![]() Chris Hayhurst plays Fletcher and Krystal Millie Valdes is his wife in the show that runs about 35 minutes and is offered up to eight times each day with time for cleaning and sanitizing in between. It blends theater, video and escape room adventures as patrons try to help a frantic computer programming genius find his missing wife. It’s the original immersive experience called “Safe House,” created and directed by co-artistic director Brendan Ragan. You only have until Sunday to experience something unusual at Urbanite Theatre. For more information: 94 Last chance for ‘Safe House’ Previous artists featured in the Jean and Alfred Goldstein Exhibition Series, which began in 2015, include Salvador Dali, Marc Chagall, Andy Warhol and Paul Gauguin. For more information: Īrt and nature combine once again in the colorful new Selby Botanical Gardens exhibit, “Roy Lichtenstein: Monet’s Garden Goes Pop.” Continuing through June 27, it features Lichtenstein’s takes on garden paintings by Claude Monet, and both artists are represented around Selby with a variety of outdoor exhibits and plant displays in the conservatory. This new exhibit joins three others that recently opened: “Frans Hals: Detecting a Decade,” “Larry Rivers: Boston Massacre” and pieces by abstract artist Sam Gilliam. After World War II, Saitō became one of the main figures of the modernist Creative Print movement. It is the first comprehensive exhibit of the artist’s work in the United States and focuses on prints created in the 1940s and 1950s. It is comprised of recent donations of Saitō works from Charles and Robyn Citrin to The Ringling and other collections. There’s a lot of recently added artwork to experience at The Ringling, led by “Graphic Awakening,” an exhibition of work by Saitō Kiyoshi. The symphony postponed the concerts planned for this season til next year and recorded a series of small ensemble programs in a socially distanced manner on the stage of the Venice Performing Arts Center. The latest concert, as well as programs from earlier in the season are available at and on the organization’s YouTube channel. The Venice Symphony closes its virtual concert season with its final free program “Resound, Resilience” featuring works by Vivaldi, Mozart and Debussy and performed by chamber ensembles. 941-72 Virtual Venice Symphony season closes Solo tickets are also available for $35 the day prior to each performance. Tickets are $75-$99 per car (with up to four occupants). “Leonard Bernstein’s New York” runs Friday through May 9 at 6099 Central Ave., St. Artistic Director Eric Davis directs Emanuel Carrero and Julia Rifino. Michael Raabe is the musical director. It features songs from “West Side Story,” “On the Town,” “Wonderful Town” and more. Petersburg’s freeFall Theatre explores that relationship in the revue “Leonard Bernstein’s New York,” which is presented as a drive-in concert, with patrons watching from their cars. He led the New York Philharmonic and the city was the subject or backdrop for several of his Broadway musicals. Leonard Bernstein had a love affair with New York. Tickets are $15, $12.50 for student s(who must call the box office for reservations). Friday and Saturday at the Bazaar on Apricot and Lime, 821 Apricot Ave., Sarasota. ![]() ![]() The play is presented by the Players Teens, a performance group that is part of the education department at the Players Centre for Performing Arts. ![]() In Ian McWethy’s comedy “Bad Auditions by Bad Actors,” a casting director has just one day to find the perfect leads for a community theater production of “Romeo and Juliet.” But the director is not expecting a depressing array of performers, including ill-trained method actors and those who don’t know what to do with their hands. For more information: Players Teens stage ‘Bad Auditions’ The production stars Nick Duckart as Arthur, with Britney Coleman as Queen Guenevere, and Alex Joseph Grayson as Lancelot. Tickets are $20 for individuals and $30 for householders and you have 48 hours to watch the roughly 90-minute production. The theater has won permission to video record the live performance and offer it for home streaming, which it will do Monday through April 11. But you still have a chance to see this Lerner and Loewe musical about the world of King Arthur and the Knights of the Roundtable. The outdoor Asolo Repertory Theatre production of “Camelot” pretty much sold out before it opened last month. ![]()
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