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Show Page 2 • The Summerbird • June 22, 1992 ~~~· ~~ .. Cl}e BlaCI{ SwaN $3.25 HOUSE SALAD Leaf l..£ttuce, mandarin oranges, sliced almonds and our own house poppyseed dressing. $5.50 LEAR SHADOW SALAD A medley of fresh fruits served with a creamy mint sauce. Available June - September. AVOCADO CHICKEN SALAD $7.50 CHICKEN fEITUCCINI ALFREDO $6.95 Avocado with tender strips of chicken, lettuce, tomato, onion, sprouts & dressing. Fettuccini noodles with alfredo sauce and tender chunks of chicken. $7.95 PASTA CALIENTE Pasta noodles with peppers, and chicken sauteed in spicy pepper oil. Hot! $8.95 PRIMAVERA VERONA Pasta cooked in a cream sauce with mushrooms, peppers & ham, th~ topped with asaigo, feta and Parmesan cheese. Delicious! HONEY MUSTARD CHICKEN A boneless breast $9.95 of chicken, grilled till tender, then topped with tangy honey mustard sauce. CHICKEN BREAST WITH AlmCHOKE HEARTS & MUSHROOMS A boneless breast $10.95 of chicken topped with sauteed mushrooms and artichoke hearts. PORK LoIN WITH Tenderloin PwM SAUCE $11.95 of pork, cooked to perfection, then topped with red plum sauce. SHRIMP 5cAMPI $16.95 Jumbo shrimp sauteed in white wine and garlic butter. NEW YORK STRIP $15.95 This juicy steak is sure to satisfy the most ravenous appetite. BAKED HALIBUT $16.95 A thick halibut steak, baked with our tangy white wine sauce. CHATEAUBRIAND $24.00 Our house five-course specialty. A fillet of beef tenderloin, served with fresh bearnaise sauce, new red potatoes, breads, house salad, soup du jou1; sorbet & dessert. Open Monday - Saturday Lunch: 11:30 - 2:30 Dinner 4:30 - 9:30 Within walking distance of the University 164 South 100 West, Cedar City, UT (801) 586-7673 Roxane (Gina Nagy) mmes a dying Cyrano (Randy Moore) in the Utah Shakespearean futi~al- production of Edmond Rostand's romantic 'Cyrano de Be7gerac.' Festival opens June 25 This summer, "Involve yourself in a plot!" Delve into the dark machinations of political conspirators or of an ancient king and his three daughters. Peer into the embittered hearts of Venetian businessmen. Or rejoice in the lighthearted and romantic plots of two feuding ghosts, a chivalric soldier and that lovable clown Falstaff and the two women he "woos:' It's all at the Utah Shakespearean Festival in Cedar City, Utah. The 1992 theatre season, the Festival's 31st, runs June 25 through Sept. 5. Featured in the Randall L Jones Theatre stage will be Blithe Spirit by Noel Coward, Cyrano de Bergerac by French playwright Edmond Rostand and William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. In the outdoor Adams Shakespearean Theatre are three of Shalc.espeare's most loved works: King Lear, The Merchant of Venice and The Merry Wives of Windsor. Tickets for all six plays are now on sale at the Festival Box Office. Telephone 586-7878 for more information. Blithe Spirit, a completely insane and uproarious farce, features Charles Condomine, a novelist living with his second wife in a state of fashionable discontentment. Bur that world begins to crumble when he hires a spiritualist to gain a little useful information about the occult for a novel he is writing. The spiritualist more than earns her money when she brings back from the psychicbeyond the spirit of Charles' first wife. Then through an eerie mischance, Charles' second wife is translated into a spirit, and the two disembcx:lied beings begin a duel of wits and hilarity for Charles' affections. Cyrano de BeTgerac features one of the most famous lovers in classic literature. The title character is a long-nosed daredevil who, thinking himself too ugly for Roxane whom he loves, aids his friend Christian, who is mainly inaniculate, to woo her. Cyrano writes Christian's love letters, and, in a superb balcony scene, whispers from the dark the poetic phrases that gain Christian entrance to Roxane's hean and to her chamber-while he stays below. The historical ttagedy of Julius Caesar . has been called the greatest political play1 in all of world literature. Taking place in ancient Rome, the story concerns events before and after the assassination of Roman ruler Julius Caesar. The play's central c~aracter is Brutus, a Roman general and Caesar's best friend, who reh.fctandy joins a plot to murder Caesar because he believes Rome's safety requires Caesar's death. Although the plot is simple and direct, the tragedy's action and philosophy are complex and distrubing, leaving audiences to contemplate murder, even murder for lofty purposes. A dark and towering tragedy, King Lear was called by Shakespeare "the most piteous tale that ever ear received:' (CONTINUED ON PAGE 6) |