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Show The Park Record C-4 PARK CITY FILM SERIES.ORG TONI ERDMANN FREAKY FRIDAY Rated R CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM Rated PG APR 4 Tues 9pm Admission is free! Intro by ACLU-Utah and director. Underwritten by PCMC, Vail EpicPromise and Summit Co RAP Tax JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE, PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 TUESDAY APRIL 4, 2017 Jim Santy Auditorium Park City Library PRESENTED BY: Doors open at 6:00PM, Raffle at 6:15PM, Showing starts at 6:30PM Tickets available online at: Continued From C-2 Theaters will screen ‘1984’ www. BeyondSightMovie .com/tour-dates SOME THEMATIC ELEMENTS McEuen celebrates his career rience is why he has to make every show his best. “You have to be as good as you possibly can because people have listened to your recordings or have come to see you play for years,” he said. “So, you better not have an off night in this business. Whether your sick or not, you still have to play. McEuen said his fans are the reasons he why he strives to perform the best he can. “Quite often a person will buy a ticket a month or two in advance,” he said. “These are the people who allow me not to have a job, meaning I don’t have to get up and go to work at 8 o’clock and come home at 5. I get to work for the people who are sitting in the audience, those seats. And it’s fun to make them laugh, cry and clap their hands.” McEuen always knew he wanted to do something other than sit at a desk. “I wanted to get out and travel the world and continue to build as I got older,” he said. “I like the fact that this is something that I could keep doing and continue to see where it could take me.” The idea to become a musician hit McEuen when he was 17. “I saw this group called the Dillards who played the Darling Family on the ‘Andy Griffith Show’ when I was getting ready to graduate high school,” he said. “When I saw what their music 1984 APR 1 Sat 8pm APR 1 Sat 4pm Part of the Book 2 Movies Program. APR 2 Sun 6pm Admission is FREE! Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, April 1-4, 2017 Continued From C-3 Wang said. “We came together again when the Trump administration came in to power, and it became clear that its agenda was antithetical to some of the values that arts orga- The New York Times crossword puzzle MIXED RESULTS By Tracy Gray and Jeff Chen / Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Martin Van Buren was the first president who wasn’t one 5 Get ready for a long drive 11 I.M. chuckle 14 Martial arts move 18 Vitamix competitor 20 Hoity-toity 21 Shelley’s “To the Moon,” e.g. 22 It’s between the Study and Lounge on a Clue board 23 1970s TV cartoon series, with “The” 26 World capital whose seal depicts St. Hallvard 27 Pull out 28 It might give you a shock 29 Missile Command maker 30 Scintilla 31 Filmer in a stadium 33 Noodle dish 35 Rushes on banks? 37 Medicinal plant 39 Possible subject of a French scandal 40 German article 41 “Who ____ you?” 45 1973 No. 1 hit for Jim Croce 51 Téa of “Madam Secretary” 52 Pull (in) 53 Philosopher who wrote “To be sane in a world of madmen is in itself madness” 55 It may carry a virus 56 First and last word of the Musketeers’ motto 57 Pour, as wine 60 Degree in math? 61 Wrestler’s wear 63 Claw 65 Tickles 68 Target protector, perhaps 70 Jury-rigged 72 Monastery head’s jurisdiction 75 Feudal lords 77 Practice mixology 81 Chum 82 James of NBC’s “The Blacklist” 84 One side in golf’s Ryder Cup 86 Song of mourning 87 Big, husky sorts 90 Pennsylvania’s “Gem City” 92 Director Kurosawa 93 Title creature in a 1958 #1 Sheb Wooley hit 97 Buick model 98 Planter’s aid 99 Figure-skating jump 100 It’s a wrap 102 False start? 105 Words of defiance 106 Control groups 110 Captain of the Pequod 111 Actor Reeves 113 Onetime acquisition of G.E. 116 Shipping coolant 118 Cameo, for one 119 Dystopian film of 1971 122 Rihanna album featuring “Work” 1 2 3 4 18 5 19 23 9 10 42 33 45 51 73 74 87 88 65 90 91 105 118 119 122 123 124 126 127 128 120 62 64 66 67 69 71 72 73 74 76 79 108 109 80 97 101 106 113 78 92 96 112 67 86 100 111 DOWN 1 Bowls over 2 Word both before and after “to” 3 Retriever’s retrieval, maybe 4 Little Rascals’ ring-eyed pooch 5 Big airport inits. 6 Hathaway of “The Intern” 7 Point out 8 Cabbage variety 9 Rice-Eccles Stadium player 10 Image on the back of a dollar bill 11 Lindsay of “Freaky Friday” 12 Sign of decay 13 Civil rights icon John 14 Hearty soups 15 “Idaho cakes,” in diner lingo 16 Slapstick sidekick of old comedy 17 Movie-review revelations 19 B-side of Bruce Springsteen’s “Dancing in the Dark” 24 Toll 25 Shade of gray 85 95 110 41 42 43 44 46 47 48 49 50 54 56 58 59 66 77 99 32 34 36 38 54 71 76 94 123 Juice brand whose middle letter is represented as a heart 124 Tushy 125 Biggest employer in Moline, Ill. 126 Bridge position 127 Drop-____ 128 GPS, e.g., in military lingo 129 Wild Turkey and Jim Beam 50 60 70 89 104 49 59 84 98 103 58 83 93 48 64 75 82 36 53 63 17 40 47 69 81 16 30 39 57 62 68 15 26 35 46 56 61 14 22 34 52 55 13 29 38 44 12 21 32 43 11 25 37 102 8 28 31 72 7 24 27 41 6 20 114 115 107 116 117 121 Gaggle : geese :: ____ : emus Actress Peet Big name in ice cream Rank between viscount and marquess What may be brewing Interstate hauler Zen master’s query Conundrum Shoulder muscle Lyre-plucking Muse Howard of Hollywood Delighting? Letter header Stammered syllables Delta hub, in brief European language Costume worn by Michelle Pfeiffer in “Batman Returns” Parisian palace French for “sword” Easy-to-peel fruit “Rabbit Is Rich” Pulitzer winner Hug Org. that usually meets in evenings P.D. dispatch Epstein-____ virus Military decorations featuring George Washington’s profile Welcomes 125 129 78 Jolly Roger, in “Peter Pan” 79 Indian city whose name is an anagram of some Indian music 80 Bona fide 83 ____ Bowl 85 Matches, at a table 88 “Hmm … probably not” 89 Burned rubber 91 Comic’s asset 94 South American prairie 95 Harem servants, often 96 One of the geeks on “The Big Bang Theory” 101 Former Big Apple mayor Giuliani 102 Fruit tree 103 1953 hit film set in Wyoming 104 Animal with striped legs 105 Difficult conditions for sailing 107 City with a University of Texas campus 108 “Revelations” choreographer 109 Hit pay dirt 112 “The Wealth of Nations” subj. 114 Its state song is “Yankee Doodle”: Abbr. 115 Opera highlight 117 ____ milk 120 Mauna ____ 121 Bandleader Eubanks, familiarly COURTESY OF MICHAEL J. MEDIA GROUP Showing he isn't ready to slow down any time soon, John McEuen recorded and released “Made in Brooklyn” late last year. The singer and songwriter, along with a group of friends and musicians, spent two days in an former church to record the album. did to the audience, I knew that’s what I was going to do.” After that, McEuen attended every Dillard show he could. “I went to see them so much in concert that my mother told me I should change my name to Dillard,” he said. McEuen even practiced writing his autograph. “I was a dork before I worked my way up to nerd status and started playing music,” he said with a laugh. “Then everything changed.” McEuen started with guitar, but made some adjustments so he could play the music of his favorite band. “I changed the strings and tuned it like a banjo,” he said. After playing a few years, he auditioned for a group that had been together for a month. “Les, who will play the Park City show with me, told me to come and play with his band,” McEuen said. “I had a song that I wrote for a contest and we won, so I thought I should stick with these guys for a while.” Six months later, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band released its selftitled 1967 debut album. “My goal was to get on the radio and travel the country and be a troubadour, so this has worked out wonderfully,” McEuen said. The Park City Institute will present John McEuen at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 8, at the Eccles Center for the Performing Arts, 1750 Kearns Blvd. Tickets range from $29 to $79 and can be purchased by visiting www. ecclescenter.org. nizations hold dear: freedom of speech, freedom of creative expression,” Wang said. “Certainly we have seen the zeroing out of the budget for the National Endowment of the Arts, National Endowment for the Humanities and Corporation for Public Broadcasting. As these things were coming down the pipes, what film better than ‘1984’ to show.” The April 4 screening date is significant, because that’s when Winston Smith starts writing his diary. The screening will be preceded and followed by a short presentation. “Filmmaker Michael Radford has agreed to introduce his film to audiences in participating theaters via an exclusive taped video interview and a taped post-screening conversation about the film,” Wang said. “The introduction will be approximately three minutes, and the post-screening conversation will be approximately 15 minutes in length.” In the introduction, Radford will express his views about the relevance of “1984” in today’s world. “During the post-screening conversation, Michael will recall stories about the making of the movie while discussing the ways in which Orwell's prescient dystopian tale has retained its haunting and powerful currency across continents and generations,” Wang said. She hopes the screening will engage people with the book and its ideas. “We are pleased to a part of this collective screening, a prime example of the important role that the arts play in our society and why they are worth supporting,” she said. “Films (and books) like ‘1984’ allow people to experience for a moment what life under a totalitarian government could be like and why it is so important to speak out and resist things like ‘alternative facts’ before they become normalized and we get distanced from our most basic values such as freedom of speech and respect for our fellow human beings.” The screening is also a great way to get the community together for a discussion about its values. “We live in a community that is pretty idyllic in ways,” Wang said. “But we are not immune to what’s going on at the federal level. So, we hope this film will give people a sense of what we can do to preserve those values.” The Park City Film Series will present a free screening of Michael Radford’s “1984,” rated R at 9 p.m. on Tuesday, April 4, at the Park City Library’s Jim Santy Auditorium, 1255 Park Ave. For information, visit www.parkcityfilmseries.com. |