OCR Text |
Show 'Ufa ilti on 3 Page B4 Thursday, June 24, 1982 The Newspaper - .PltttCmx r Ill .Hi I II ii 1 1 I ii mil moi n hi W,',IV'' f 'in i. mm 1 1 mKtdmmtSl 1 ( Mr" ( tk -.u.i nHl(i jtlfcVM il J110II K K. S I A I R A I at Prospector Square Sue Hay good, Chef at the Grub Steak Restaurant, invites you to Sunday Brunch, every Sunday, April through November ... Adults $7.95 Children $4.95 10:00 a.m. -2:00 p.m. LUNCH SERVED 11:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday - Saturday 649-8060 Prospector Square, Highway 248, Park City Mm m "'..as 45 IS .Mb - v . - . j j Native crafts are just one of the many attractions at the Utah Arts Festival Fes-tival running in Salt Lake City for five days. Utah Arts Festival opens The sixth annual Utah Arts Festival is being held in Salt Lake June 23 through June 27. The event will include two exhibiting artists from Park City jewelry craftsman Dick Doty and ceramist David Fernandez plus performers, per-formers, visual artists, poets and the popular Children's Art Yard. The festival is held outdoors out-doors in the Bicentennial Arts Complex on West Temple Tem-ple Street. This year, it is holding its first theatre project with the Western premiere of the musical "Diamond Studs". (See related article.) During the festival, free tickets for the show can be obtained from the information booth at the north end of the grounds. Another cowboy-oriented event is the Utah Media Center's festival of Western movies (see last week's paper) with stars ranging from Tom Mix to Jeff Bridges. The festival also includes the following activities: Two outdoor stages are holding daily performances by groups such as the Utah Symphony, the Repertory Dance Theatre, Ballet West, Utah Opera Company, and the Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company. The Children's Art Yard allows children to paint, weave, and work with clay. Working from this year's theme, The Ice Age, children can create and decorate saber-toothed tigers and a papier-mache wooly mammoth. mam-moth. Special artists' projects will be featured at the festival. Artist Gyll Huff will show videotape portraits of festival visitors. Spectators can watch the evolution of a work by Ed Dolinger. And artist Stephen Taft will create neon forms on the sides of Symphony Hall and the Art Center. Readers theater will feature fea-ture Dorothy Solomon, reading read-ing from her autobiography about polygamy, and poet Lorraine Ferra reading her work. Traditional and ethnic crafts such as violin making, Trivia Test ice sculpture and the Japanese Japan-ese pottery art of Raku, will be demonstrated. The works of 70 artists and craftsman will be exhibited, plus a variety of foods such as Navajo tacos, crepes, quiche, and traditional South America food. IK ; Mr ' ,j .... wf - RDT presents Mitchell Rose The Repertory Dance Theater will present New York dancer choreographer choreograph-er Mitchell Rose in a solo concert July 2, 8:30 p.m. in the Dance Building Theatre at the University of Utah. This concert, part of RDT's SummerDance Festival will highlight the comedic flair of Mr. Rose whom the New York Times has called "the dance world's Woody Allen". Mr. Rose, who is also a guest faculty member for RDT's 12th annual Summer Dance Workshop, will be setting his work on RDT for inclusion in the company's repertory for the 1982-83 season. Tickets for this concert are priced at $4-$5 and are available at the door. For more information on this and other SummerDance events contact the Repertory Dance Theatre at 581-6702. Summer Sunday schedule The Egyptian Theatre has released a schedule for its two-buck Summer Sunday program: June 27: Harold and Maude July 4: no show . July 11: Coffee House July 18: Comedy Store July 25: Emmanuelle, The Joys of a Woman Aug. 1: The Night of the Iguana Aug. 8: Godspell Aug. 15: One Acts Aug. 22: Casual classical music Aug. 29: One acts Receive a $2 discount off the regular admission price. Individuals wishing to perform in either the Coffee House, the Comedy Store or the classical music evening should contact Don Gomes at the Egyptian Theatre, 649-9371. Norv Lambert, Allen Titensor They doubled their pleasure For the first time, Trivia Corner has a pair of winners! Allen Titensor and Norv Lambert share the prize this week. Together they figured out that the WIN button (which stood for Whip Inflation Now) was propagated by Gerald R. Ford; that Danny DeVito and Christopher Lloyd were the two lunatics in the movie "Cuckoo's Nest" who went on to regular roles on "Taxi"; and that Scott Richards' nickname is "Fatback". A Trivia Corner team is interesting, but we hope the idea doesn't become a fad. (As of now, we're limiting eligible teams to two members.) After all, it's hard to fit eight people in one small photo, and how could they share their prize a sandwich from the Main Street Deli. Anyway, it's nice to see two new faces in Trivia Corner. In that spirit, we are bringing something new to the questions this week. Our first two queries have been submitted by Mr. X., a trivia expert from Parts Unknown. Mr. X. will reveal his identity next week if his questions turn out to be stumpers. (Don't blame us if they're hard. Blame him!) 1. Who played the tall blond guide in "Journey to the Center of the Earth," the 1959 fantasy with James Mason and Pat Boone? What was the name of his pet duck? 2. What famous 1940s musician started the Mambo craze? 3. Name the three lawyers for the John Singer estate. |