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Show C-4 The Park Record PARK CITY FILM SERIES.ORG CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM SPEAK UP THE POST MAR 23 MAR 24 MAR 25 Fri Sat Sun Rated PG-13 8pm 8pm 6pm (A Voix Haute:La Force de la Parole) Not Rated MAR 22 Underwritten by Julie Hopkins, KW Real Estate Thurs 7pm Post-film panel. Presented in partnership with YouthSpeak and Park City Toastmasters. Admission is free. JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE, PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 Dancers ready for production teem. “I tend to look down a lot when I walk around the school, and my dance teachers are always reminding me to look up and show people my face,” she said. “By doing so, I have learned to look people in eye because of that.” Wakefield said dance also improves her ability to make friends. “You meet so many different types of people, and it’s a lot easier to get to know someone when you’re at a place like Virginia Tanner because of all the people who are also different ages,” she said. Wakefield got into dance because her mom signed her up for classes. “I didn’t really fall in love with dance until the middle of last year,” Wakefield said. “That’s when I decided to put more focus on it and started working harder.” Aglaure enjoys expressing herself Isabelle Aglaure’s segment in “The Magic Lake” takes place shortly after Chaska heads out on her mission. She dances as part of a pack of pumas who fight Chaska as she is making her way through the forest. “When Chaska is making her way through the forest, she sees a hungry pack of pumas and we fight,” Aglaure said. The 15-year-old said being a puma is a challenge because of the physicality of the role. “Since they are cats, there is a lot of movements you have to do with your back,” she said. “The pumas also play with each other a lot, so there is a lot of jumping on each other. It’s very physical and intense.” The intensity of the role is also one of the reasons why Aglaure likes her role. “I like how the dancing feels in the moment, because you feel a sense of accomplishment when you finish,” she said. “It’s fun to dance with slow, sinister movements.” Like Wakefield, Aglaure enjoys expressing her emotions The L.A. Times crossword puzzle “WORD FOR WORDS” By C.C. BURNIKEL ACROSS 1 Did a triathlon leg 6 Pepper spray alternative 10 At full speed 15 Slightly 19 Taste enhanced by shrimp paste 20 Otherworldly glow 21 Multi-colored spring bloomer 22 Bugs or Porky 23 Pet Airways security device? 25 Narrative from novelist Levin? 27 MIT, for one 28 Govt. investment 29 Grand Mosque locale 30 Luxury hotel chain 31 Essence 33 Pyrex sister brand 35 It precedes Flames’ home games 37 The Yankees during the Babe Ruth era? 40 True 43 Chicago Blackhawks’ broadcaster 44 Give 45 Wine glass-making component? 50 “Your point being?” 51 Betel nut tree 53 Church reading 54 Memorable Louis 55 A/C measures 57 Agenda 59 Dress policy at some fancy restaurants 62 Enzyme ending 64 Shot at a bar 65 Big name in anti-itch cream 66 Slow-cooked dishes 69 Alley designation? 72 “The Highwayman” poet 73 “Don’t sweat it” 75 “Of course!” 76 __ Paese cheese 77 Like some celestial paths 78 Isn’t being used 81 Dust jacket ID 85 City bus path: Abbr. 86 Expose 88 Where __ 89 Green Day drummer __ Cool 90 Seminar on Hughes’ poetry? 94 “Amen to that!” 97 Inseparable 98 Utterly lost 99 Hockey contract negotiator? 100 Solo performance 103 Actor Cumming 105 Lat. and Ukr., formerly 106 SpaceX CEO Musk 107 Put a damper on 110 Memorize things, maybe 112 Part of U.S. 115 Association of gamblers? 117 Injury treatment for a top pitcher? 119 Not worth __ 120 Resort rental 121 Apple Watch assistant 122 Exposed 123 Body imperfection 124 Dover souls 125 Warmhearted 126 Plot spoilers? Wed/Thurs/Fri, March 21-23, 2018 Continued from C-1 PHOTO BY CAMILLE AGLAURE Isabelle Aglaure, a Park City High School sophomore, dances as one of the pumas in a pack that fights with the heroine of the Children’s Dance Theatre’s “The Magic Lake” production. through dance. “You can translate everything you experience into movement,” she said. “If you’re having a bad day, you can create a dark dance and things like that.” She also enjoys the friends she has made during the years she has been with the Virginia Tanner Creative Dance program. “Tanner Dance is like a family, and there is a Big Sisters program where the older dancers spend a whole week with one of the younger dancers,” she said. Both dancers are grateful for support Aglaure and Wakefield said they wouldn’t have been able to dance in the performance if it weren’t for their parents’ support. Their mothers -- Tamara Aglaure and Paige Wakefield -- said sometimes getting their daughters to rehearsals three times a week in Salt Lake City is difficult, but the final results are worth the sacrifices. “It is a pain to drive down there, especially in the winter, but when we get down there, you feel this nurturing, amazing and unique environment for the kids,” Paige Wakefield said. “It’s so hard being a teenager, and to have her in that nurturing environment for three nights a week is worth it.” Tamara Aglaure agreed. “There are many options for dance, and many of them focus on competition and don’t highlight the beauty of creativity,” she Continued from C-2 Koyczan will speak Saturday overcome the trolls. “Life isn’t just one flower,” he said. “There is a whole bouquet here.” Koyczan’s writings led him to other expressive arts. His forays into music include his band -- the Short Story Long -- who put together an animated anti-bullying video, “To This Day,” which has been viewed more than 22 million times on YouTube since it was uploaded in 2013. He has collaborated with Cayne McKenzie of the band We Are the City and musician Hannah Epperson on performances that involve poetry and music. Koyczan is also starting a series of web videos, and he worked with filmmaker Melanie Wood on a documentary called “Shut Up and Say Something,” which was screened at the Van- SUDOKU DOWN 1 Tampa NFLers 2 Apple since 1998 3 Nepal Airlines headquarters 4 First-responder letters 5 Call the shots 6 Hand, to Jorge 7 Uncle Henry’s wife 8 Wading spot 9 Corn holder 10 Cap-__: from head to toe 11 Jacobs of fashion 12 Jungle crusher 13 Genesis father of twins 14 1785-’90 U.S. capital 15 Ferocious Flea foe 16 Like hardcovers 17 Ancient neighbor of Lydia 18 Big bang producer 24 Come before 26 Dance in a line 29 Beauty mark 32 And so on: Abbr. 34 Language of Andorra 36 “It’ll be fun!” 37 Striker’s bane 38 39 41 42 45 46 47 48 49 52 56 58 60 61 63 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 74 76 Habit Flying start? Little devils Daring exploit Reject with contempt Forearm-related Slangy rejection Like critters counted at night City in southern France One of the Van Halens 2005 horror sequel “If __”: “So be it” Hamlet, for one Alfalfa sprouts concern USMC rank West Yorkshire’s largest city Show contempt Sacher dessert Receded Risotto relative Show with numbers Shiny, in adspeak January birthstone Home to the Congressional Country Club 78 Variety 79 “__ of My Soul”: Isabel Allende novel 80 Not of the cloth 82 Took a course under duress? 83 __ Mawr College 84 In order 87 “Madam Secretary” star 91 Almond Joy ingredient 92 Cat-__-tails 93 Close 95 “Hold your horses” 96 Cabinet dept. 99 Apprentice 100 Creator of tasty cups 101 John of rock 102 Ugly marketing battle 104 Computer acronym 108 Home run pace 109 Scrapes (out) 111 eBay competitor 113 Like fine cheese 114 Doc’s orders 115 Unenviable 116 Doing the job, briefly 117 “Don’t __ me!” 118 Deserving said. “Children’s Dance Theatre focuses on the creativity.” Production expands dancers’ horizons Mary Ann Lee, artistic director of Virginia Tanner Creative Dance and Children’s Dance Theatre, said the production company worked hard to make the story authentic to the Incan and Peruvian culture. “Our company composer Tristan Moore found the story and brought us a book full of very old traditional folk tales,” Lee said. “When we started doing some research, we saw the tale told in other books, so we put together our story from several different iterations.” Lee said she tasked Virginia Tanner teachers, who choreographed the different segments, to do more research on Incan culture. “This production has been fantastic for us because we have learned so much about the culture and the beliefs of the Inca and Peruvian people,” Lee said. “’The Magic Lake’ is a heart-warming story and what’s been cool for us is tying us back to the culture.” The Children’s Dance Theatre will present “The Magic Lake” at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, March 23, and 2 p.m. on Saturday, March 24, at the Capitol Theatre, 50 W. 200 South in Salt Lake City. Tickets are available by calling 801355-2787 or by visiting www. arttix.org. couver Film Festival last year and is still touring other festivals. The film takes a look behind the scenes in Koyczan’s life and examines his reconnection with his father who he had not seen since he was a child, he said. “As an artist, I’m interested in music and that’s why I have a band,” Koyczan said. “I’m interested in film; that’s why I’m working on a web series and did a documentary.” Even with all of his explorations, the spoken word is his first love. “Spoken word is malleable art,” he said. “It crosses different spectrums, and I’ve come to understand that because I’m not just getting invited to poetry, writers or spoken-word festivals. I’m getting invited to jazz festivals, [and] comedy festivals. I feel very fortunate that I’m able to do it and that people get out of it as much as they do.” The Park City Institute will present award-winning slam poet and TEDx presenter Shane Koyczan at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 24, 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. |