Antiques Shows______
Antiques Shows______
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Saturdays (through mid-Dec): 39th Season Woodburyâs Famous Antiques & Flea Market, 787 Main St South (Rte 6, near Rte 64), Woodbury, 7 am-1 pm, 150± vendors each week; 203-263-2841.
Sundays (through Dec): Elephantâs Trunk Country Flea Market, Rte 7, New Milford, 7 am-2:30 pm (early buying 5:45 am, $20), adm $1; 508-896-1975.
Sundays (through fall): 8th season Clinton Village Antiques & Collectibles Flea Market, 327 East Main St/Rte 1, Clinton; 860-669-3839.
Aug 25: Madison Historical Society Antiques Fair, on the green, Rte 1/Boston Post Rd, Madison, 9 am-4 pm rain or shine, adm $5, 100 dealers, refreshments available, no pets please; 203-245-4567.
Aug 25-26: 52nd edition Papermania Plus, Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, Sat 10 am-5 pm, Sun 10 am-4 pm, adm $7 (senior citizens half price on Sun), 160 exhibitors, free appraisals Sun 11 am-2 pm; 860-563-9975, 860-529-2234.
Sept 1-2: Farmington Antiques Weekend, Farmington Polo Grounds, 152 Town Farm Rd, Farmington, Sat 8 am-5 pm, Sun 10 am-5 pm, adm Sat $10 (good for both days), Sun $5, approx 400 dealers outdoors & under tents; 317-598-0019.
Art Exhibits, Museums Historic Places__ _____
Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, 258 Main St, Ridgefield. Hours: Tues-Sun 12-5 pm. Call 203-438-4519.
Through Sept 3: âNeil Jenney: North America,â first museum showing of works by Mr Jenney since his presentation at Whitney in 1994 introduces diverse body of work by one of the most intriguing artist of our time, focusing on landscape imagery of North America as observed & interpreted by the artist, w/ works paintings from âgood paintingsâ of early 1970s to new work making debut at Aldrich.
Through Sept 3: âMary Judge: Studies in Segmented Form,â new installation focuses on relationship between large-scale cast concrete sculpture in museumâs inner courtyard & a spolvero (âdustingâ in Italian) wall drwing that will fill wall of adjacent corridor gallery.
Through Sept 3: âArturo Herrera: Castles, Dwarfs & Happychaps,â works created through Renaissance technique of pouncing have transferred designs on paper to gallery walls creating âa complex drawing of knotted dwarfs, complete w/ pick axes & gemstones, composed of dots of sev colors.â
The Barnum Museum, 820 Main St, Bridgeport. Hours: Tues-Sat 10 am-4:30 pm, Sun 12-4:30 pm.
Call 203-331-1104.
Through Aug 30: âOil Drum Art â a juried exhibition,â collection of work created by CT artists using 55-gal oil drums as juried by art professor, historian & author Sid Wertham & sculptor Matthias Elfen; Aug 30, closing reception, 5-8 pm, special guests will incl Polly Brody (At the Flowerâs Lip, The Burning Bush & Other Nations) & other members of CT Poetry Society doing readings from their works.
Permanent exhibition: âCome One Come All: The Barnum Festival,â exhibit highlighting the history & significance of the festival as an event & an organization in constant operation since 1949 incl ballgowns, portraits of past Ringmasters, pins, posters & props, photos & other paraphernalia to reflect upon as symbols of community spirit & historical significance the festival has given to city of Bridgeport. âGrand Adventure: A Celebration of the American Spirit in Bridgeport,â permanent exhibit on museumâs 2nd floor provides in-depth exploration of Bridgeportâs 19th Century industrialization & urbanization w/ emphasis on P.T. Barnumâs role in the cityâs growth; âP.T. Barnum: Bethel To Broadway To Bridgeport,â artifacts incl reproduction of Barnumâs Fejee Mermaid, souvenir pc of cake from Tom Thumbâs 1863 wedding & personal items from Barnum family; re-creation of library from Barnumâs first Bridgeport mansion Iranistan; âBaby Bridgeport,â preserved 6â8â 700-lb elephant, 2nd elephant born in captivity & 1st to be preserved; re-creation of drawing room from Harral-Wheeler mansion, considered one of most outstanding examples of Gothic Revival in America, ca 1847; âP.T. Barnum Presents the âDivine Jennyâ Lind,â artifacts from American tour of opera star reveals impact of Barnum-Lind collaboration on culture & society & Barnumâs promotional talents; 1,000-sq ft 3/4-inch scale model of five ring circus hand-carved by Meriden resident William Brinley w/ more than 3,000 miniature pcs; âGeneral Tom Thumb,â original furniture, clothing & personal objects belonging to Barnumâs legendary protégé; and Pa-Ib, an Egyptian mummy documented by Egyptian priest as more than 2,500 yrs old.
Booth Library, 25 Main St/Rte 25, Newtown. Hours: Mon-Thurs 10 am-8 pm, Fri 12-5 pm, Sat 10 am-5 pm, Sun 1-5 pm. Call 426-4533.
On libraryâs main floor â Through Aug 31: âMyths, Legends & Fairy Tales: A Display of Art Quilts by the Scrapbag Quilt Artists,â collection of 10 art quilts by members of local quilt guild.
*(new show) Sept 6-28: âOn the Road: A Photographic Exhibit by Faith & Peter Vicinanza,â gallery quality digital images shot by the Newtown couple during their 3-month bicycle trek up the East Coast during 2006, also print images from past 15 years of photographic work by the couple & new images done during past 2 years; Sept 9, opening reception, 2-4 pm.
Brookfield Craft Center, 286 Whisconier Rd (Rte 25), Brookfield. Hours: Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm, Sun 12-5 pm. Call 775-4526.
Through Sept 30: âConnecticut Collects Connecticut,â handmade fine craftwork made by CT artists from several private collections.
Brookfield Museum & Historical Society, 165 Whisconier Rd (Rtes 133 & 25), Brookfield Center. Hours: Sat 12-4 pm, first Sun of month, by appt & chance. Call 740-8140.
Through Aug 26: âBrookfield and The Underground Railroad,â display of items owned by former slaves who used Underground Railroad to reach Brookfield, terms that members of RR society used to cover their work & more.
Bruce Museum of Arts & Sciences, One Museum Dr, Greenwich. Call 203-869-0376.
*(new show) Aug 25-Dec 2: âEye Candy: Two Centuries of Chocolate Advertising,â complement to âA Taste of Chocolateâ offers vintage posters & notable advertisements touting chocolate incl approx 20 examples from Wilbur Chocolate Candy Americana Museum in Penn., The International Poster Gallery of Boston & private lenders.
Through Sept 9: âFlora and Fauna: Themes and Symbols in the Decorative Arts of China,â exploration of Chinese symbolism by craftsmen celebrated for their mastery of artistic expression in the decorative arts offers textiles drawn from museumâs collection along w/ porcelain, jade, cloisonné enamel, ivory & metalwork on loan from private collections.
Through Sept 9: âFakes and Forgeries: The Art of Deception,â 60 examples of western paintings, works on paper, sculpture & decorative arts that have been recognized as imposters incl examples of rarest & more deceptive works, also examination of themes incl connoisseurship, authentication, conservation & the evolving scholarship of stylistic development.
Danbury Railway Museum, 120 White St, Danbury. Call 778-8337.
Permanent exhibitions on railroad history (museum is along old New Haven RR line & housed in former Danbury station & railyard), also original & restored rolling stock incl a New Haven RR Mack FCD railbus, Alco RS-1 diesel locomotive, fully operating turntable, etc.
Easton Public Library, 691 Morehouse Rd (at corner of Center St), Easton. Hours: Tues-Wed 10 am-8 pm, Thurs 10 am-6 pm, Sat 10 am-3 pm. Call 261-0134.
Through Sept 4: âPeter Landa: Paintings of the Far East, Scenes from China, Japan and Korean,â paintings & monotypes by Easton resident who spent more than 3 years in Far East & has intimate knowledge of people & landscapes.
Fenn Gallery of Contemporary Art, 345 Main Street/Rte 6, Woodbury. Hours: Wed-Sun 12-5 pm. Call 203-263-2821.
Through Sept 16: âAtmosphaera,â moody & compelling paintings by Karen Green Recor & landscapes w/ a focus on architectural subjects by Tyson Skross.
Good News Café & Gallery, 684 Main St/Rte 6, Woodbury. Hours: Wed-Mon 11:30 am-10 pm. Call 203-266-4663.
Through Aug 27: âDavid Eugene Bell: His Life, His Art,â special retrospective of unique abstract needlepoint creations of the late Washington (CT) artist David Eugene Bell.
Gregory James Gallery, 25 North Main St/Rte 7, Kent. Call 860-927-7133.
Through Aug 26: âRooftops and Ridgelines,â paintings by Robert Ferrucci depicting farms w/ their old structures & distance open spaces, also works by Thomas Adkins, Frank Federico, Michael Patterson & Rick Daskam.
Gunn Memorial Library & Museum, 5 Wykeham Rd, Washington Green. Hours: Thurs-Sat 10 am-4 pm, Sun 12-4 pm. Call 860-868-7756.
Through Aug 31: âCountry Chairs: From Children to Garden and Everyday Use,â eclectic collection of country chairs from museumâs collection & many private collections range from mot elemental form & handcrafted hedge chairs to elaborate workmanship of a marriage chair, curated by furniture historian, author & interior designer Florence de Dampierre.
Through Aug 31: âAbner Mitchell: Letters of a Civil War Soldier,â 49 letters sent home from Washington resident Abner Mitchell (Company B of 6th Regiment of CT Volunteers) were transcribed by 8th grade students at Shepaug Valley Middle School, led by teacher Michael Croft, students have curated collection of letters & transcriptions.
Stairwell Gallery â Through Sept 1: âUnleashed Wisdom: Portraits of Shelter Pets by Sally Andersen-Bruce,â images by the photographer who created the Neuter-Spay stamps for US Postal Service, who continued to photograph dogs & cats at shelters (partial proceeds from exhibit sales will benefit animal shelters).
Institute for American Indian Studies, 38 Curtis Rd, Washington. Call 860-868-0518.
Through Aug 31: âWeaponry,â traditional weaponry used by pre-contact North American Peoples incl bows, arrows & clubs, also recent innovations popular during âhorse culture.â
Through Aug 31: âWritten In Bone,â discover anatomical similarities between human & animal bones, basic bones that make up animal skeletons, how to tell is a bone was used as a tool or if it had disease & more, organized by IAIS volunteer Kimberly Parent (hods degree in Human Osteology & Paleopathology from University of Bradford).
Through Dec 31: âAll Across America: Adaptation, Ingenuity and Artistry,â cultural items incl pottery, beadwork, textiles & basketry illustrating the adaptation, ingenuity & creativity of North American tribes as they began to embrace new materials of European settlers incl cotton, glass, beads & metal.
Knights of Columbus Museum, 1 State St, New Haven, Wed-Sat 10 am-5 pm, Sun 11 am-5 pm. Call 203-865-0400.
Through Sept 3: âJoan of Arc: Medieval Maiden to Modern Saint,â 200+ works incl paintings, sculpture, prints, illustrated books, posters & popular art on loan from 20+ public & private collections in US & France look at the historical figure & the manner in which Joan of Arc has been characterized or portrayed.
Mattatuck Museum Art & History Center, 144 West Main St, Waterbury. Hours: Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm, Sun 12-5 pm. Call 203-753-0381.
*(new show) Aug 30-Nov 18: âBombshells, Bond Rallies & Blackouts: Waterbury in World War II,â objects, artifacts, photos, text panels & narratives drawn from museumâs collections exploring how WWII impacted Waterbury; Aug 30, opening reception, 5:30-7:30 pm.
Morrison Gallery, Kent Village Barns, near Rte 7 at Rte 341, Kent. Hours: Wed-Sat 10:30 am-5:30 pm, Sun 1-4 pm. Call 860-927-4501.
*(new show) Aug 25-Sept 23: recent works by painter Carroll Macdonald & sculpture by the late Paul Suttman.
Silvermine Guild Arts Center, 1037 Silvermine Rd, New Canaan. Call 203-966-9700.
Through Aug 30: â17th Annual Juried Student Exhibition,â works by students of all levels from Silvermine School of Art incl works in ceramics, jewelry & silversmithing, mixed media, painting, photography, prints & sculpture as selected by juror Sherry Camhy.
Washington Art Association, 4 Bryan Plaza, Rte 47, Washington Depot. Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 10 am-5 pm, Sunday 12-5 pm. Call 860-868-2878.
Through Aug 26: âFreefall in Form,â âorganic yet sharply defined watercolorsâ by Janet Niewald, photographs by Judith Petrovich & oils on canvas by Craig Stockwell.
Wisdom House/Marie Louise Trichet Gallery, 229 East Litchfield Rd, Litchfield. Hours: Mon-Sat 10 am-4 pm. Call 860-567-3163.
Through Sept 8: âSimply Landscapes: Pixels and Prints,â photographic landscapes from around the world by C. Sandra Lopez-Isnardi, who specializes in traditional gelatin silver prints & pigment inkjet digital prints.
Yale University Art Gallery, 1111 Chapel St at York, New Haven. Hours: Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm, Sun 1-6 pm. Call 203-432-0600.
Through Aug 26: âMade For Love: Selections from the Jane Katcher Collection of Americana,â 39 folk & decorative art objects from 18th & 19th Centuries that contain expressions of affection between men & women, parents & children, students & teachers, & friends, examines the material symbols Americans used to express bonds of affection.
Auditions, Juried Events _____
Chamber Music Central (CMC), Westport. Call 203-227-0662.
Aug 25-26: Auditions for students ages 9-18 for 2007-08 season, 1-5 pm (directions to studio given w/ appointment), 10-min auditions will incl playing scale of musicianâs choice plus 2 contrasting movements to demonstrate level of ability, accepted students then placed in level & age-appropriate trios & quartets of piano, strings & woodwinds, non-profit CMC prepares young musicians throughout Fairfield County for performances w/ student concerts in early Dec & mid-May, visit ChamberMusicCentral.org or call # above for addtâl info.
Mendelssohn Choir of Connecticut. Call 800-663-9018.
Aug 27 & 30: General auditions for 2007-08 concert season, at Norwalk City Hall, 125 East Ave, Norwalk, 7-9 pm, call phone # above or visit MendelssohnChoir.com for additional info.
Sept 6: General auditions for 200708 concert season, at Fairfield Public Library, 1080 Old Post Rd, Fairfield, also 7-9 pm, same details as above.
Seven Angels Theatre, Hamilton Park pavilion, Plank Rd, Waterbury. Call 203-757-1316 x15.
Sept 10-11: Local auditions for Chip Deffaaâs The Seven Little Foys, A Fable of Vaudeville, 6-8 pm by appt only (call Renee Purdy at above phone # to make appt), all actors should prepare 16 bars of uptempo pc in classic musical theater, bring proper dance footwear & be prepared to move, roles available for male & female actors ages 6-16, all should be able to sing & dance, tap dance a plus, other special skills (juggling, baton twirling, etc) a plus, Mr Deffaa will direct production, music director is Richard DeRosa.
Concerts, Musical Events ____
Aug 26: Tenth World Ensemble at Newfield Park, 698 Seaview Ave, Bridgeport, 2 pm, free concert of jazz & African rhythms will close Black Rock Art Centerâs 10th Annual Summer Sounds Concert series; 203-367-7917.
Aug 28: Love & Knishes: Swing & Dixie, Walzer Family Jewish Community Campus, 444 Main St North/Rte 6, Southbury, lunch at noon, music at 1 pm, suggested donation $8 adults, $5.50 ages 60 & up (reservations requested by Aug 24), performances by pianist Jeanne Hinkson & clarinetist Artie Schnabel will incl favorites American standards by Louis Armstrong, Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, et al; 267-3177 x105.
Aug 28: Music From The Heart at Pomperaug Woods, 80 Heritage Rd, Southbury, complimentary refreshments 5:30 pm, performance to begin at 6:30 at gazebo (call if inclement weather), bring chairs or blankets for seating; 262-6555.
Sept 1: NUMC Coffee House, 7:45â10:30 pm, Newtown United Methodist Churchâs Rauner Hall, 92 Church Hill Road, adm $3 for those attending earlier pasta dinner (see separate Misc listing), $4 otherwise, live bluegrass & folk music, refreshments, suitable for all ages; 426-9998.
Sept 2: Swing Dance, Norfield Grange, 12 Good Hill Rd, Weston, doors open 7 pm, free Lindy/Savoy swing dance intro lesson at 7:30, dancing 8:30-11:30 pm, adm $15 adults, $10 students w/ ID, music by Swing DJ Bill âStretchâ Gore, very beginner friendly, no partner required, air-conditioned 100+ year old hall, door prizes, smoke & alcohol free event, organic refreshments, dances also being offered Sept 15 & 29; 203-522-5341.
Sept 6: First Thursday featuring Jackâs Cats, Mattatuck Museum Arts & History Center, 144 West Main St, Waterbury, adm $15 ($7 museum members, free for anyone dressed in WWII era clothing), performance by 9-man band unified by their love for jazz & swing will incl salute to armed forces & plenty of WWII-era music, also free dance instruction by members of CT Dance Theater staff; 203-753-0381 x10.
Portuguese Cultural Center, 65 Sand Pit Rd, Danbury. Call 268-8570.
Weekly Ballroom Dancing, Wed 7-11 pm, adm $15 (incl buffet), music provided by DJ, free dance lesson (7:15-7:45 pm), cash bar, door prizes, singles, couples & beginners all welcome.
Films _________________
Discovery Museum, 4450 Park Ave, Bridgeport. Hours: Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm, Sun 12-5 pm & most Monday holidays (call ahead). Call 203-372-3521.
Planetarium shows: Rock on Mars! Mon-Fri 3:30 pm, Sat-Sun 1 & 3 pm, designed for ages 8 & up; Wonderful Sky, Mon-Fri 1 pm, Sat-Sun 2 pm, designed for ages 7 & under.
Edmond Town Hall, 45 Main St/Rte 25, Newtown. Call 426-2475.
Aug 24-30: Pirates of The Caribbean: At Worldâs End (PG-13), daily 7 pm, mat Fri-Tues 1 pm.
Maritime Aquarium, 10 North Water St, South Norwalk. Call 203-852-0700.
Through Oct 4: Greece: Secrets of the Past, Mon-Fri 11 am, noon, 1 & 3 pm (Fri also 7:30 pm); Sat-Sun 11 am, noon, 1, 3 & 4 pm.
Yale Center for British Art, 1080 Chapel St, New Haven. Call 203-432-8842.
Spotlight on Dame Judi Dench, free, screenings 2 pm: Aug 25, Chocolat (2000; rated PG-13).
Miscellaneous ___________
Aug 24: âThe Farm and The Homefront in the 1940s,â Osborne Homestead Museum, 500 Hawthorne Ave, Derby, 12:30-2 pm, free program will show how Frances Kellogg (namesake of adjoining Kellogg Environmental Center property) fared during WWII thanks to recently discovered letters, also artifacts & re-created items plus music of the era will create a feeling of the 1940s, program also being offered Sept 21; 734-2513.
Aug 25: âReading the Forested Landscape,â Kellogg Estate & Osbornedale State Park, Hawthorne Ave, Derby, 10 am-noon, free (registration requested), meet in Kellogg Environmental Centerâs lobby & join volunteer Peter Rzasa for hike through grounds of park while hearing of history & developing new observational skills that can be used to interpret forest history; 734-2513.
Aug 25-27: Friends of Bethel Library Annual Book Sale, at Bethel Municipal Center, School St, Bethel, Sat 8 am-4 pm (early buying 8-10 am, $10 adm; free adm remainder of sale), Sun 10 am-4 pm, Mon 9 am-noon, 14,000+ books available, also CDs, DVDs, records & ephemera, proceeds benefit library; 794-8756.
Aug 26: 2nd Annual Summer Jewish Festival, Congregation Bânai Israel, 193 Clapboard Ridge Rd, Danbury (attendees asked to park at nearby St Anneâs Melkite, 181 Clapboard Ridge), 1-6 pm, free adm, live music & entertainment, family activities & plenty of homemade kosher food; 792-6161.
Aug 26: Sandy Hook Village Farmersâ Market, 5 Glen Rd, Sandy Hook, 9 am-noon, local & regional farmers & vendors, final week; 426-2427.
Aug 26: âAmerican Cottage Gardens,â Glebe House Museum & Gertrude Jekyll Museum, Hollow Rd, Woodbury, 4-6 pm, tickets $40, lecture by writer & gardening expert Tovah Martin will be followed by wine & hors dâoeuvres in the garden, proceeds to help restore part of Jekyll Garden; 203-263-2855.
Aug 31-Sept 3: 47th Mark Twain Library Book Fair, at Redding Community Center, 37 Lonetown Rd/Rte 107 (behind elementary school), Redding, daily 9 am-5 pm, early buying Fri 9-10 am (adm $10), free adm remainder of event, one of oldest & largest book fairs in Northeast (also DVDs, videos & more), proceeds benefit library; 203-938-2545.
Sept 1: Indoor Fair, Newtown Congregational Church, 14 West St, Newtown, 9 am-3 pm, craft vendors, tag sale, face painting, childrenâs activities, entertainment & refreshments; 426-9024.
Sept 1: NUMC Monthly Pasta Dinner, Newtown United Methodist Churchâs Rauner Hall, 92 Church Hill Rd, Sandy Hook, 5-7:30 pm, adm $8 adults, $7 seniors, $3.50 children, full spaghetti dinner incl salad, desserts, and soft drinks/coffee raises funds each month for church, all welcome, coffee house/musical event follows (see separate Concerts listing); 426-9998.
Sept 6: âThe Importance of Civic Engagement in Community Affairs,â Western CT State Universityâs White Hall, 181 White St/Rte 6, Danbury, 6:30 pm, free lecture by veteran New York Times correspondent, who regularly shares observations on urban life & culture in his work; 837-8486.
Sept 7: Southford Falls Quilters Inc meeting, Shepardson Community Center, Whittemore Rd/Rte 188, Middlebury, 7-9 pm, area quilters of all levels invited, first meeting of 2007-08 season; 860-274-1483.
Audubon Center at Bent of the River, 185 East Flat Hill Rd, Southbury. Call 264-5098.
Programs free unless noted, reservations requested, call if weather is questionable, leave pets home: Aug 24, âLate Evening Moth & Insect Walk,â 9:30-11 pm, free but reservations required, naturalist & author John Himmelman will lead walk while describing the important role of moths in nature, their life cycles & their behavior.
Connecticutâs Beardsley Zoo, 1875 Noble Ave, Bridgeport. Call 203-394-6565.
Also, Farmersâ Market, Sun 10 am-3 pm (weekly through Oct 28), set up in zooâs parking lot (so zoo adm & Beardsley Park adm not required to shop), farms from across CT will have fresh, seasonal fruits & vegetables, also homemade baked goods, pesto & pasta sauces, jellies, jams, preserves, soap, CT honey, home décor & more.
Danbury BNI Trailblazers, meetings at Assumption Greek Orthodox Church, Clapboard Ridge Rd, Danbury. Call 797-1122.
Group meets Wednesdays, 8-9:30 am, members network & help build businesses, all visitors welcome, contact Mark Vendetti at above phone # for details.
Farmersâ Market, Griffin Hospital, 130 Division St, Derby. Call 203-732-1265.
Through Oct 26: Fridays 2-6 pm, locally grown seasonal vegetables, herbs, fruits & flowers, also fresh baked goods, set up in portico just outside hospitalâs main entrance, plus newsletters, recipes, demos & tastings in hospital cafeteria.
Friends of Putnam Park, Rte 58 at 107, West Redding. Call 797-8604, 203-938-3171.
2007 Putnam Park Summer Craftsmen Program, ongoing demos 10 am-4 pm Sat-Sun, free: Aug 25-26, Apothecary, see & hear remedies of 18th Century, how bartering & trade were used for payments, by reenactor playing role of the Colonial era pharmacists & healer.
Institute for American Indian Studies, 38 Curtis Rd, Washington. Call 860-868-0518.
Through Sept 2, Sat-Sun 12-4 pm, Village Interpreter: Observe the Living Traditions of Indian New England, members of Eastern Woodland tribes will be at IAIS each weekend to demonstrate & discuss traditional activities & lifeway skills incl dreamcatchers, talking sticks, bead work, outdoor cooking, dancing & more.
Newtown VNA Thrift Shop, Edmond Town Hall (lower level), 45 Main Street, Newtown. Call 270-4377.
Shop is open every Wed 12-3 pm & Sat 9 am-noon, access is from town hallâs back parking lot, shop carries discounted items from local businesses & private donors incl clothing, sm home accessories & more.
Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS), Newtown Meeting House, 31 Main St/Rte 25, Newtown. Call 426-6224.
Non-profit weight loss support group meets every Mon 6-8 pm (weigh-ins 6-6:45, meetings 7-8), meetings $2/week, membership $24/year.
Treehouse Comedy Productions.
Shows at Fairfield Theatre Company, 70 Sanford St, Fairfield (call 203-259-1036), tickets $22 ($17 FTC members) unless noted, showtime 8:30: Aug 25, Quentin Heggs, Regis Als & Mitchell Walters.
Shows at The New Sorrento, 32 Newtown Rd, Danbury (call 744-5575), shows 9:30 & tickets $15 unless noted: Aug 25, Billy Winn headlining, Judy Cienciotto & Tony Liberati opening.
Theatre ______________
Long Wharf Theatre, 222 Sargent Dr, New Haven. Call 203-787-4282.
On Stage II: Late Nite Catechism, through Aug 25, curtain Thurs-Sat 8 pm, mat Sat 2 pm, call for ticket details.
Westport Country Playhouse, 25 Powers Court (off Rte 1), Westport. Call 203-227-4177.
Being Alive!, Aug 24-Sept 9 (previews Aug 24, opening night Aug 25), curtain Tues-Sat 8 pm, mat Sat 4 pm, Sun 3 pm, Wed 2 pm, tickets $25-$55 during previews, $45-$65 opening night, $35-$55 remaining performances; Aug 26, Sunday Symposium, post-performance discussion of playâs themes; Sept 2, open captioning; Sept 6, TalkBack Thursday, post-performance discussion by members of company w/ audience.
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Events that appear by date have Newtown items listed first, with additional events listed by their start time. At the time of printing, the information here is accurate as presented; a call ahead is always a good idea to be safe.
DEADLINE INFORMATION
Press releases for the Enjoy calendar of events or the Enjoy section must be received by MONDAY NOON for publication in that weekâs edition of The Newtown Bee. Send to the attention of Shannon Hicks, Associate Editor, Newtown Bee, 5 Church Hill Road, Newtown CT 06470, or to shannon@thebee.com. Photos are welcome and can be black & white or color, but must be in sharp focus. Please call for specs if you plan to email digital photo files.