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A diverse and entertaining lineup of music that includes Broadway, Big Band and opera, as well as country, a variety of instrumentalists and vocalists, plus three plays featuring the Santa Cruz Shoestring Players, is coming to the Community Performance & Art Center this spring and summer.
Great entertainment is always a perk. So is having CPAC in Green Valley and Sahuaritaâs backyard.
Two seasoned show-goers, Marilyn Snyder and John Nelson, have adored live entertainment since their teen years. Snyder recalls seeing âCarmenâ in Columbus, Ohio, as her first live entertainment, and Nelson remembers a variety of great live entertainment in Reno, Lake Tahoe and California s Bay Area.
(Welcome to
Mission: Impossible franchise as we sprint toward the release of the seventh film in the franchise.)
There are two phases to the career of Thomas Cruise Mapother IV. In the first phase of his career,
Tom Cruise worked with exciting and distinctive auteurist directors, often being pushed to deliver daring and adventurous work. Not every film Cruise made in this phase was a creative success, but working with filmmakers like Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, Oliver Stone, Stanley Kubrick, Cameron Crowe, and Paul Thomas Anderson led the star to unlock deep wells of talent in genres as diverse as Gothic horror, ’50s teen drama, and romantic comedy.
Submitted photo/ Andy Plavny
Candace Campana of Struthers has performed The Star Spangled Banner at many major sporting events and is attracting attention for her own songs, like the pop country single Goodie Two Shoes Girl.
EDITOR’S NOTE: This is one of a series of Saturday profiles of area residents and their stories. To suggest a profile, contact features editor Burton Cole at bcole@tribtoday.com or metro editor Marly Reichert at mreichert@tribtoday.com
Candace Campana is a songwriter herself, but the song she’s sung the most is a familiar one
by a composer named Francis Scott Key.
Lawmaker Under Fire for Calling Black Colleague Buckwheat During Debate
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A Colorado lawmaker is under fire after calling a black female colleague buckwheat during a tense exchange.
Richard Holtorf, a Republican legislator, said during a debate about military rules of engagement. While struggling to get his point across, Holtorf looked over at a colleague and said, I m getting there. Don t worry, Buckwheat. I m getting there.
He followed up by saying, That s an endearing term, by the way. The remark led to an immediate recess in the session and sparked a brief shouting match between Holtorf and two other representatives.