Look, up in the sky It’s a bird, it’s a plane … it’s a whole lotta planes descending on Arnold Palmer Regional Airport in Unity for the 75th Anniversary Shop ‘n Save Westmoreland County Airshow on Saturday and Sunday. The show gets underway at 10:15 each day, with The Heroes
A night at the ballet doesn’t tend to produce gales of laughter.
But hark, “Don Quixote,” the three-act ballet based on Miguel de Cervantes’ famous novel, “Don Quixote de la Mancha,” might be the exception to the rule.
“I love it. It’s so different from so many other ballets,” says Analeah Buckley, 18, who’s playing Kitri, a lead role and the love interest in Rachael’s School of Dance’s upcoming production. “Ballets are usually pretty serious and in the drama category, but every once in awhile there’s a comedic ballet like ‘Don Quixote.’ Those are so much fun to do.”
Leobardo Perez-Rivas Leobardo Leo Perez-Rivas passed away on February 8, 2021, at age 78. He was born near the Andes in a little village called Pueblo Nuevo in the state of Merida, Venezuela, on September 12, 1942. His life was cut short while living in Seville, Spain, when he became ill from COVID-19. Leo was the third of 10 children. He was raised in Venezuela and attended Liceo Libertador school before completing a degree in economics at the University of the Andes in 1965. He was then awarded a grant to travel and study in England. He completed a master’s degree in economics at the University of Exeter and a second master’s degree at the University of Cambridge.
Shakespeare, Cervantes and the Mysteries of Authorship
As attractive as speculation about Shakespeare and Cervantesâ authorship may be, looking closer at their lives shows just how irrelevant class, education and conspiracy theories are in terms of explaining their genius.
First Folio of William Shakespeare s plays at the Victoria & Albert Museum. Photo: Steve Evans/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0
Culture13/Jan/2021
William Shakespeare and Miguel de Cervantes, two of the most important writers of literature, are surrounded by a halo of mystery related to authorship.
In the case of Shakespeare, the question of whether he is the true author of his plays has circulated for some time. In the case of Cervantes, mysteries about authorship tend to concern who wrote the sequel to the first part of