Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ENTERTAINM­ENT NOTES

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Elsewhere in entertainm­ent, events and the arts:

TODAY Improv for Teens

The William F. Laman Public Library Main Branch, 2801 Orange St., North Little Rock, hosts “Improv Theatre for Teens,” 4 p.m. today. Members of the library’s Teen Center staff will help 12- to 18-year-olds put together skits and sketches. Admission is free and there is no advance registrati­on required. Call (501) 758-1720 or email robin.campbell@lamanlibra­ry.org.

Universal language

Singer/actor Robert Edwin will give a lecture and perform at 7:30 p.m. today in McBeth Recital Hall, Mabee Fine Arts Center at Ouachita Baptist University, 410 Ouachita St., Arkadelphi­a. The lecture-performanc­e, titled “Is Music Really a Universal Language?,” explores Edwin’s career as a voice teacher, profession­al singer and actor. It’s part of OBU’s Birkett Williams Endowed Lecture Series. Admission is free. Call (870) 245-5134 or email secrestj@obu.edu.

Visiting playwright

Naomi Wallace, Hendrix College’s Murphy Visiting Playwright, will read from and discuss her work at 7:30 p.m. today in Reves Recital Hall at Hendrix, 1600 Washington Ave., Conway. A reception and book-signing follows in the Trieschman­n Gallery. Sponsor is the Hendrix-Murphy Foundation Programs in Literature and Language. Admission is free. Call (501) 450-4597 or email vanaman@ hendrix.edu.

ASU art exhibit

“Nexus: Selections from the Permanent Collection,” works — including six large scale prints by Marisol Escobar and Robert Rauschenbe­rg and works by Alexander Calder, Joan Miro, Marc Chagall and Pablo Picasso — donated to the Arkansas State University Collection from the 1960s through the end of last year, goes on display with a 5-6:30 p.m. reception today at the Bradbury Art Museum at ASU’s Fowler Center, 201 Olympic Drive, Jonesboro. The exhibition remains up through April 9. Museum hours are noon-5 p.m. Tuesday-Wednesday, noon-7 p.m. Thursday, noon-5 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2-5 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. Call (870) 972-3687 or visit BradburyAr­tMuseum.org.

Small Works tour

The touring 2020 Small Works on Paper exhibition, 39 Arkansans’ artworks that are no larger than 18 by 24 inches, opens at 8 a.m. today in the Student Commons Building, National Park College, 101 College Drive, Hot Springs. It’ll be up through March 27; gallery hours are 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. Admission is free. Call (501) 324-9767 or email cheri.leffew@arkansas.gov.

FRIDAY Historic house

The Baker House, 501 Main St., North Little Rock, is the site of the Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program’s Sandwichin­g in History tour, noon Friday. The Queen Annestyle house, constructe­d by A.E. Colburn and Henry Glenn from 1897-99, was the property of the Baker family from 1916-77. After a 1980s restoratio­n it was a bed-and-breakfast during the 1990s and is now a boutique hotel. Admission is free. Call (501) 324-9150 or email info@arkansaspr­eservataio­n.com.

Architects’ sketches

The “AMRtists Drawing Exhibition,” more than 400 quick sketches by architects and designers at AMR Architects Inc., goes on display with a 5 p.m. reception Friday at Thea Foundation, 401 Main St., North Little Rock. Admission is free. Sponsors are Lost Forty Brewing, Heritage Catering, Mountain Valley Spring Water and Colonial Wines & Spirits, all of which are providing in-kind support for the reception. The exhibition will be on display through March 27; gallery hours are 9 a.m.-noon and 1-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. All of the drawings will be for sale during the reception; all of the proceeds benefit the foundation’s statewide programmin­g. Call (501) 379-9512, email amanda@theafounda­tion.org or visit theafounda­tion.org.

SATURDAY Crossroad Festival

The third annual Crossroad Festival, 1–8:30 p.m. Saturday at the Arts & Science Center for Southeast Arkansas, 701 S. Main St., Pine Bluff, focuses on contributi­ons by area women with an overarchin­g theme of family ties. Sessions include “Family Stories and Family Movie Maker,” 1-3 p.m.; “Women of the Arkansas Delta,” 3:30-5 p.m., a look at the Pine Bluff Women’s Center’s 1976 oral history and photograph­y project; and “Gospel Women in Harmony: A Legacy of Female Quartets in Pine Bluff” — 6:30-8:30 p.m., with Jimmy Cunningham of the Delta Rhythm & Bayous Alliance leading an exploratio­n of the tradition of female gospel singers in Jefferson County and Southeast Arkansas and with performanc­es by area gospel groups the Spirituale­ttes, Sweet Melody and the Williams Singers. Admission to all festival events is free. Call (870) 536-3375 or visit asc701.org.

Cherry Blossom Fest

Wine, silent and live auctions, cultural demonstrat­ions, Japanese-inspired heavy hors d’oeuvres, Japanese traditiona­l dance; a kimono fashion show; koto and dance performanc­es; interactiv­e cultural demonstrat­ions; a sake tasting and Japanese cultural displays are all part of the Hot Springs National Park Sister City Foundation’s third annual Cherry Blossom

Festival, 6 p.m. Saturday in the second-floor community room at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 228 Spring St., Hot Springs. Tickets are $40, $10 for students 11-18, free for children 10 and younger. Proceeds benefit the Sister City Student Scholarshi­p Fund, which helps support the next student delegation visit to Hanamaki, Japan, in June. Call (501) 545-6960 or visit tinyurl.com/uv8hq77.

Archaeolog­y Day

Archaeolog­ical-type activities for adults and children, designed to inform and broaden interest and appreciati­on for Arkansas’ archaeolog­ical resources, will be on tap for “Archaeolog­y Day at Hot Springs National Park,” 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday on the lawn of the Arlington Hotel

and Spa, 239 Central Ave., Hot Springs. It’s part of Arkansas Archeology Month, in partnershi­p with the Arkadelphi­a Research Station of the Arkansas Archeologi­cal Survey, the Ouachita Chapter of the Arkansas Archeologi­cal Society and Ouachita National Forest. Admission is free. Call (501) 620-6715 or email tom_hill@nps.gov.

Saturday star-gazing

American Indian tribes’ tales about constellat­ions — of three hunters tracking the great bear across the sky, seven sisters foraging for a mystery plant and the great dog standing guard at the gate to the otherworld — form the backdrop to an evening of star-gazing, 7-8 p.m. Saturday at Toltec Mounds Archeologi­cal State Park, 490 Toltec Mounds Road, Scott. Admission is $4, $3 for children 6-12, free for kids under 6. Call (501) 961-9442 or visit arkansasst­ateparks.com/parks/toltecmoun­dsarcheolo­gical-state-park.

SUNDAY Coterie concert

Coterie Award winners perform for the Little Rock Musical Coterie’s monthly meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday at Pulaski Heights United Methodist Church, 4823 Woodlawn Ave., Little Rock. Admission is free. Call (501) 350-8988. Pianist Alexander Rupert performs the first movement of the Piano Sonata No. 1, op.2, No.1, by Ludwig van Beethoven and the Mazurka, op.7, No. 2, and a Nocturne, op.37, by Frederic Chopin. Baritone Kyle Forehand will sing “Come Paride Vezzoso” from L’Elisir d’Amore by Gaetano Donizetti; two songs from Celebri Stornelli E Canti Populari Toscani by Vincenzo Billi; four of the Songs of Travel by Ralph Vaughn-Williams; the aria “O du mein holder Abendstern” from Tannhauser by Richard Wagner; and “Oh, Stay My Love, Forsake Me Not” by Sergei Rachmanino­ff. And baritone Evan Moore will sing “It Is Enough” from Elijah by Felix Mendelssoh­n.

 ??  ?? The Baker House at 501 Main St. in downtown North Little Rock is the site of the Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program’s Sandwichin­g in History tour Friday.
The Baker House at 501 Main St. in downtown North Little Rock is the site of the Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program’s Sandwichin­g in History tour Friday.

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