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Show Jerry Jeff and Prine Up Against Jerry Jeff Entries Being Accepted For Photo Fest Entries now are being accepted for Photo Festival 1980. The festival will consist of two juried shows hosted by the Kimball Art Center September 21 through October 26. The second show will be held at the Finch Lane Gallery October 5 through November 7. All photographers are eligible eligi-ble to submit entries for one or both exhibits. A total of five entries are permitted per photographer per exhibit. exhi-bit. Persons interested in entering works for the Kimball Art Center Exhibit must submit entries no later than August 23. Entries for the Finch Lane Show must be submitted on September 12, 13 or 14. Entry forms for both exhibits can be obtained at the Kimball Art Center. In conjunction with the Kimball Art Center exhibit, Master Photographer George Tice will conduct a workshop at the Art Center. Tice began his career as a darkroom assistant. At this time, Edward Steichen recognized re-cognized Tice's talent and Tice became Steichen's printer until 1973. Tice has published several portfolios including 'The Amish Portfolio,' Port-folio,' 'Urban Landscapes' and 'Paterson.' The workshop work-shop 'Making the Fine Photographic Print,' is designed de-signed for photographers who wish to improve the quality of their prints. WfinnepDBSg Beaujolais The wines of Beaujolais (pronounced Bow jolay), are big, bright and some say even a little brassy. Beaujolais is a conversation wine; one glass after another appears to flow easily between open lips. Beaujolais is a red French wine, grown in a region comprising of some 60-odd villages. Approximately forty-five miles in length and never more than ten in width, this region north nor-th of Lyons, France is distinctly rural in appearance ap-pearance and lifestyle. So goes its wine! Beaujolais is a red wine that like Zinfandel, many people choose to chill. Swirled within a large tulip glass, its color is an almost translucent tran-slucent red, not at all the dark ruby color associated with Burgandies. Frenchmen (and of course French women) relish it as table wine, suitable with fish as well as beef. What makes Beaujolais inherently interesting to Americans is its price; normally a lusty French Beaujolais may be persuaded to spend the evening for under five dollars. Beaujolais wines are made from Camay grapes, a varietal that appears with unusual frequency. Many people believe that some of the inferior Burgandies are produced by the Gamay grape. Not so! While most of us associated red Burgandies with the Pinot Noir grape, some are produced from Gamay grapes. These are, however, a different dif-ferent variety. California wine connoisseurs immediately recognize the name Gamay Beaujolais. Another swindle? The Gamay Beaujolais of California has nothing whatsoever what-soever to do with the Gamay grape of France. Introduced to American soil in the late 1800s, our Gamay Beaujolais actually is a clone of a the Pinot Noir grape, certainly not a slight. Calculating the geneological tree of a grape does little for the Utah drinker with a dry throat, however, and many of you may be lost at this point. Having done your part by indulging in-dulging me so far. the reward is a method of finding that reasonably priced French wine. The region in which these wines proliferate may be divided into north and south. In the south, all Beaujolais are labeled either Beaujolais or Beaujolais Superieur. Thp latter term is applied to a limited quan tity of wine with a higher sugar content and inuir vipIH npr acre witn amount produced. Assuming may be looking at carries me oeaujuidis Superieur designation, you may be assured of a reasonably good wine. The Crus de Beaujolais. wines of premium quality grown in the northern part of the Walker Emphasis is placed on developing de-veloping the critical ability and craftmanship necessary for the creation of fine expressive photographies. The classes will be held daily from 10 a.m. to late afternoon. after-noon. Cost for the workshop is $125 for Kimball Art Center members and $150 for nonmembers. Tice will also serve as sole juror for both exhibits. In addition, Tice's works will be exhibited at the Art Center show along with the works of those photographers photo-graphers chosen to exhibit their works. For additional information contact the Kimball Art Center at 649-8882. Auditions for 'Harvey' Begin at KAC The Kimball Art Center's Park City Players will hold open auditions for the upcoming up-coming production of 'Harvey on Saturday August 16, from 11 a.m. to noon. Auditions will also be held on Monday, August 18 and Wednesday, Wed-nesday, August 20 from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the Kimball Art Center. The show has parts fqr six men and six women ranging in age from mid-twenties mid-twenties to mid-fifties. The show is slated for production on October 3,4 and 9 through by Rick Lanman respect 10 the the bottle you Hi, buckaroos! Scamp Walker time again. Tryin' to slide one by yew once more. The Austin-to-Nashville Redneck Rocker, Jerry Jeff Walker, will be headin' to Park West along with John Prine this Saturday night at 7p.m. Best known for his tune "Mr. Bojangles," Jerry Jeff spins yarns witn nis music and "talks to life," With his raucous style and gravelly voice, Jerry Jeff sings tales to appeal to rebels and "the white trash in us all." He's the harmless hell-raiser, a balladeer and a rock 'n roller. Some of his compositions now are classics: "Hill Country Rain," "L.A. Freeway," "Sangria Wine," "Desperados Waiting for the Train," and "Up Against the Wall, Redneck Mother." The street-wise storyteller grew up somewhere in upstate up-state New York, then hit the road when he was 16. He ended end-ed up in New Orleans, worked in bars, sang on the streets, and passed his cowboy hat for some spending spen-ding change. Then he was off to Texas, had a rock group called Circus Maximus, then hit the road again. And that's pretty much where he's been since, taking it as it comes, and singing about it, easy and natural. Another great singersongwriter is headed to Park West John Prine. His . album "Bruised Orange" marked a turning point in his career and earned him many accolades, including in-cluding a citation as one of 1978's top 10 albums by Time magazine. For his album "Pink Cadillac," Prine turned toward rock n' roll's real stomping grounds, Memphis, Mem-phis, and with a full-sized band, explored a different side of his roots. Prine was born in 1946 in Maywood, Illinois, a working class Chicago suburb where 12. It will be directed by Don Gomes, Kimball Art Center Theatre Director. Scripts are available for review at the Art Center. 'Harvey' is the story of Elwood P. Dowd and his invisible rabbit friend, when Elwood is to be dispatched to a mental hospital for observation, obser-vation, his 'sane' sister is committed instead. From there the fun begins. For additional information contact the Kimball Art Center at 649-8882. district, are allowed to bear village names. Saint-Amour, Julienas and Morgon are all villages that guarantee, at least to a point, good wines. If the wording Beaujolais-Villages Beaujolais-Villages appears on the label, then the bottle was produced in approximately the same region as the villages mentioned above. To carry this designation, the wine must have been produced in one of 30 other villages designated by law as superior. Actually, the distinction mentioned earlier between the California Gamay Beaujolais and the French Beaujolais is not critical. The climate and soils of California seem to produce a flavor closer to the Gamay grape than the Pinot Noir. California has in recent years begun to produce half gallons of the Gamay Beaujolais and, aside from its wonderful won-derful compatability with nearly everything, it makes a good mixer for some of the mixed drinks mentioned last month. The French Beaujolais may be used as well, although it would not be advisable to waste your money buying the Superieur or village-named selections. selec-tions. Beaujolais is best when young; holding it in your cellar will do little or nothing for it. Terms such as nouveau or primeur may appear ap-pear on the label ; they are meaningless, other than an indication that the wine is young (the primeur is simple French for "early"). As a young wine, Beaujolais is often quite fruity and thus should be chilled. If consumed at room temperature, the fruitiness may become overwhelming and somewhat acidic. A slight chilling of the wine is said to keep the acid content in balance. Beaujolais has increased in popularity since sin-ce the end of World War II. That most great Beaujolais now go to Paris, London and New York has created a strain upon this region just outside of Lyons. .Many comment that great Beaujolais may not be found in its home town; rather one must travel to the capitals of the world for a taste. An increased affection for Beaujolais has indeed created a shortage in a region that produces wine only on a small scale most vineyards are 30 acres or less. While it seems certain that shortages already have influenced some pricing, bargains still are available Beaujolais remains a wonderful, full-bodied table wine at a reasonable price. It may be one of the last bargains available from the European continent. his family moved from the coal-mining town of Paradise, Kentucky. He developed his music interest early, focusing on country and rock and roll. His older brother taught him to play the guitar, but it wasn't until 1970 that he made his first stage appearance. At the Fifth Peg, he sang "Sam Stone," "Paradise," and "Hello in There," and his career was off and running. His music has been recorded by pop, country, folk and rock artists, and through A Classic Recommended Good Double feature material Time-Killer For masochists only Coalminer's Daughter Talk is that Sissy Spacek is going to get an Academy Award for this one, which is supposed to be the Loretta Lynn story, right- there for all to see on the screen: It's a good yarn about her rise to Country-Western stardom, and about her old man, who likes the women and the booze (or used to anyway). But the real star of the film, the real knockout, is Levon Helm who plays Spacek's father, a down-home hillbilly, from Possum Holler (or somesuch). Helm is dynamite. And he's matched by other good stuff in this top-flight film. For those who seek out such things: it's also a story of consciousness-raising for a 14-year-old bride. Spacek's husband, Tommy Lee Jones is particularly powerful. In all, its highly recommended but it doesn't have thfe final sense of character resolution and development that a classic demands. At the Holiday Village. Airplane It's raunchy, with ghastly sight-puns and stretches of flaccid, esoteric humour. It also is filled with moments that make one give way to uncontrollable un-controllable giggles and conniption fits, (like, the opening gag over the credits a plane fin swishing through the cloud banks to the theme from "Jaws.") "Airplane"'s passengers include in-clude a singing nun, cute little lit-tle old lady, and adorable little lit-tle girl on her way to a heart transplant at the Mayo Clinic (where the already-extracted already-extracted heart is somersaulting somer-saulting anxiously on the doctor's desk.) The flight crew is peopled by characters charac-ters named Roger and Captain Cap-tain Over leading to predictable predic-table confusion. (The stewardess, Julie Hagerty) is followed on board by her husband (Robert Hays) the world's youngest WWII veteran, who is still haunted Indian Art Comes to KAC American Indian culture and heritage come together through art at Park City this summer. The exhibit, "20th Century American Indian Artists," is a compilation of works by some of America's most influential Indian artists. ar-tists. The exhibit will be at the Art Center August 24 through September 18. A reception honoring the artists ar-tists will be held on the 24th from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Art Center Main Gallery. Participating artists are Clifford Beck, Earl Biss, T.C. Cannon, Fireshaker, Hi-Shi-Flower, Carl Gorman, R. C. Gorman, Doug Hyde, Ar-mond Ar-mond Lara, Jon Lightfoot, Dan Namingha, John Nieto, Lawney Reyes, Fritz Scholder, Bert Seabourn, Jaune Quick-To-See Smith, Kevin Red Star, Randy White and Jeannie Young. R. C. Gorman exhibited at the Art Center in August 1979. According to the New York Times, "Gorman is the Picasso of American Artists." Ar-tists." In the fall of 1973, Gorman was the only living artist to be inch-.! d i the show "Masterworks of the Museum of the American Inidan," held at the Metropolitan Museum in New York City. Armond Lara and John Nieto, natives of Colorado, work out ot Santa Fe, New Mexico. In 1975, Lara became the Art Director for the King County Parks Department in Redmond, It At Park West club gigs and concert tours, he's gathered a big following. . His newest album "Storm Windows," was produced by Barry Beckett and was recorded at Muscle Shoals. Critics say it's his best effort yet. No doubt, he'll be giving fans his best effort this Saturday night, as no doubt will Jerry Jeff. Don't miss the dynamic duo at 7 p.m., August 16 on the grass at Park West. Tickets are $8.50 by combat experiences. Best of all, we've got Peter Graves (as the airsick captain), cap-tain), Lloyd Bridges (the airport terminal ramrod) and Robert Stack (as the seasoned pilot) spoofing their stalwart images. At the Holiday Village. The Big Red One By B movie director Sam Fuller, it displays artistry, but it's like a fine sketch painter suddenly having a mural thrust upon him, in the WWII chronicle of a top sergeant (Lee Marvin) and his squad surviving from the North Africa landings to the liberation of a Czechosla-vakian Czechosla-vakian death camp. The tone is businesslike bloodshed war businesslike bloodshed war as a job of work mixed with a gently cruel irony that reveals men knifing and killing one another in the foxholes, oblivious to the peace agreement signed hours ago. Because he's got a lot of grou'hd to cover, Fuller's war looks too much like one beach-head after another. Without the hurry-up-and-wait moments between be-tween battles, there is none of the numbing tensions between be-tween blood and boredom that others have told us about. The photography is excellent, and the performances perfor-mances from Marvin, Bobby Carradine, Mark Hamill, etc. rarely fall into stereotype. y2 The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu Peter Sellers exits not on a cry but a wheeze. The inscrutable in-scrutable Fu and archenemy arch-enemy Nayland Smith (both Sellers) butt heads yet again as Fu seeks to renew his youth elixir after a bumbling manservant piddles his supply sup-ply away. "You look familiar," Fu tells the slave, and he should it's the "Pink Panther"'s Cato, Burt Kwouk. But that small in-joke in-joke for Clouseau fans is about all they get. More common is Fu's comment when he kidnaps the queen, wrapped in a rug ("A royal egg roll!"); she turns out to be an undercover policewoman police-woman (Helen Mirren) who becomes the doctor's mistress after they discover dis-cover a common yen Washington. In 1977, Lara was chosen "Artist in the City" in Seattle. Nieto's works have been accepted in the 34th Annual American Indian Artists Exhibition at the Philbrook Museum in Tulsa. Nieto is represented in collections throughout the United States and internationally. inter-nationally. Lara and Nieto will be present at the opening reception. Three artists, Kevin Red Star, Earl Biss and Doug Hyde, have recently exhibited at the Putney Gallery in Aspen, Colorado. In the past, the three men have stated that their common com-mon goal is to keep their cultures alive through their work. Red Star uses his art primarily as a source of ex 'Learn by Doing' at Theater Workshop . The Kimball Art Center is presenting a theatre workshop work-shop beginning Tuesday, August 19. The workshop will be held Tuesday and Thursday from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Classes will run through Thursday, September Sept-ember 4. The workshop will give students a chance to 'learn by doing.' Classes will include acting on stage, radio drama and voice interpretation, music and movement. In addition, m advance ai me ivimDaii Art Center, and in Salt Lake, the Cosmic Aeroplane, Gepetto's, Ruby Records, Sound Track stores, Judd's Frontier Club, Toad Tape, and Budget Tapes. Upcoming concerts at Park West include Judy Collins and the Salt Lake Chamber Ensemble Sunday, Aug. 31; the Blues Festival featuring B.B. King, Muddy Waters and James Cotton Sunday, Sept. 7; and Bonnie Raitt, Thursday, Sept. 11. (sorry about that) for music hall ditties. Meanwhile, Nayland Smith jumps into action, his brilliance marred only by a senile attachment to his lawnmower; in his wake are a Bunkeresque FBI agent (Sid Ceasar) and a silly-ass Scotland Yard man (Simon Williams). Sellers pioneered this kind W silly humour on the British "Goon Show" long before Monty Python. It's truly pathetic to see this style degraded in his last film with turgid direction, jokes that sound like first drafts, and slap dash acting. Go see "Being There" instead. ; Xanadu Olivia-phobes should stay away but the rest of you will have a good time at this very listenable, very laughable musical fantasy. Newton-John Newton-John isn't the romantic center cen-ter of this film; she's its Golden Calf, surrounded by adoring dancers, gorgeous costumes and the kind of shimmering opticals you'd expect to find in a disco run by Stanley Kubrick. Why shouldn't she get the goddess treatment? She plays a muse named Kira, one of those nine inspirational sisters from Greek myth (the same folks who brought you Shakespeare, and Beethoven.) Her mission is to help a frustrated album-cover album-cover artist (Michael Beck) find new meaning in life through the healing powers of roller disco, as Beck opens the dance palace Xanadu with an old-time swing musician (Gene Kelly) who knew Olivia in his youth. (Aside from the fact it's Beck's painting that needs inspiration, one never learns what entrepreneurial skills he lends to the project he just hangs around!) Among the few moments of genuine (almost) inspiration are a "fantasia" derived animation anima-tion sequence by Don Bluth and Associates; and a demonstration of Kira's powers that has the characters charac-ters in a T.V. late-movie talking to Sonny in his living room. Above all, the relaxed exuberance of Gene Kelly outshines his pallid co-stars and the songs by Electric Light Orchestra and Jeff Lynne rumble through a sound system (at the Villa Theatre) that amplifies the music to 3.5 on the Richter Scale. pression. According to Red Star, "My art is a form of great personal satisfaction." Earl Biss began drawing at the age of eight. At 16, he enrolled in the Institute for American Indian Art in Santa San-ta Fe to begin studying art seriously. Hyde, a sculptor, began his career with the intentions in-tentions of becoming a painter. pain-ter. However, according to Hyde, "I turned to sculpture because the three dimensional dimen-sional aspect was more appealing." ap-pealing." The exhibit can be viewed by the public during regular Art Center hours. Kimball Art Center hours are Monday Mon-day through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 6 p.m. backstage techniques ot scenecraft and lighting will be covered. The workshop is designed for the beginner as well as the more experienced. Classes will be taught by Don Gomes, Kimball Art Center director and a team of experts. Students can register at the Kimball Art Center. Cost for the workshop is $25. For more information contact the Kimball Art Center at 649-8882. The Newspaper Thursday, August 14, 1980 Page 13 at the Golf Open for T)inner Tuesday thru Sunday 6:00 to 10:00 Lite 'Entertainment Friday & Saturday Featuring Tom Distad 649 THE IRISH CAMEL LTD. Now open for the summer season with a new menu serving fine Mexican dishes, burgers & salads. Try our frozen Margarita and Daiquiri set Lunch: 12-2:30 Dinner: 5-10:30 Happy Hour: 5-7 Closed Wednesday Located at 434 Main Park City, 649-6645 ( ITALIAN S52 r si i The Advantage is with NANCY " 1 "Ul1"-- "mas ,4 v. ' "' 1 -v V't 4 , Vote YES E3 For Nancy McComb for School District District No. 3 Course - 7177 - ups. Street CUISINE) OPEN FOR THE SUMMER SEASON TUESDAY-SUNDAY 6:00-10:30 412 Main Street 4 J |