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CLASSICAL
NOTES

About
4•1

The Chamber
Music Society of
Detroit presents
pianist Paul Barnes,
longtime cham-
pion of minimalist
composer Philip
Glass and other American composers,
in An Evening of Detroit Premieres at
8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 21, in the Music Box
at the Max M. Fisher Music Center in
Detroit. The informal concert includes
cabaret-style seating, a cash bar and com-
plimentary snacks. $30 general admis-
sion/$15 students. 248-855-6070;
chambermusicdetroit.org.
At 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 22, the Berman
Center for the Performing Arts in West
Bloomfield presents Anastasia Rizikov:
Solo Piano Concerto. The 15-year-old
Toronto-born prodigy practices on a baby
grand piano provided to her by the Glenn
Gould Foundation (Gould was often
mistaken for being Jewish but was in fact
Presbyterian). $15-$20. (248) 661-1900;
theberman.org.

ON THE STAGE

WSU's Hilberry Theatre stages All in
the Timing eight comedic one-act plays
(including Philip Glass Buys a Loaf of
Bread) by David Ives, directed by David
Magidson, to be performed in repertory
Nov. 21-Jan. 15. $10-$30. Show times and
tickets: (313) 577-2972; hilberry.com .
Neil Berg's musical revue of Broadway's
most celebrated shows, 100 Years of
Broadway, returns to Detroit with a new
cast of five Broadway stars accompanied
by an all-star New York band, at 3 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 23, at the Fox Theatre.
$19.50-$44.50. (800) 745-3000;
olympiaentertianment.com.

DANCE FEVER

You don't have to celebrate Christmas to
adore the annual holiday tradition of The
Nutcracker. BalletMet Columbus' produc-
tion returns to the Detroit Opera House,
with a cast of more than 100 professional
company dancers and local children, at
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday,
and 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 28-30. $25-
$125. (313) 237-7464; michiganopera.org.

THE BIG SCREEN

Martin Scorese Presents Masterpieces of
Polish Cinema — a four-day, nine-film
event featuring works from Poland's most
celebrated filmmakers — Friday-Sunday,
Nov. 27-29, and Thursday, Dec. 18, at
the Detroit Film Theatre in the Detroit
Institute of Arts. These new digital res-
torations, with newly translated English

PROVIDE

subtitles, were selected from
a 21-film series created by
Scorcese's Film Foundation;
additional films in the series
will be screened at the DFT
in 2015. For details, a sched-
ule and tickets, go to dia.
org/dft.

COMPASSIONATE
IN-HOME CARE

FOR THOSE

are have

FAMILY FUN

Pinkalicious: The Musical, based on the
storybook about a little girl who can't stop
eating pink cupcakes, comes to Detroit's
City Theatre Friday-Sunday, Nov. 21-23.
Performance times: 6:30 p.m. Friday; 11
a.m., 2 and 5 p.m. Saturday; 11 a.m. and 2
p.m. Sunday. $22. (800) 745-3000;
olympiaentertainment.com.
WSU's Bonstelle Theatre in Detroit
mounts a production of Peter Pan, writ-
ten by J.M. Barrie and adapted by Janet
Allard, at 7 p.m. Friday, 2 and 7 p.m.
Saturday, and 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 21-23.
$15-$20. (313) 577-2960; bonstelle.com .
Get ready for Thanksgiving with some
annual Detroit traditions. America's
Thanksgiving Parade, with Grand
Marshals Charlie White and Meryl
Davis, begins at 9 a.m. Thanksgiving
Day at Kirby and Woodward Avenue; the
Thanksgiving Day Turkey Trot Run, with
three races (10k, 5k and 1 mile), starts at
7:30 a.m.(no race-day registration); and
Hob Nobble Gobble, the premier fund-
raiser for the parade, with carnival games
and rides, performances and more, takes
place Friday, Nov. 21, at Ford Field. For
details, and tickets where needed, go to
theparade.org.

Let your loved ones stay happy and
independent in their OWN HOME.

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Fountain of Care utilizes a
person and family-centered
care model which is
recommended to improve
the lives of seniors in a
caring, in-home setting.

THE ART SCENE

• Increase quality of life.

The Jewish Community Center in Oak
Park (not West Bloomfield) hosts the Bar
Kochva Israeli Art Expo from 10 a.m. 8
p.m. Sunday-Tuesday, Nov. 23-25. More
than 2,000 works of art, each one-of-a-
kind and made in Israel, will be available
for purchase. Proceeds help support
programming at the JCC. (248) 967-4030;
jccdet.org.
Cranbrook Art Museum launches
three new exhibits on Sunday, Nov.
23: The Cranbrook Hall of Wonders:

• Gain peace of mind
for the future.

--

c

il

-

Artworks, Objects and Natural
Curiosities, inspired by 16th-century
"cabinets of curiosities"; Theater of
the Mind, focusing on the imagination
of the audience, with light and sound
installations accompanying artworks;
and Iris Eichenberg: Bend a solo exhi-
bition by the contemporary jewelry art-
ist. Details: cranbrook.edu.
Sociologist/author Sarah Thornton
speaks on Are Artists 21st-Century
Entrepreneurs?" at 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov.
23, at the DIA. Free to the public with res-
ervations: (313) 833-4005; dia.org .

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November 20 • 2014

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