Attractions | Visit Twin Cities https://visit-twincities.com Fri, 12 Apr 2019 22:04:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://i1.wp.com/visit-twincities.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/vtc-icon-whitebg.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Attractions | Visit Twin Cities https://visit-twincities.com 32 32 106052805 Mother’s Day 2018 https://visit-twincities.com/blog/mothers-day-2018/ Fri, 04 May 2018 21:01:45 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=128733 Check out more than a dozen Mother's Day ideas around the Twin Cities

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Mother’s Day 2018

Photo by Nina Hagen

Like many holidays in the calendar year, Mother’s Day can be over-commercialized. But does it really hurt to get a little reminder to celebrate one of the most important bonds in life? Blood related or otherwise, mothers can make such a difference in everyone’s life, so make some time to show them just how much you love them with these events around the Twin Cities.

Woman Power

This trio of events is all about mom and woman power. Listen To Your Mother (May 10) reflects on the trials and treasures of motherhood with live, onstage readings. Minneapolis’ takes place in the historic Riverview Theater, but these events are also happening across the continent. Two days later, the Minnesota Lynx are taking on the Chicago Sky. Ok, game day is the day before Mother’s Day, and it’s not necessarily Mother’s Day-themed, but we would have egg on our face if we didn’t mention some of the strongest women in the state as they warm up for a run at a fifth championship title in the last eight years. As Mother’s Day wraps up on Sunday, May 13, go to the Dakota Jazz Club & Restaurant for Soul Women: Three local vocalists are going to bring the house down.

Get Active, Get Outdoors

On Mother’s Day, moms get in free at the Minnesota Zoo, and they are also treated to discounts at the gift store and IMAX Theatre. Como Park Zoo & Conservatory is always free, and while they don’t have long outdoor trails filled with sea otters, farm babies and Asian wild horses or a red panda on their Tropics Trail, they have a special Mother’s Day bonsai show in addition to their polar bear, great apes and spectacular conservatory.

On May 12, you can get your hands dirty with the Three Rivers Park District’s Mother’s Day Weekend Tree Planting. Otherwise, on Mother’s Day, the Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden and Bird Sanctuary’s special Mother’s Day Wildflower Walks at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. will get you outdoors in nature as will the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum’s 1,200 acres and vibrant tulip show. For a different change of pace outside, take advantage of the DNR’s Take a Mom Fishing Weekend, where moms can fish without a fishing license all weekend—children under 16 can always fish without a license—or go on one of the first Mississippi River tours of the season at Paradise Charter Cruises. For the really active, run or walk a Mother’s Day 5K together.

Get Artsy

Creators Space in St. Paul has a handful of crafty classes for Mother’s Day the entire weekend you can do with your mother, such as painting a flower still life, making herbal healing salve or even painting a portrait of your pet. If you’re on the west side of the cities on May 13, St. Louis Park’s Pinot’s Palette offers an all ages (13-plus recommended), no-experience-needed, discounted art class with available refreshments—and your mom will get to sip on a free mimosa—while you paint Van Gogh’s “Daisies and Poppies.” If you have a child ages 7 to 15, check out Mother’s Day Tea at Way Cool Cooking School for a morning of baking goodies for a tea with mom.

It’s Showtime

With such a bustling arts and culture scene, check out these performing arts options you can treat your mother to. On May 12, see the decadent and emotional opera Thäis in St. Paul, or see the St. Paul Ballet all weekend in their 1920s adaptation of Bizet’s “Carmen.” At the Guthrie, they’re doing the classic “Guess Who’s Coming for Dinner?” among other shows, and for a whole family affair, consider the Children Theatre Co.’s whimsical “Lorax” or the high energy “Newsies” at Chanhassen Dinner Theatre. (For a taste of both of the latter, check out our reviews here and here, respectively.) And, of course, who could forget the St. Paul Civic Symphony’s annual free Mother’s Day concert? This year it features Stravinsky’s “Firebird Suite” at the Landmark Center at 1 p.m. on May 13.

Getting Gifts or Time Together?

The day before Mother’s Day, JB Hudson Jewelers on Nicollet is offering an upstairs children’s beading clinic where they’ll make a bead bracelet for mom with a personalized metal charm, and downstairs in the main area, the Mother’s Day trunk show will be out and glimmering. (In short, the perfect way to either get a last minute Mother’s Day present or bring her along so there’s no guessing what she likes.) Another pre-Mother’s Day event that could either be a gift, bonding or both are the Mother’s Day Arrangement Classes at Block Studios on May 10 where she can take home a vase of flowers specially arranged by you.

Need some more insider info?

The writers at Visit Twin Cities are here to answer any questions you're still left with as a visitor or potential visitor to the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro region. Click below to send us a message, and we'll get back to you as soon as possible!

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Art-A-Whirl 2018 https://visit-twincities.com/blog/art-a-whirl-2018/ Thu, 03 May 2018 15:37:38 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=128690 You can paint with all the colors of the wind.

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Art-A-Whirl 2018

Image by Artlu-fotolia

It’s time to paint the town red with the 23rd annual Art-A-Whirl. Scratch that. It’s time to paint the town every color found inside Crayola’s 64-count crayon box. You know, the box that every kid in class with the standard 24-count box (me) was jealous of. I mean, it had the Macaroni and Cheese and Purple Mountains’ Majesty colors and the sharpener on the back. Come on, it was like Christmas morning for kindergarten art projects.

Covering Northeast Minneapolis in a blanket of creativity Friday, May 18, through Sunday, May 20, the Northeast Minneapolis Arts Association’s (NEMAA) Art-A-Whirl will give visitors a chance to view the creations from more than 650 artists at more than 50 locations, including Vevang MPLS, Solar Arts Building, Casket Arts Building and many, many more. A full list of participating locations can be found on the 2018 Art-A-Whirl map.

But it doesn’t stop there. Art-A-Whirl, which happens to be the largest annual open artist studio tour in the U.S., will also give art enthusiasts the opportunity to view demonstrations, mini workshops, installations and special exhibitions during the artists’ open studio tours. And the best part about all of this is the price of admission: free. Visitors can go to one, two or all three days, view as much art as they want, all for $0.00.

Trolley Rides

And don’t let the anxiety of trying to find parking put a damper on your plans. Free trolley rides will run all weekend, picking up and dropping off visitors approximately every 15 minutes at a number of locations spread across the event.

First Trolley Departs:
Grain Belt Studios
Friday, May 18: 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 19: noon
Sunday, May 20: noon

Last Trolley Departs
Grain Belt Studios
Friday, May 18: 10 p.m.
Saturday, May 19: 8 p.m.
Sunday, May 20: 5 p.m.

A full list of trolley stops can be found here.

Dining

All of this art observing will no doubt leave you hungry and thirsty. Fortunately, there are plenty of dining options just blocks—or even steps—away from participating locations. Chow down on a plate of Red Stag Stroganoff or roasted half chicken at Red Stag Supperclub—one of the brainchild’s of James Beard Award semifinalist Kim Bartmann. Or quench your thirst with a slew of craft ciders at Sociable Cider Werks.

The Twin Cities have long been known as an arts mecca. It’s a community that values the freedom of expression, and events such as Art-A-Whirl are just one of the many pieces of that creativity puzzle.

Hours

Friday, May 18

5-10 p.m.

Saturday, May 19

Noon-8 p.m.

Sunday, May 20

Noon-5 p.m.

Need some more insider info?

The writers at Visit Twin Cities are here to answer any questions you're still left with as a visitor or potential visitor to the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro region. Click below to send us a message, and we'll get back to you as soon as possible!

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Ten Films, 10 Sentences https://visit-twincities.com/blog/ten-films-10-sentences/ Wed, 11 Apr 2018 20:41:53 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=128434 Ten sentences don’t begin to describe the 10 out of 528 films at the 37th Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival, but it’s a start.

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Ten Films, 10 Sentences

“Supa Modo,” photo courtesy of the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival

Talking about the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival (MSPIFF) ends up including a huge line of astounding numbers: Two hundred sixty-eight films from 75 nations, six screening venues, and more than 40 screenings with the director and subjects attending all pack into the 17 days that make up the festival’s 37th year.

While MSPIFF has a number of program categories, such as Science on Screen, Nextwave, Minnesota Made and Dark Out, the spotlight for 2018 is Chasms and Bridges: Cinema and the Search for Common Ground. Stories and art have long been recognized as a way to bridge perceived divides and to bring to light to obscured voices, and these films, whether fictional or real, show how no matter how old we are, how we identify ourselves, where we live and how much money we have, common threads still unite us.

Check out 10 films from this Spotlight category plus a note on one of the three short compilation screenings. However, as this list makes up a mere 9.5 percent of the total feature length films at the festival and a quick sentence doesn’t begin to encapsulate them, make sure to look through the MSPIFF website or the MSPFilmSociety app to find what films speak to you April 12-28.

RBG,” April 12, two screenings. Tickets are sold out, so come early for rush tickets. Follow the life of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and see how she became the political and feminist icon she is today—plus, learn about the moments that just made her, her. Director Betsy West will be attending, and tickets include admission to the Opening Night Party at Jefe: Urban Hacienda.

Black Kite,” April 14, 15, 18. When the Taliban outlaws flying kites, Arian can’t stand the thought of his daughter’s freedoms being stripped away and vows to fly a kite with her in this film shot over two weeks while the production crew evaded the real Taliban. Director Tarique Qayumi will be attending.

Wajib,” April 14, 18, 25. The dynamics of leaving or staying in Palestine creep into this dramedy by the “preeminent female filmmaker in the Arab world” about a father, teacher and visiting son as they hand deliver the latter’s wedding invitations.

What Will People Say,” April 15, 19, 21. After high school student Nisha’s parents discover the Western lifestyle she lives outside of their traditional Pakistani household, they send her to live with her aunt in Pakistan.

The Workers Cup,” April 15, 20, 28. Adam Sobel’s documentary shows the exploitation and endurance of Qatar’s migrant workers as they work to construct the 2022 FIFA World Cup stadium while holding their own football tournament.

The Cakemaker,” April 15 and 24. When Thomas learns his lover Oren died in a car accident, he leaves his home in Berlin to travel to Jerusalem to meet Oren’s wife and son who never knew about him and ends up working as the widow’s pastry chef.

Of Father and Sons,” April 20, 23, 28. Documentary filmmaker Talal Derki pretended to be a jihadist sympathizer and provides singular access to the household of Osama, an Al-Nusra Front member, where he reveals a family that experiences love, darkness and radicalization.

Western,” April 19, 25, 28. A German construction team clash with the Bulgarian villagers they now share the land with in order to build a hydroelectric plant, and one man walks the middle.

Crime + Punishment,” April 27 and 28. This documentary peers into an abyss full of corruption and systemic racism in the New York City Police Department through one group of officers’ frank conversations and hidden recordings.

Minding the Gap,“ April 27 and 28. A documentary captured from a skateboard—Bing Liu records the lives of himself and two of his friends as they find themselves on the edge of being men in the Rust Belt. Director Bing Liu will be attending.

Bonus: Chasms and Bridges II, April 17.“ One of three Spotlight short compilations, “Chasms & Bridges II” shows five stories, including a 21-minute documentary on undocumented workers in Wisconsin’s dairy industry, a 5-minute animation depicting the meeting of a Chinese mother and her British-born daughter, and a 22-minute story on the transformation of an Israeli commissioned officer as he transports a prisoner.

Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival 2018 PosterMinneapolis St. Paul Film Society

"Supa Modo" is one of the family friendly films to show at the 37th annual Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival this year.Minneapolis St. Paul Film Society

Family Flicks

If you’re looking for family friendly movies at MSPIFF, filter your selections based on the program Childish Films or the tag “family friendly.” Here’s one of our favorites:

Supa Moda,” April 14 and 28. Nine-year-old Jo wants to be a superhero, and the whole village is behind her dream. They want her to feel super strong, they want her to fly—they want her to feel anything but the illness the cancer inside of her permeates. In this fictional film, see how this small Kenyan village makes Jo’s dreams come true while facing reality. Recommended for ages 9 and up.

Need some more insider info?

The writers at Visit Twin Cities are here to answer any questions you're still left with as a visitor or potential visitor to the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro region. Click below to send us a message, and we'll get back to you as soon as possible!

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Upcoming Concerts in the Twin Cities Under $35 https://visit-twincities.com/blog/concerts-in-the-twin-cities-under-35-dollars/ Thu, 29 Mar 2018 20:59:26 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=128393 The Twin Cities brings in thousands of musical artists every year but not every concert experience has to break the bank

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Upcoming Concerts in the Twin Cities Under $35

Photo by verve // Fotolia

With Bon Jovi, Shania Twain, Harry Styles, Charlie Puth, Justin Timberlake and Bruno Mars coming to the Xcel Energy Center this year and Ed Sheeran, Taylor Swift and Jay-Z and Beyonce (iconic, right?) coming to U.S. Bank Stadium, it’s pretty safe to say we’re not lacking in the concert department here in the Twin Cities. But what about the smaller venues and the up-and-coming artists? If you’re anything like me, my music/concert funds only allow me to spend breath-taking amounts of money on tickets maybe once a year. But the good news is that with our thriving music scene here in the Twin Cities, plenty of talented musicians come this way for more intimate concerts at venues such as First Avenue and 7th St. Entry, Varsity Theater, Cedar Cultural Center and Palace Theater—and the tickets to see them up close won’t cost you half your paycheck. Here are just 14 concerts (out of many) coming up in the next two months that you won’t want to miss.

Courtney Marie Andrews (with Molly Parden)

WHERE: 7th St. Entry
WHEN: April 2
COST: $12
SONGS: “Kindness of Strangers” by Courtney Marie Andrews, “Who Did You Leave for Me?” by Molly Parden

Phillip Phillips (with The Ballroom Thieves)

WHERE: First Avenue
WHEN: April 3
COST: $25
SONGS: “Gone, Gone, Gone” and “Miles” by Phillip Phillips, “Can’t Cheat Death” by The Ballroom Thieves

Robert Earl Keen

WHRE: Varsity Theater
WHEN: April 12
COST: $35
SONGS: “Feelin’ Good Again” and “Corpus Christi Bay”

Echosmith (with The Score and Jena Rose)

WHERE: First Avenue
WHEN: April 13
COST: $24
SONGS: “Over My Head” by Echosmith, “Legend” by The Score and “Reasons” by Jena Rose

Margo Price (with Blackfoot Gypsies)

WHERE: First Avenue
WHEN: April 15
COST: $30
SONGS: “Hurtin’ (On the Bottle)” and “A Little Pain” by Margo Price and “Coming Through the Pines” by Blackfoot Gypsies

Current Swell (with Trevor Devine and The Immaculate Beings)

WHERE: 7th St. Entry
WHEN: April 16
COST: $10
SONGS: “Young and Able” and “When to Talk and When to Listen” by Current Swell, “Teach Me How to Love Again” by Trevor Devine and The Immaculate Beings

Robbie Fulks (with Buffalo Gospel)

WHERE: Cedar Cultural Center
WHEN: April 20
COST: $20
SONGS: “Long I Ride” and “Alabama At Night” by Robbie Fulks and “Hard Labor Side of Gettin On” by Buffalo Gospel

Lord Huron

WHERE: Palace Theater
WHEN: April 22
COST: $33.50
SONGS: “Wait by the River” and “The Night We Met”

FRENSHIP (with Yoke Lore)

WHERE: 7th St. Entry
WHEN: April 27
COST: $15
SONGS: “Capsize” and “LOVE Somebody” by FRENSHIP and “Fake You” and “Goodpain” by Yoke Lore

Mary Bridget Davies and Mia Dyson

WHERE: Cedar Cultural Center
WHEN: April 28, 2018
COST: $22
SONGS: “Take It to the Limit” by Mary Bridget Davies and “Fool” by Mia Dyson

George Ezra (with Noah Kahan)

WHERE: First Avenue
WHEN: April 30
COST: $35
SONGS: “Paradise” and “Hold My Girl” by George Ezra and “Hurt Somebody (with Julia Michaels)” by Noah Kahan

Sofi Tukker

WHERE: Fine Line Music Café
WHEN: May 4
COST: $16
SONGS: “Best Friend” and “Baby I’m A Queen”

Randy Houser

WHERE: Varsity Theater
WHEN: May 12
COST: $35
SONGS: “Runnin’ Outta Moonlight” and “How Country Feels”

Marian Hill (with Michl)

WHERE: Palace Theater
WHEN: May 16
COST: $31.50
SONGS: “Down” and “Differently” by Marian Hill and “Die Trying” and “Better With You” by Michl

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Swing Dancing in the Twin Cities https://visit-twincities.com/blog/swing-dancing-twin-cities/ Fri, 23 Feb 2018 19:44:48 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=128168 Check out these swing dance locations with lessons, dances and events for everyone.

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Swing Dancing in the Twin Cities

Photo by Erica Loeks

I first learned about swing dance as a sophomore at the University of St. Thomas when I attended a student performing arts show on campus. One of the very last dances was an upbeat swing number with about 10 couples twirling, spinning and flipping in the air. As a dancer myself, I was delighted. I had danced my whole life (well, since I was three), but I had never focused on social dance before—the energy and joy that exuded from the dancers’ faces made me want to learn.

An opportunity came when a friend of mine, Thomas, invited me to a university swing dance event. It was a Friday night, and 40-plus people showed up to dance in the lower level of the student center. Girls were wearing sundresses with converse, and a couple of the guys had dressed up with some colorful bow ties and socks. After a quick sound system malfunction, the music started and students flooded the floor. I was timid at first, but Thomas had a lot of swing dancing experience and I happily walked away from the event with a basic idea of how to swing dance (although there was no flipping in the air for me that night!).

We all know the Twin Cities are not lacking in the music and theater departments, and swing dance is no different. Whether you’re a seasoned swing dancer looking to hit the local dance floor or a visitor wanting to try something new while in the cities, here are a few dance club and studio options located in the Twin Cities.

TC Swing

Run by Cindy and Terry Gardner, TC Swing is one of the most popular swing dancing locations. TC Swing offers weekly classes for East Coast Swing (the easiest form of swing dance) followed by Lindy Hop (the original swing dance form) later in the evening. On Thursday nights, dancers can come to its Late Night Swing with a $6 admission ($5 with a student I.D.), and if they want to get a little fancier, on the first Saturday of the month is First Saturday Swing with a live band and open bar.

Wabasha Street Caves

Besides being a really cool historical destination (have you been on a tour yet?), Wabasha Street Caves offers a Thursday night swing dance with a cover charge of $8 cash (due to bad reception problems in the caves, credit cards aren’t accepted). Doors open at 6 p.m., and live jazz music is provided from 7 to 10 p.m. Some regular bands include The Moonlight Serenaders with vocalist Lee Engele, The Minnesota Jazz Orchestra with vocalists Gregg Marquardt and Debbie O’Keefe, and Beasley’s Big Band with vocalist Courtney Burton among many others.

Four Seasons Dance Studio

Located on Hennepin Avenue, Four Seasons Dance Studio focuses solely on social partner dance styles and offers East Coast Swing, West Coast Swing and Lindy Hop classes among a selection of more traditional ballroom dances. The studio also throws its own dance parties for dancers to practice their new moves. Check out the studio’s online schedule for rates, events and class options.

Uptown Swing

Named after its Minneapolis location where owner and founder Peter Strom grew up and as a tribute to Uptown, New York City-Harlem where the Lindy Hop was born, Uptown Swing offers two nights of classes with four different levels, bringing hundreds of dancers through its doors every week. Single lessons are $12 and a full four-lesson session is $40 (discounts are available with a student I.D.) On Saturday, March 24, join Uptown Swing for its first ever Uptown University with national instructors coming in to teach classes for intermediate and advanced levels. A dance will follow the lesson with a free beginner class taught at 8 p.m. and live music from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.

Lee’s Liquor Lounge

Wednesday night is swing dance night at Lee’s Liquor Lounge in Minneapolis. Lessons are taught by Bill and Shannon Butler at 8 p.m., and live music begins at 9 p.m. Check Lee’s Liquor Lounge online schedule for more music, dance and event information.

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Telling Your Story https://visit-twincities.com/blog/telling-your-story/ Thu, 08 Feb 2018 22:57:04 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=128055 With upcoming pieces at the Minnesota History Theatre and Southern Theater, artists aren’t finding pieces that show a perspective they relate to—they’re sharing their own perspective to those who will listen.

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Telling Your Story

Hero image by ET1972/Fotolia

As you read the missions of many Twin Cities performing arts companies, a common thread emerges: They want to tell narratives that are overlooked; they want to give a voice to the underrepresented; and they want to show how art is not only a means for social justice and understanding, but a catalyst for it. By and large, these artists succeed, whether it’s through historical reflections or not-so-removed worlds.

In the month of February, two performing art groups will make this connection through their own personal stories. Starting Feb. 10 through March 4, Minnesota History Theatre is putting on the world premiere of “A Crack in the Sky,” a mosaic of memories and folk tales from author Ahmed Ismail Yusuf and playwright Harrison David Rivers of Yusuf’s journey from being a shepherd boy in Somalia to being an author in Minnesota.

Halfway through the show’s run, over on the west side of the Mississippi River, urban dance crew Kudeta will present “I’m From Vol. 2: Immigration and Identity,” also a world premiere, from Feb. 23-25. Both productions are based on personal stories but are executed in very different ways.

A Look in the Mirror

An old adage for creative writing is to “write what you know.” But even then, writing what you know and writing your story are two different things.

“It’s so scary putting yourself out there to people you may not know,” says Joëlle Fernandez, co-founder of Kudeta and co-director of “I’m From Vol. 2.” “But I think it’s even scarier to face it yourself because through the process of creating our individual pieces, we really have to think and be in our feelings a lot.”

Since Kudeta’s first installment of “I’m From” about a year and a half ago, “Vol. 2” is pared down. Instead of about 30 artists, including children, they are working with 13. While some of “Vol. 1”’s dances focused on swathes of exodus and historical movements, this time Fernandez and her partner, Kudeta co-founder and co-director Frankie Herbres, are asking the question on an individual level. It’s not about street addresses or passport stamps. It’s about, for instance, being from “soy sauce and vinegar lighting up the house when you get home,” says Fernandez.

For Fernandez, answering where she’s from requires not shying away from the sacrifices her parents made for her. “My parents came here to give me a head start, and I used that head start to do what, hip hop? It’s the question of if what I’m doing is good enough,” she says.

Fernandez’s individual piece will be influenced by the Filipino traditional dance “binasuan,” where she has to balance cups filled with water on her head and hands as she dances. Historically, binasuan is performed in times of celebration. As the binasuan dancers turn, spin and roll to upbeat music, people watch in awe at the seemingly effortless way they balance the cups, never letting them spill. However, it is that skill, that unspoken limitation the cups impose, that Fernandez uses to draw a parallel to how the guilt she has about pursuing her love of dance burdens and limits her life.

Unlike most dance performances where you might get an artist’s note about the dance’s significance, there will be more than a vague explanation from Fernandez. She’s going to tell you her story through spoken word, too, as will the other nine dancers of the night.

“Our artistic vision is to be raw, clear, upfront, explicit, and so even if I danced everything I wanted to dance, the audience will still walk away with their own interpretation,” Fernandez says. “In my piece with the cups, that could mean anything. But if I have spoken word incorporated with it, it helps make it even clearer.”

Image by Sam Harper FusedXPhotography. The 13 dancers of Kudeta's "I'm From."Sam Harper FusedXPhotography

Whose Story Is It?

While Fernandez’s story is unique to her, there is always a question of representation. If Fernandez is the only Filippino that someone knows, will they see her story as universal to every Filippino in a similar situation? Part of the power of telling personal stories is the realization that everyone’s stories aren’t as different or as foreign as they may seem, but that there is a fine balance between the individual and the collective.

To try to define that convergence, Kudeta’s approach is vulnerable honesty, which means a long, hard look at who each member is. Each solo piece has been created without input from Fernandez or Hebres, and because of that, it’s up to the dancer to dive into what makes them who they are, including what they don’t know about themselves.

With “A Crack in the Sky,” Yusuf and Rivers create a story that fully lives in the epicenter of the individual and the collective coming together. While the play incorporates much of Yusuf’s journey to the United States, Rivers thought to intertwine Somali folk tales into the narrative, and the pair had to pick which moments of Yusuf’s life to highlight and which timelines might have to change to fit the stage medium the best.

“I did a bit of research (on Somalia) just so that I could understand the broad strokes of Somali history and get a sense of the place Ahmed is from,” says Rivers, who has upcoming plays at Penumbra and Theater Latté Da as well. “But because we were telling Ahmed’s specific story, I relied on him to provide his perspective on the places and the people. … A different character or a different person with a similar story might remember different details, but I really wanted to adhere to Ahmed’s real story as possible.”

For months, Yusuf would write down his story for Harrison, who would ask what Yusuf describes as “illuminating” questions, and eventually those stories made up the script that balances Yusuf’s storytelling with Rivers’ masterful play creation.

Just as Kudeta’s dancers have to contend with the forces that have influenced them, Yusuf has to reflect on how he has become who he is. Before he came to the theater, he says he was not ready to tell it, but when he started, he says, “There was no second-guessing what to say or what to tell or why.” His story is infused with gratitude toward the communities that have made him who he is, and he has a large place in his heart for the teachers who have reached out to him and fundamentally changed how he viewed life.

Even though “A Crack in the Sky” is based on Yusuf’s journey, he doesn’t see it as a play about him. “It’s actually a shared story; it is a communal story,” he says. “I wanted a story that is not only about me but about humanity in general and about a world that I left behind that has stayed with me and the world that I live.”

A Crack in the Sky - MN History Theatre. From left to right, Hajji Ahmed and JuCoby Johnson.Minnesota History Theatre

Coming Together

The performing arts, theater in particular, are an animal. At least according to Yusuf. “(Writing) is you and the page, but then you have to think of the audience, of the language of you’re using. You are thinking about the actors, the stage, a million other things that matter,” he says. “It is an animal, somehow or another, and you don’t seem to know where it leads.”

But then, as everyone who has been in theater knows, that can be the beauty of it. The shared story that Yusuf wanted to impart to his audience also soaks into the cast and crew who put the show on. The group numbers that Kudeta intermixes in between the solo pieces remind them they aren’t alone.

Like many shows that examine the world in all of its imperfections, “I’m From Vol. 2” ends on a hopeful note. Although I cannot confirm “A Crack in the Sky” does, my hunch is that it, too, will end with a sense of a new beginning.

Skipping past messy questions, unresolved issues and bittersweet memories and going straight to the positive feelings that smiling curtain calls can impart would certainly make for a lighter toll on the creators. However, whether you’re in the audience or on the stage, to not think about who you really are underneath your shield of skin and social media and personas is to live in a world without trying to see it or understand how you can fit in it. Likewise, ignoring the experiences of those around you is to fail to appreciate what makes up our personal stories—no matter how tangled and incomplete they are—and how those experiences can unite and define us.

“When I was a youth,” Fernandez says, “I went to UC Berkely for a youth leadership retreat, and something I learned was how to tell your own story because if we don’t know our own stories, and if we don’t speak on it, someone else will. Someone else will tell us who we are.”

Do you know who you are?

Mark Your Calendars

A Crack in the Sky

  • History Theatre
  • Feb. 10-March 4
  • $15-40

I’m From Vol. 2

  • Kudeta at the Southern Theater
  • Feb. 23-25
  • $12-24, free for ARTShare members

 

Need some more insider info?

The writers at Visit Twin Cities are here to answer any questions you're still left with as a visitor or potential visitor to the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro region. Click below to send us a message, and we'll get back to you as soon as possible!

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Red Bull Crashed Ice 2018 https://visit-twincities.com/blog/red-bull-crashed-ice-2018/ Wed, 17 Jan 2018 20:34:41 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=127873 Red Bull Crashed Ice 2018 slides its way into downtown St. Paul Jan. 19-20. Don't miss out on the action-packed weekend with some of the best skaters in the world.

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Red Bull Crashed Ice 2018

Calling all adrenaline junkies and extreme sports fanatics! Red Bull’s Crashed Ice brings its thrilling, high-energy and frozen entertainment back to the capital city Jan. 19 and 20 for the seventh straight year.

Join more than 120,000 raucous fans and watch the action as some of the world’s best skaters race up to 49 miles per hour to try to ink their names in the Crashed Ice history books. Some of the contenders include Cameron Naasz, a Minnesota native who is gunning for a record-breaking third straight Ice Cross Downhill World Championship; Canada’s Jacqueline Legere, who is also looking to take home a third consecutive women’s championship; and former champion Kyle Croxall of Canada.

Spread over two days (qualifying races will take place on Friday and finals are on Saturday), 64 men will fight through five knock-out style rounds of four-man heats while 16 women compete in three rounds. All of the events will take place on the redesigned arena consisting of a 1,600-foot, man-made ice track filled with banked walls, hair-pin turns and a 12-story drop, all with the backdrop of a lit up Saint Paul Cathedral.

Quick Facts: 

What: Red Bull Crashed Ice

When: Jan. 19 and 20

Where: Cathedral of Saint Paul. 239 Selby Ave., St. Paul, 55102

Time: 6-10 p.m. (both Friday and Saturday)

Tickets: We got you

Need some more insider info?

The writers at Visit Twin Cities are here to answer any questions you're still left with as a visitor or potential visitor to the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro region. Click below to send us a message, and we'll get back to you as soon as possible!

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Q&A with Jungle Theater’s Sarah Rasmussen https://visit-twincities.com/blog/qa-with-jungle-theaters-sarah-rasmussen/ Wed, 03 Jan 2018 20:40:39 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=127832 Artistic director Sarah Rasmussen is bringing one-person plays, music, puppets and new faces to the Jungle Theater in the 2018 season.

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Jungle Theater 2018

Artistic director Sarah Rasmussen chats about the Jungle’s upcoming season

Hero image and feature photo courtesy of the Jungle Theater. All play photos by William Clark.

By Lianna Matt

Coming into her third season as the Jungle Theater’s artistic director, Sarah Rasmussen is riding in on the waves of her previous seasons’ successes. OK, she might not put it that way, but local publications would tend to disagree, piling on the praise for her diverse casting and show choices. In her first year, Rasmussen put on an all-female cast of Shakespeare’s “Two Gentlemen of Verona,” and during the 2017 season, she chose all female directors.

You can see her feminist values in this year’s show lineup, too, but the season is also peppered with surprising forms and unexpected stories, including one-person shows, puppets and teenage ferocity. Before the Jungle kicks off with “Ishmael” (Jan. 13-Feb. 4), Rasmussen took some time out of her busy schedule to talk with Visit Twin Cities.


Your 2018 season is a huge mix of shows. Is there something that unites them, or are they each to be taken as individual gems?

We’re pretty intentionally eclectic. We do like to give our audiences a real range of stories, but what I love about them is that they’re all just great stories that are surprising. I think they’re really stories about deep inquiries about the human heart and what it means to be human right now. I know it sounds broad, but these plays are from an emotionally grounded place of exploring the humanities in a deep way.

So your first two shows, “Ishmael” (Jan. 13-Feb. 4) and “My Mother Has 4 Noses” (Feb. 10-March 4) are called “plays with music,” which seems like very specific wording. Could you speak a little more to what you mean?

Last summer, we performed a new musical called “Fly by Night,” and the lead actor was Chris Koza, a singer/songwriter in town (of the band Rogue Valley), and the music band also featured James Munson (local musician of Semisonic and The New Standards). I thought this was something kind of unique the Jungle can do. A lot of theaters in town do musicals, but it’s unique to feature musicians from the pop/rock/folk music world on stage. The Twin Cities have such a vibrant music scene; the more that we can overlap our theater and our music scenes, the more exciting it is as directors and producers. It brings a different experience.

Out of this year’s lineup, why did you choose to direct “The Wolves”?

Well, a big thing for me in coming to the Jungle and running a theater is that there’s still not that many women artistic directors in this business. Having come up through my career, I feel really passionate about giving women opportunities. Over 50 percent of the roles on our stage are for women and for diverse women, and with more than half of the population being women it may sound obvious, but it’s not. You’d be hard pressed to find a theater that’s hiring women at the percentage we are.

The Wolves,” this is my happy place right now. I’m excited to be in the room with these smart young women making this place. When I was a professor at the University of Texas-Austin, I loved that feeling of getting to open doors for younger women, to be that mentor and be that sounding board. When I can, I just try to find more opportunities for them. I’m really happy that all of our (2017) seasonal directors are women and that we’re working with more women playwrights. Now I get the chance to open the doors for these people and create a space that’s really exciting and respectful, a place to have really important conversations. With all of this stuff that’s come up about sexual assault in the entertainment and theater industry, for most of my career, nobody was talking about that even though it was happening all the time. It’s really important now with my own theater to make different choices.

And to that end, will your playwright and theater initiative for high school women, JungleWrites, be continuing?

JungleWrites will continue through the school year in 2018, and it is something we are absolutely figuring out how to raise money for. It’s really rewarding for the girls, and I’m excited about what we’re writing. They got to come watch rehearsals and see that shows. They’re going to see Jonatha’s play and “The Wolves,” so we’re really excited about these initiatives, and we think of it as our opportunity. … I think we were able to get everyone who wanted to come in (this first time around), which is fantastic. I know we’ll have a wait list going for the future. It’s a really open process, really intentional, obviously. It’s a cohort of girls, professional teachers and mentors.

I know you’ve sold out past shows, the most recent being the holiday’s “Miss Bennet,” so here’s to a new year of successes at the Jungle!

We’re a 150-seat theater, so we’re really intimate—we like to say we’re a great theater in a cozy living room. The acoustics are particularly great for music, but for all of the shows, you feel like you’re right there with the performers. … This time of year, we’re really pushing those subscriptions for 2018. We got the stats the other day, and we were at over 92 percent capacity (in 2017). That means we sold out more often than not, and to folks reading about us, just get your tickets.

 

Photo by William Clark, courtesy of Jungle Theater. Jack Weston is Ishmael (and every other character) in Leo Geter's take on Moby Dick. Photo by William Clark, courtesy of Jungle Theater. International singer/songwriter Jonatha Brooke is taking the stage with song and prose about taking care of her mother. Photo by William Clark, courtesy of Jungle Theater. Three of the fierce soccer players in "The Wolves" this spring. Photo by William Clark, courtesy of Jungle Theater. Thomasina Petrus takes the stage as Billie Holiday. Photo by William Clark, courtesy of Jungle Theater. The Tyrone looks innocently at you, halo intact. Don't let him fool you, though.

2018 Season

Ishmael,” Jan. 13-Feb. 4. It’s the big story of Moby Dick in an intimate way with one man and members of local bluegrass band, “Pert Near Sandstone.”

My Mother Has 4 Noses,” Feb. 10-March 4. Singer/songwriter Jonatha Brooke just moved to the Twin Cities and is already taking the stage, guitar in hand, to tell autobiographical stories of taking care of her mother.

The Wolves,” March 31-April 29. Rasmussen is directing this girl soccer team scrabble, and if you talk to her about it, she almost sounds like a fan girl, she’s so excited about it.

Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill,” May 26-June 24. Local singer Thomasina Petrus croons to us as Billie Holiday during one of Holiday’s last concerts.

Hand to God,” July 21-Aug. 19. As Rasmussen puts it, “Comedy is a public service.” To deal with his father’s death, Jason joins the Christian Puppet Ministry, but his puppet takes on an irreverent life of his own.

Can’t get enough of the show after the curtain call? Make sure to stay after every performance for a talkback.

ASK A LOCAL

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“Home for the Holidays” with Minnesota Orchestra https://visit-twincities.com/blog/home-holidays-minnesota-orchestra/ Mon, 18 Dec 2017 22:09:32 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=127615 The Minnesota Orchestra welcomes you for the holidays with the world premiere of their show, "Home for the Holidays," Dec. 21.

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"HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS"

The Minnesota Orchestra extends a warm welcome for the holidays with an all-new show

Hero image by Becky Swora/Fotolia; feature image of Sarah Hicks by Courtney Perry

By Taylor Weeks

The Minnesota Orchestra, one of America’s top symphonic ensembles, touches many with its music through avenues such as concerts, radio broadcasts, recordings and international tours. This year, the orchestra is bringing the holiday cheer to the Twin Cities with its world premiere of “Home for the Holidays” Dec. 21 at 11 a.m. and again at an already sold out evening performance.

This holiday show is different than anything the orchestra has done in the past, first and foremost because it has a theatrical arc to it. Written with excerpts from the book “Holiday Inn” by local Kevin Kling of NPR’s “All Things Considered,” the storyline is inspired in part by the Ukrainian folktale of “The Mitten.” Conductor Sarah Hicks and four local actors aid Kling’s  omniscient onstage narration to capture the essence of the holidays, and the whole show aims to convey one simple message: “There’s room enough for everyone.”

“We wanted to create something orchestra-centric that still struck some nostalgic notes,” says Grant Meachum, director for Live at Orchestra Hall.

To get ready for the show, Kling, conductor Sarah Hicks and Peter Rothstein, the artistic director for Theatre Latte Da and stage director for “Home for the Holidays,” have worked on adapting Kling’s story for the past year and a half. Robert Elhai, the show’s composer and arranger, adds old time classics and original music as well.

The team has sprinkled in touches of Minnesota throughout the production, such as using the word “hot dish” instead of “casserole” and including a special performance of “Heart of the Heartland,” the theme song for the iconic “A Prairie Home Companion,” with composer and mandolin player Peter Ostroushko. There is an especially memorable piece in the show that every Minnesotan can relate to, informally called “Car Shenanigans,” where the four actors have to scrape snow off their car to the tune of Vivaldi’s “Winter” from “The Four Seasons.”

Minnesotan traditions aside, the experience will be accessible to all people, and moments in the show like interactive sing-alongs are designed to emphasize the communal experience of family and the holiday season.

“No matter what anyone’s background is or what the holiday season is for them, everyone likes to hear a good story,” says Meachum. “Home for the Holidays” is more than a story with music at its center, though; it is a warm welcome to anyone who is in Minnesota for the holidays.

 

Photo by Courtney Perry. Conductor Sarah Hicks at the spring Campus Night 2017, Minnesota Orchestra.

Minnesota Orchestra conductor Sarah Hicks. Photo by Courtney Perry.

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Review: “Blithe Spirit” at the Guthrie https://visit-twincities.com/hit-the-road/stories/review-blithe-spirit-at-the-guthrie/ Wed, 06 Dec 2017 16:23:16 +0000 http://visit-twincities.com/?page_id=127546 "Blithe Spirit" celebrates the farce, delivers humor and indulges in the perfect amount of pettiness at the Guthrie Theater (Nov. 25-Jan. 14).

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EVEN GHOSTS CAN LAUGH

“Blithe Spirit” is the comedy cocktail for the stressed out soul

Photo by Dan Norman, courtesy of the Guthrie Theater

By Lianna Matt

The characters of the Noël Coward’s 1941 play “Blithe Spirit” would like to invite you to Kent, England, for a dry martini and a seance. Or rather, you’re going to watch them drink it as they conjure the dead. And talk about love. And try to untangle themselves from a farce. With absurdity, comebacks and affluent society, “Blithe Spirit” could be campy, but it’s not. It’s hilarious, and it’s at the Guthrie Theater in downtown Minneapolis from Nov. 25-Jan. 14.

Here’s the setup: Author Charles Condomine hosts a seance with his second wife, Ruth, to learn the “tricks of the trade” and compose a believable medium for his upcoming book. The problem? Madame Arcati, for all her eccentricities, is the real deal. She brought back Charles’ first wife, Elvira, who isn’t planning on leaving anytime soon.

The audience may expect a more laugh-out-loud comedy after seeing the maid, Edith (Suzanne M. Warmanen) waltzing around as she tidies up the set at the beginning, but it’s the micromanaged interactions, sniping comments and incredulous looks at the audience that must sustain the show across all three acts. The most delightful moments are where attempted airs clash with childish reactions. 

Case in point? Take the argument that the unamused and put-together Ruth, played by Heidi Armbruster, has with Charles (Quinn Mattfeld) the day after the seance. If you can’t hear him over the clinking of your spoon in your teacup, can he really bother you? Or look at Elvira, played with sprite-like flirtatiousness by Elia Monte-Brown, as she moves about the room so that Armbruster, who can’t see her, is raging at thin air.

Mattfeld’s performance as a somewhat pompous and exasperated Charles is right on target, but the person who “wore the pants” in the play, so to speak, was Sally Wingert, who played spunky and spry Madame Arcati. Costume designer Meg Neville’s wardrobe for her is reminiscent of a tropical bird when she’s on the clock as a medium and somewhat safari-leading when she’s not. However, Wingert never lets the clothes wear her. Indeed, her go-get’em and gleeful attitude, verbal winks and lack of self-consciousness make you more apt to look out for a flailing punch as she charges forth into the supernatural.

Despite Director David Ivers’ efforts and successes at keeping the dialogue sparkling and snappy, the second act gets a bit long. The play doesn’t go out with a whimper, though. The last scene injects one final, grandiose burst of concentrated energy onto the stage, courtesy of scenic designer Jo Winiarski. “Blithe Spirit” may slow down along the way, but its cocktail of clever pettiness and simple humor is the best balm for any stressed out person going into the holiday and winter seasons.

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