Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 20 Jun 2001, p. 22

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"Nil 8 BENCH I00l J?,yrjli0if [and Design gardcn mun Clay and mum decorum :mlmneri Cemtnl (”names and pre, m Aguaknn prko 933mm Nam mm an: M pcmn'nés. annuals and ' Della Cerammat Craft Paml i Ill prod and paper 25 [mm Lunalr oh and decorum mama; Old Vlech Pm C, nu !] ou Hug: Pm qum~ $I “Molt: Pine Adimndtrk Chaim 37 {hldltn ' . 1am Null-17mm mull-Ito M “mm ly" I v3 Tar Lek utetilt m! in'l y: M's M pm" look and berxh look al prim helm! our mm. V, mmhk orer, reused. N " Rnn' \ohnd} hem our mend» Inn paces an llmul King Harhmm and this weekend we are uLhtdf mull»! Sill Ihe New l sill he an ale br only $319 Rhik quann'ties IN? we}; earlx for the deal nf [he ommer', SHIRE HUI RS: MON-FRI 8:00hM - WWW“ S \l #:00tM - 7:00Pi1 \l N 9:00AM - 5:MPM 9Cl ml Theatre & Company hosts New Works Festival heave & Company is I busily gearing up for its final event of the season - the Record New Works Festival 200i, which takes place lune 21-23, 8 pm. nightly at the Market Theatre in downtown Kitchener. This annual event pro- duces and celebrates new work by aspiring platwrights in the Waterloo region. The event is produced by Henry Bakker, Theatre & Company's resident dra- maturg and literary manag- er. The same five new one- acts will be staged for three “.99 " lift off Imus! price marked In ITrdt $10.00 me “4.99 $6.99 , 10.09 , ltr? $7090 SI " la_I' upto 15% dl upto 50% all up to 41% all W'r ott 509': all b"; olf WM In The Way by Linsay Stewart, a young woman watches television late at night. An old friend who hasn't slept in three days arrives He speaks of dir turbing dreams, and she finds mysterious scratches orthisback... successive nights. Fumes By Sarah Bakker details the surreal journey of two boys, home alone and bored, who decide to indu- lage in a favourite passtime - sniffing gas. in Andrew Lakin’s Dropped Queues, four char- acters are standing in line at a bank. One seems to have strange intent. I Call Myself Isabel by Isabel Cistema is a one-per- son show about a homeless woman with a bottle ofwine who meets a trash can. Utterance by Frank Hall is set in the pioneering days of the Southwest. A man wor- ries that his past is about to catch up with him as he observes a wagon approach- ing in the distance. The Record New Works Fest (formerly May Playfest) has enjoyed increasing pop- ularity since its inception three years ago, and will be Theatre & Company's final event in its Interim space at The Market Theatre. Nightly post-performance discus- sions with the playwrights are part of the event and not to be missed. Tickets are $10 to $12. Call the box office for reservations at 571-0928. Five Waterloo musicians perform with National youth Orchestra The National Youth Orchestra of Canada (NYC) and TD Bank Financial Group announced this week selections for the 2001 Orchestra. Five musi- clans from Waterloo will be among 87 of Canada's finest young classical musicians convening July 2 at the cam- pus of Queen's University in Kingston for the 41 season of the National Youth Orchestra of Canada. Clarie Gallant, Heather Kilborn. Daniel Waldron. Graham St-taurent and Fleur Sweetman ofWatcrloo were selected from among more than 400 young play- ers who competed at tthI) national auditions last January in more than 30 locations across Canada They will participate in an intensive eight-week program, which includes instruction from an interna- tionally acclaimed faculty. and culminates with a tour of Eastern Canada, the NYO's first since 1997, as well as performances in the Northeastern United States Approximately 40 per cent of the members of Canada's professional orchestras are NYO alumni,

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