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Show gnninigf mi Looking for something different to do this weekcnl? Here are a few suggestions, compiled by Park Record entertainment critic Pick Brough. Unless otherwise noted, events listed below will take place in Salt Lake City. . x t - ' MOVIES The United States Film Festival concludes Jan. 24-27 at Park City with films from foreign and American independents, premieres and competition winners. The Salt Lake Public Library nresents "One Sinus thp Othpr Doesn't" on Jan. 24 at 7 p.m. Director Agnes Varda follows two young women friends over 14 years as each struggles to control her destiny in the "Feminine Touch-French Style" series. Tickets are $2.50 for each screening. The library is at 209 East 500 South. Also, the library concludes its series with Margaret Rutherford as sleuth Miss Marple. In "Murder Ahoy," as you might guess, she investigates a killing on a steamship. It plays Jan. 25 at 2 p.m. (for 25 cents) and 7 p.m. (for 50 cents). - , At the Blue Mouse: the Charlie Chaplin festival concludes with his sentimental classic, "The Kid"; "The Best of the Warner Brothers Cartoons" features Bugs, Elmer and Daffy as "Duck Dodgers in the 24th Centurv" : "The Mission" bv exiled Iranian director Parviz Sawad. ;is about an assassin who targets an ex-colonel of the Shah in New York but instead saves him from being mugged; and in Altman's "Secret Honor" Nixon (Phillip Baker Hall) raves that he saved us from a worse fate than Watergate. The Mouse is at 260 East 100 South. The Utah Media Center concludes two comedy series. In "Room Service" the Marx Brothers plot to stay in their unpaid-for hotel room until they can premiere their hit play. The movie doesn't match the anarchy of their classics, but watch for appearances by Lucille Ball and Ann Miller. It plays Friday, Jan. 25 ( 7:30 p.m.), Jan. 26 (5:30 and 9:30) and 27 (7:30.) In "Live at the Hollywood Bowl" the Monty Python troupe stages a-funnv a-funnv energetic show, including such classics as the Nauseating Candv Sketch, the Dead Parrot, and (of course) the Lumberjack song. It plays Jan. 25 (9:30p.m.), 26 (7:30) and 27 ( 5:30 and 9;30.) All films are shown in the auditorium of the Salt Lake Art Center, 20 I South West Temple. General admission is $2.50, $3.50 for the double feature. For further information call 534-1158. MUSIC The Utah Opera Company presents "II Trovatore" at the Capitol Theatre (50 West Second South) on Jan. 24, 26, 28 and 30. Tickets are available at the box office, Datatix outlets, ZCMI stores and the Salt Palace. Showtime is 8 p.m. Folk pianist Steven Halpern is in concert at the U. of Utah's Kingsbury Hall on Jan. 25 at 8 p.m. Reserved-seat tickets are $10. He will also conduct "Sound Health," a The Zephyr, at 301 South West Temple, presents Jack Mack and the Heart Attack (Jan. 24-26) and Doc Watson (Jan. 30.) 1 The University of Utah Brass Choir, formerly the Brass Ensemble, stages its annual winter concert on Tuesday, Jan. 29 at 8 p.m. The free concert takes place in Gardner Hall 200, on the U. of U. campus. THEATRE Me?t Elwood P. Dowd and his giant rabbit friend "Harvey" at the Pioneer Memorial Theatre on the U. of U. campus. The production plays nightly, except Sundays, through Jan. 23 at 8 p.m. ETCETEEA The Kimball Art Center hosts exhibits by watercolorist Dawna Barton, printmaker Brooke Morrison, Morri-son, sculptor Clayton Robbins and photographer Sandria Miller. The exhibit runs through Jan. 31. An "Evening with the Arts" Cm Six will take place on Jan. 24 at 6 p.m. at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts on the U. of Utah campus. Dinner is followed by a program of dance, theater and music. Seating is limited but open to the general public. The event is sponsored by Utah Citizens for the. Arts. The Utah Jazz hits the hoops against Cleveland on Jan. 24, Los Angeles two days later and Denver on Jan. 28. The Eagles play Muskegon on Jan. 25 and Milwaukee on Jan. 30. |