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Show C-4 The Park Record CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM PARK CITY FILM.ORG WILLAM CHRISTENSEN’S THE NUTCRACKER: A 75TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Rated PG-13 DEC 13 DEC 14 DEC 15 Park City gets a chance to explore ‘Empires of Ice’ Friday event will open the 2019-20 Main Stage season HARRIET Fri 8pm Sat 8pm Sun 6pm Not Rated DEC 12 Thurs 7pm Post-film Q&A and book signing with Ballet West dancers and Ballet West Artistic Director Adam Sklute. Part of the Made in Utah Film Series. Admission is free. Underwritten by Gardner Group Park City JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 Get your subscription to The Park Record! Mail or Home delivery within Summit County (Includes a free Sunday Tribune and e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $56 2 Years $98 Mail delivery outside of Summit County (Includes a free e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $80 Wed/Thurs/Fri, December 11-13, 2019 Submitted by Park City Instutute National Geographic Live, National Geographic’s touring speaker series, and Park City Institute are proud to announce “Coral Kingdoms and Empires of Ice” with David Doubilet and Jennifer Hayes, a team of National Geographic underwater photographers that will take place at 7:30 p.m., on Saturday, Dec. 14, at the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Center in Park City. “We are excited to present National Geographic Live ‘Coral Kingdoms and Empires of Ice,’ with David Doubilet and Jennifer Hayes,” said PCI Executive Director, Teri Orr. “We are looking forward to them sharing their in-depth knowledge of the ocean, and their commitment to conservation, with our audience.” Doubilet has a long and intimate vision into the sea. He began snorkeling at age eight at summer camp in the Adiron- dack and by age 12 he was making pictures underwater using a Brownie Hawkeye camera stuffed into a rubber bag. He has long since mastered the techniques of working with water and light to become one of the world’s most celebrated underwater photographers and a contributing photographer for National Geographic magazine, where he has published nearly 70 stories since his first assignment in 1971. Doubilet has spent five decades under the surface in the far corners of the world from interior Africa, remote tropical coral reefs, rich temperate seas and recent projects in the northern and southern ice. His personal challenge is to create a visual voice for the world’s oceans and to connect people to the incredible beauty and silent devastation happening within the invisible world below. Hayes is an aquatic biologist and photojournalist specializing in natural history and marine environments. She has authored and edited numerous articles on marine environments, and her images have appeared in books, advertising campaigns and publications such as National Geographic, Sports Illustrated, Sport Diver, DIVE Magazine, Diver, National Geographic Live: “Choral Kingdoms and Empires of Ice” When: 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 13 Where: Eccles Center for the Performing Arts, 1750 Kearns Blvd. Cost: $29-$39 Web: parkcityinstitute.org People, Alert Diver and Ocean Geographic. She is co-author and photographer for “Face to Face with Sharks” by National Geographic Books and an honorary editor for Ocean Geographic magazine. Hayes and Doubilet collaborate as a photographic team above and below water on project development, story production, feature articles and books. National Geographic assign-D ments have taken them aroundF the globe from Africa’s Okavango Delta, through tropical and temperate seas, and to the poles. Recent projects have found them in the remote corners of the Great Barrier Reef, under oil and gas rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, swimming among congregations of 500-pound goliath grouper, and submerged in the ice with harp seal mothers and pups. 2 Years $138 Home Delivery within Salt Lake, Utah, Davis, Wasatch Counties (Includes a free e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $80 2 Years $138 Call us today and ask for Lacy 435.649.9014 COURTESY OF THE EGYPTIAN THEATRE The L.A. Times crossword puzzle “INITIAL OFFERINGS” By DAVID KWONG Across 1 Extra NHL periods 4 Official order 9 Prefix suggesting savings 14 Weightlifting units 18 Like a nonexistent chance 19 Provides an excuse 20 Queen Amidala’s “Star Wars” home 21 Rink move 22 Christmas buy 23 When the Commodore 64 computer was released 26 Clean Air Act org. 27 Eye drop 28 Looks for prints 29 Driveway hoops game 30 World capital since 1931 34 Bart Simpson’s grandma 35 One might be slipped 36 California’s Santa __ River 37 Character who said about her father, “Yet he hath ever but slenderly known himself” 40 Amigo of Fidel 43 Doctrines 47 Tennis great 50 Hood 52 1982 Physical Tour singer 57 Corrida participant 58 Bug 59 Novel makeup 60 Prey for a Hauskatze 61 Starchy roots 62 Card game shout 63 “Cotton Candy” jazzman 64 Defeat 65 Low-pH stuff 67 “Excuse me ... ” 74 Son of Seth 75 “Gigi” playwright 76 Assures, as a win 77 Cal Poly campus site, initially 78 Zoo features 81 “Beloved” novelist Morrison 82 Lab dish eponym 83 Give the chance to 84 Word on a bill 85 What a shutout lowers 89 Place to get a lift 91 Aspiring atty.’s exam 92 Sushi roll wrap 93 Camera move 94 Ahead 96 Personal quirk 98 Org. giving G’s and R’s 102 Declines 104 Capital near Siena College 110 Stiller’s partner 112 Lucas droid 114 Quick reminder 115 Hindu title 116 Highest grossing movie of 1980, with “The” 120 X, at times 121 Cut out 122 Attach with twine 123 Unsettling looks 124 Bread grain 125 Living __ 126 Professional gps. 127 One of the vitals 128 With 87-Down, fairly Down 1 Insult 2 National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall site 3 Soda shop supply One of the highlights of the annual Park City Holiday Spectacular is the audience sing-alongs led by various members of the local artistic community. Continued from C-1 Local talent hits the stage 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 24 25 31 32 33 34 38 39 41 Architect Saarinen Alice’s cat Andorra’s region Op. __ Half a fly Ho-hum feeling Type of salad Parting words? Quaffs with punch Massage reaction Ersatz silk Tool for removing broken screws Seats arranged in rows Shrub with a purple fruit Chip in a pot Baseball Hall of Famer Roush Beachwear for the immodest Lowest multiple of CLI that fits in this space Thunderstruck Creator of the GOP elephant “Death in Venice” author Freudian topics “Dilbert” cry Subway fare? 42 God with a quiver 44 Drawing tools 45 First quarterback to exceed 5,000 passing yards in a season 46 Derisive sounds 48 Superfamily including gibbons 49 Makes into law 51 German town 52 “Movin’ __”: ’70s-’80s sitcom theme song 53 “Smallville” character 54 Horror film helper 55 O.T. queen 56 Artful dodge 61 More under the influence 64 Soccer great Messi 65 Inverse trig function 66 Big name in tequila 68 Thinks 69 SpaceX CEO Musk 70 Nothing, in Nantes 71 Madonna’s “La __ Bonita” 72 Cassini of fashion 73 Reference book reference 78 Verge 79 “Lonely Boy” singer 80 Testing subject 81 Palm smartphone 82 World leader who’s a judo black belt 85 Long times 86 Pertinent 87 See 128-Across 88 Frost-covered 90 Kind of pneumonia 95 Benefactor 97 One of two in a crash 99 Recovery place 100 Overdue debt more commonly pluralized 101 Quite a bit like 103 Shiny, in product names 105 Butcher shop cuts 106 __ choy 107 Is closer to reaching 108 Run the show 109 Bowl-shaped pans 110 “I’m ready to come in now” 111 John’s first partner on American TV’s “The Avengers” 112 Clearance item caveat 113 Highways: Abbr. 117 Bus sched. letters 118 FRA neighbor, to the IOC 119 Onetime Beatle Sutcliffe would be fun for the audience to have me also lead the singalongs.” Hansen scheduled six singalongs each night. “The sing-alongs are audience favorites, and we picked songs that were easier for everyone to sing,” she said. Hansen and Cook held auditions for the Park City Holiday Spectacular on Nov. 13, and some of the talent submitted videos, Hansen said. “The artists are all very professional, and they range in age from 2 to 70,” she said. “While we have some of the same people who are in the show every year, we do get a lot of new people. Many of these new people have never performed on our stage before, which is exciting.” While Hansen organizes the spectacular, she said Cook is the “maestro” who takes on the lion’s share of the work. “She does the preparation and rehearses everyone to make sure they are showready,” Hansen said. “Then she and I get together with the cast during tech rehearsals and then it’s showtime.” In addition to the performances and singalongs, Santa will make a stop to hand out candy canes and visit with the kids after the performance, Hansen said. “This year we were able to get the real Santa,” she said. “When I found him, I told him I needed to put a contract together so he could get paid. I asked him who I should write the check out to,he said his legal name was Santa Claus, and I said, ‘Looks like I hired the right one this year.’” The Park City Holiday Spectacular is also a chance for the Egyptian Theatre’s technical crew to get creative, Hansen said. “Our video designer, Bob Melanson can create video stories that will go with the songs, and our lighting director, Peter Mayhew, can pull out all his tricks to make the stage look really festive,” Hansen said. “So this is truly a locals-only production, which is a thrill, because it’s a true Egyptian Theatre creation that has continued to be successful over the years.” |