On Main Street between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m. DAILY ANNOUNCEMENT J J)Jj We are pleased to announce a "first" in rark City dinme: Soft, tuneful, romantic piano background music to complement an excellent candle-lit dinner. World traveler ERIC LUNDBERG'S reminiscent ram-blings ram-blings at the piano and occasionally on the accordion-bringing accordion-bringing back "new nostalgia" and international melodies we feel will truly delight you. You know, there's not much of this kind of music around any more. We are sincerely confident you will thoroughly enjoy it. Appetizers L'Escargot 3.00 Oysters on a Half Shell 2.75 Sauteed Mushrooms 1.50 Shrimp Cocktail 3.00 French Onion Soup 1.50 Clam Chowder 1.50 'Entrees All entrees include Salad, Vegetable du Jour, baked Potato with Sour Cream, Chives or Butter or Rice Pilaf and Beverage Fresh Sole Tilet poached in Herbs & Wine 8.95 Trout Amandine Ohe traditional Western Rainbow Grout 7.50 Darnes de Saumon Grillees au Beurred Escarots Salmon basted in herbed butter 7.95 Poisson Farcia a la Florentine Tlorida Red Snapper prepared with fresh spinach dressing served whole 10.50 Coquilles St. Jacques a la Parisienne Scallops presented in the shell simmering in a white wine sauce 7.50 Lobster CJwo broiled Australian lobster tails 13.95 Alaska King Crab Senled With lemon r butter 9.50 Crab & Steak Alaskan King Crab leg combined With a prime fillet 10.95 Roast Duckling Montmorency One halj duckling served with wild rice cohered With cherry sauce &- Jlamed tableside 10.50 VealMadere Dend.er leal seasoned with mushrooms, shallots & Madere 8.95 New York Steak Charbroiled to your specifications 9.95 Charbroiled Tenderloin Filet Earge 9.95 Medium 8.95 Turnedos Henri IV et Choron Escoffier tour de force in Trench cooking. Medallions oj beef on artichoke bottoms cohered with bearnaise & choron sauces 1 2 . 95 Boeuf Wellington Ohe classic combination of beef, pate & pastry. "Please allow 35 minutes for preparation 13 . 95 Desserts Banana Flambe 2.50 Peaches Cardinal 2.75 Italian Rum Cake 1.25 Cheese Cake with Strawberries Please ask your waiter about children's d Fifteen percent gratuity added to bill for groups of six or more 2.00 mners |