Summer Season Schedule

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Summer Season Schedule ADDITIONAL SUMMER OFFERINGS JUNE August missoula bill zeffiro children’s 19 & Marissa mulder 13|14 theatre 8:00 PM Season Kickoff Cabaret 7:00 pm|2:00 PM Alice In Wonderland A dazzling performance Join Alice, the White CABARET family SERIES SPONSOR by two of New York’s SERIES SPONSOR Rabbit and a host of biggest Cabaret stars, others when the vocalist Marissa Mulder and pianist/songwriter/ Missoula Children’s Theatre presents an original vocalist Bill Zeffiro. Hear beloved standards and musical adaptation of the Lewis Caroll classic, Alice In Wonderland. contemporary classics-to-be. Get a sneak peak at Performed by local youth. the upcoming 2021–22 Season and enter free raffles TICKETS: ADULT $13 | CHILD $8 | LAP $4 for upcoming performance tickets. TICKETS: $28 | $25 JUly august the world famous 19 kids from wisconsin 27 glenn miller orchestra 6:30 PM Live! In Living Color 7:30 PM Most Popular Swing Band in America 147 N. RURAL STREET, HARTFORD After a stellar 51st season, The World Famous Glenn family MAINSTAGE SCHAUERCENTER.ORG SERIES SPONSOR the Kids From Wisconsin Miller Orchestra, under SERIES SPONSOR 262-670-0560, EXT. 3 will be Live! In Living the direction of Nick Color in 2021. The show will take a look at some of Hilscher, brings timeless classics like “In the Mood,” BOX OFFICE: the greatest live music venues throughout the history “Moonlight Serenade,” “Chattanooga Choo Choo,” MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY of this country and the musical artists that helped “String of Pearls,” and “Tuxedo Junction” back to the 11:00 AM – 3﹕00 PM define their legacy’s. The Ed Sullivan Theater, Caesars stage. Glenn Miller’s music is alive and well with over Palace, The Grand Ole Opry, House of Blues, and 20 musicians and singers bringing the unforgettable Broadway just to name a few. sound and songs that everyone remembers to the Location: Regner Park, Silver Lining Stage Schauer. This is a show not to miss for Jazz and Swing fans alike or the incurable romantics who want to step NEW Suggested donation $10/person at the gate back in time. Musical Theater Dance Workshop TICKETS: $39 | $37 | $34 11:00 am–12:15 pm (FREE! Register at SchauerCenter.org) Summer Music, Drinks & Fun The newly renovated Courtyard of the Schauer Arts Center will be open on the second and fourth Thursday of each month from June – August. Courtyard and bar open 6:00 – 10:00 pm, live music 6:00 – 9:00 pm. Come and go anytime. Bring your friends and bring your lawn chair. A great new hangout to have a beverage, meet friends and enjoy it all outdoors. $5 Suggested donation per person at the door. JUNE JUNE JULY 10 THE ACOUSTIX 24 SCOTCH & SODA 8 EUGENE GRUBER Formed in June of 2000, The Acoustix came to be Scotch & Soda offers delightful diversity and color, Eugene Gruber is a prolific singer and songwriter after Doug and Dave got tired of playing in other rich harmonies, in a style all their own. They play performing acoustic memories from the 1970s bands and wanted to do something more casual and familiar acoustic rock tunes, from artists like: Bonnie through today. This friendly man in the music scene intimate. Using acoustic guitar and congas, the band Raitt, the Eagles, Doobie Brothers, Steely Dan, & will help take the edge off with his smooth and has found great success in the Milwaukee area. They America as well as a sprinkling of more obscure balanced vocal attack. cover anything from Neil Diamond to AC/DC and can artists—like Keb Mo, John Hiatt, Mayer Hawthorne, entertain crowds of all ages. Todd Schneider, Cas Haley, and Marcia Ball. JULY RYAN MEISEL AUGUST SIEGMANN AUGUST BEST OF 22 TRIO 12 FAMILY BAND 26 COMICALITY Ryan’s brand of jazz is modern and original while Filled with beautiful family harmonies, skilled Leave it to the captivatingly chaotic cast of Comicality paying tribute to the history of swing, bebop, hard- musicianship and a love for music, the Siegmann to blow the roof off a roofless courtyard, and do it as bop and the avant-garde. The Ryan Meisel Trio delivers Family will be bringing the best of bluegrass, acapella, only they can – with an incredible concoction of the thought-provoking, dynamic, and spirited shows. acoustic, and southern gospel to the Schauer! funniest tunes of their record-setting SIX YEAR RUN! Captivating audiences, Meisel expresses the story The award-winning Comicality will leave you howling of his lifelong musical journey through song. Ryan’s with laughter…or maybe howling at the moon. Join brand of fiery saxophone playing pushes the group’s the court jesters as they hold comedy court in the improvisational limits. new cultural courtyard!.
Recommended publications
  • GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA Highlights
    GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA Highlights Glenn Miller was born on March 1, 1904, in Clarinda, Iowa. Glenn Miller originally wrote the music for Moonlight Serenade (later to become his theme song) as an exercise when he was studying with noted arranger, Joseph Schilinger. The first Glenn Miller Orchestra, formed in 1937, was a financial failure. In March 1938, Glenn Miller launched his second band, and unlike the first band, it became an enormous success with multiple hit records and huge box office sales. At the height of the orchestra’s popularity, Glenn Miller disbanded his musical organization in 1942 to volunteer for the army. He then organized the famous Glenn Miller Army Air Force Band. On December 15, 1944, Major Glenn Miller took off in a single engine plane from England – against his better judgment – to precede his band to France, never to be seen again. The army officially declared him dead one year later. Due to popular demand, the Miller Estate authorized the formation of the present Glenn Miller Orchestra in 1956. In 1941, Glenn Miller and His Orchestra had more hit records in one year, including A String of Pearls, than anybody in the history of the recording industry. Although other songs had sold over a million record copies, in 1941 Glenn Miller’s recording of Chattanooga Choo Choo received the first Gold Record ever to be awarded. The Glenn Miller Orchestra has been “on the road” longer and more continuously than any other Big Band ever. The Glenn Miller Orchestra travels over 100,000 miles each year, playing nearly 300 dates.
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  • “In the Mood”—Glenn Miller (1939) Added to the National Recording Registry: 2004 Essay by Cary O’Dell
    “In the Mood”—Glenn Miller (1939) Added to the National Recording Registry: 2004 Essay by Cary O’Dell Glenn Miller Original release label “Sun Valley Serenade” Though Glenn Miller and His Orchestra’s well-known, robust and swinging hit “In the Mood” was recorded in 1939 (and was written even earlier), it has since come to symbolize the 1940s, World War II, and the entire Big Band Era. Its resounding success—becoming a hit twice, once in 1940 and again in 1943—and its frequent reprisal by other artists has solidified it as a time- traversing classic. Covered innumerable times, “In the Mood” has endured in two versions, its original instrumental (the specific recording added to the Registry in 2004) and a version with lyrics. The music was written (or written down) by Joe Garland, a Tin Pan Alley tunesmith who also composed “Leap Frog” for Les Brown and his band. The lyrics are by Andy Razaf who would also contribute the words to “Ain’t Misbehavin’” and “Honeysuckle Rose.” For as much as it was an original work, “In the Mood” is also an amalgamation, a “mash-up” before the term was coined. It arrived at its creation via the mixture and integration of three or four different riffs from various earlier works. Its earliest elements can be found in “Clarinet Getaway,” from 1925, recorded by Jimmy O’Bryant, an Arkansas bandleader. For his Paramount label instrumental, O’Bryant was part of a four-person ensemble, featuring a clarinet (played by O’Bryant), a piano, coronet and washboard. Five years later, the jazz piece “Tar Paper Stomp” by Joseph “Wingy” Manone, from 1930, beget “In the Mood’s” signature musical phrase.
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  • THE JERRY GRAY STORY – 1947 [Updated Jun 15, 2018 – Version JG.002E]
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  • Glenn Miller's
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  • In Death Watch for Stranger, Becoming A
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