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Show The Park Record C-4 PARK CITY FILM SERIES.ORG FEATURE FILM: FREE SCREENING: THE SALESMAN TOMORROW RATED PG-13 APR APR APR CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM Not Rated 14 Fri 8pm APR 13 Thr 7pm is free. 15 Sat 8pm Admission Part of the Reel Community Series with support 16 Sun 6pm from Promontory Foundation and Park City APR 12-14 @ 3pm -Free Films for the Family! Community Foundation. JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE, PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 Get your smile back with Dental Implants Come in today for a free, no obligation, x-ray and implant exam. Dr. CoDy CalDerwooD 1600 Snow Creek Dr. #a 435-649-4343 www.ParkCityDentistry.com See a photo you like in The Park Record? Photos taken by The Park Record are available for purchase in a wide variety of sizes and printing options at parkrecordphoto.smugmug.com Wed/Thurs/Fri, April 12-14, 2017 Continued From C-1 Dance is a call for unity rest of the work on Repertory Dance Theatre. “In addition, we did a video interview with Zvi where he talked about hi artistic life, growing up in a Kibbutz and joining the Israeli Army,” Smith said. “He also talked about how the Arab culture, which surrounded Israel, really influenced him in terms of music, dance, food and all of the cultural elements.” Gotheiner wanted to praise, admire and acknowledge this rich culture, Smith said. “This is timely because lately, when most people think of the Arab culture, they conjure up images of people raising their fists and fighting for territories,” she said. The 10-minute video precedes the work and sets the tone for the evening. “Zvi started creating this work by gathering folk-dance videos on YouTube,” Smith said. “He and his dancers then started to learn the different variations to set the basis of the vocabulary.” Gotheiner and his dancers began to develop movement portraits of people who are experiencing cultural conflicts. “The work does show a sense of frustration and desperation in some of the sections, but hopefully, the dance will become a work that is about the ability for all of us to come together and feel empathy for one another,” she said. “It ultimately asks if we can get beyond the conflicts and form a large community that binds us together.” Creating a sense of togetherness is something Smith has done with the Repertory Dance Theatre since its foundation in 1966. “I like to look at art as something that has the ability to heal when it opens up avenues of understanding so people can have a real personal experience in the theatre,” she said. “I think ‘Dabke’ is one of these works, because I believe the audience can enter the piece in different levels.” One level is the movement. The L.A. Times crossword puzzle NATHAN SWEET “Dabke” was inspired by an Arab folk dance that is native to the Levant countries and is performed in Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Syria, Palestine, Hatay and Northern Saudi Arabia. Choreographer Zvi Gotheiner was surrounded by the culture growing up in Israel. “It’s so luscious,” she said. “When people dance a dabke, they get into a mesmerized state of celebration, and this work has that in it.” The other level is through the music. “[Composer} Scott Killian, who has worked with us many times, has taken Arab pop music and woven it through a contemporary score,” Smith said. Music is something that is close to Gotheiner’s heart. “Before he began dancing, Zvi was a gifted violinist,” Smith said. He performed with the Young Kibbutzim Orchestra, where he attained the rank of soloist and Concertmaster at age 15. Gotheiner began dancing when he was 17. “He started after he saw the Batsheva Dance Company,” Smith said. “That changed his life and he started choreographing right away.” Smith said Gotheiner used his musical training as a way to set up his works. “He looked at musical composition as a way to build a dance,” she said. “From the early 1990s to now, Zvi has opened up and developed all kinds of ways to increase his movement vocabulary. He now includes the dancers in the creative process. He is able to bring dancers to an understanding of the deep meaning the movement has for potential of communication.” Repertory Dance Theatre will perform at 8 p.m. Friday, April 14, and Saturday, April 15, at the Egyptian Theatre, 328 Main St. Tickets range from $19 to $29. Tickets can be purchased by visiting www. parkcityshows.com. “SPOUT NONSENSE” By GAIL GRABOWSKI ACROSS 1 Quaker in the wind 6 Little bite 11 “House” actor Omar 15 Full house, e.g. 19 Pond flower 20 Navel type 21 Selectively remove 22 Butterlike topping 23 Doris during a workout? 25 Maker of Regenerist skin care products 26 ’Vette roof option 27 Claims 28 Greenwich Village sch. 29 Director Oliver working on pizza dough? 32 Cymbals with a pedal 34 Tire for emergencies 36 Perfect Sleepers, e.g. 37 Yoga class greeting 39 Place for a bud? 41 Deepest, as feelings 44 Tiny bit 46 Many a pizza slice 48 Subj. for Janet Yellen 51 Diaper cream additive 52 Labor day deliveries 54 Quisling’s crime 57 1688 coffeehouse founder Edward better known in the insurance world 58 Cause of some lines 59 Comical Samantha busy stitching? 61 Look for 62 Masterful move 64 Ski resort sight 65 Avoid, as an issue 68 Some battered rings 70 Mumbai mister 71 Baker’s gluten-free choice 73 JFK : New York :: __ : Chicago 74 Singer Laine 76 Troubles 77 Lara’s love 78 Nicolas taking a swing? 80 Big 112-Down 81 Painter of dancers 84 Lacking variety 85 Silkscreen aid 87 Computer with a Magic Keyboard 88 Disc golf obstacle 89 Dürer, e.g. 91 They, in Cognac 92 One typing a’s and z’s 94 Used a bench, say 97 Certain triathlete 99 French sponge cake 102 Linguine sauce 104 Squalid 106 Singer Al making a strike? 109 Spanish pronoun 111 Provide a bank floor plan for, say 113 Eurasian border river 114 Alpha __ 115 Nathan at quarterback? 118 Inconsequential 119 Exiled Roman poet 120 Clashing with, with “of” 121 Sheds Mail or Home delivery within Summit County 1 Year $48 2 Year $90 Mail delivery outside of Summit County 1 Year $72 2 Year $130 Home delivery within Salt Lake, Utah, Davis, Wasatch Counties 1 Year $72 2 Year $130 Call us today and ask for Lacy 435-649-9014 122 123 124 125 Florist’s creation State of disarray “Spider-Man” actress Shoelace protector DOWN 1 Accomplishments 2 2002 skating gold medalist Hughes 3 Sally having fun? 4 Cuthbert of “24” 5 Editor Talese with her own Doubleday imprint 6 Stylish 7 Amen Corner golf course, familiarly 8 Benchmark: Abbr. 9 Pageant sparkler 10 Pooh’s mopey pal 11 “Silent Spring” subj. 12 Canines with corded coats 13 Flier 14 Con man’s expression 15 Spicy steamed Mexican food 16 “He Was Despised,” in Handel’s “Messiah” 17 Strip gas 18 Suss (out) 24 In one piece 30 Grassy expanse 31 Amtrak stop: Abbr. 33 “__ Schoolchildren”: Tracy Kidder book 35 Unreleased 38 Google Maps lines: Abbr. 40 Varnish component 42 Tofurky protein source 43 Newsman Koppel 44 Debacle 45 Engaged 47 Hexa- halved 49 Express sympathy (with) 50 Needing to be saved? 53 Ottawa-born songwriter Paul 55 “View of Toledo” painter 56 Yours, in Cognac 57 Romaine bit 59 Tonic ingredient 60 Layered lunches 62 Golf course rental 63 Soapbox user 65 Lucille on a trampoline? 66 Pass good in 28 countries 67 Tailgating fixtures 69 Degs. for writers 70 Something flashed by a catcher 72 The Eagles’ “__ Eyes” 75 76 78 79 80 81 82 83 85 86 88 90 93 95 96 98 100 101 103 105 106 107 108 110 112 116 117 Prayer supports Following remark? Place for shady transactions Had Subway fare Physics Nobelist of 1938 Tango move London’s Virgin __ Records Turf disputes “Billions” network, briefly Muscle-bone connector “16 and Pregnant” spin-off King known for his wealth “Lord, is __?”: Matthew Big primate One of 18 on a disc golf course Like sundials __ nectar: sugar substitute Wrinkly fruits Major snag Broadway matchmaker Speed deterrent Sister brand of Nilla Wine list heading Bank deposit See 80-Across Scott Eastwood, to Clint “Today” alternative, for short SUDOKU |