Heather Brunsdon dancers win triple
15 Apr, 2021 10:31 PM
3 minutes to read
Heather Brunsdon School of Dance scholarship winners are (from left) Charlie-Grace Kinney, 10, tap; Mercedes Lang, 15, jazz and Emma Lu, 9, ballet. Photo / Paul Taylor
Heather Brunsdon School of Dance scholarship winners are (from left) Charlie-Grace Kinney, 10, tap; Mercedes Lang, 15, jazz and Emma Lu, 9, ballet. Photo / Paul Taylor
Hawkes Bay Today
By: Brenda Vowden
Heather Brunsdon School of Dance scholarship winners are (from left) Charlie-Grace Kinney, 10, tap; Mercedes Lang, 15, jazz and Emma Lu, 9, ballet.
PHOTO: PAUL TAYLOR
Three dancers from the Heather Brunsdon School of Dance took out the scholarship trifecta at the Napier Performing Arts Competitions held at the Municipal Theatre during Easter.
Raya And The Last Dragon (Photo: Disney);
Coming 2 America (Photo: Amazon Studios);
Zack Snyder’s Justice League (Photo: Courtesy of HBO Max);
The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run (Photo: Paramount Plus)
Graphic: Libby McGuire
Blockbusters are back in a big way this March, even if movie theaters aren’t. Many of the month’s biggest titles, including the showdown between a king of the monsters and a big-ass ape, would probably be box office behemoths during any other moment in recent history. Here and now, they’re hedging their bets, going to a few multiplexes to court the dumbass (or vaccinated) demographic while simultaneously hitting a major streaming platform for those of us who choose life over Dolby sound. Meanwhile, the content stream offered by Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, et al. flows freely. This month, it just happens to also include what may be the most loudly clamored-for director’s cut ever. (Hint: Does he bleed? He will.) Keep reading to find out what
the Enterprise staff
Nurse Gail Lautenschuetz draws a dose of coronavirus vaccine Feb. 25 at the North Country Community College gym in Saranac Lake.
(Enterprise photo â Elizabeth Izzo) Signup for COVID-19 vaccination clinics are often only scheduled online, and since many seniors have challenges accessing or using technology, many have had a hard time getting appointments. A new pilot program is aimed at filling this gap. It’s the product of new teamwork between Kinney Drugs, the New York Association on Aging and county offices of the aging. Beginning next week, a 10-week, 21-county pilot program will offer local vaccination clinics for people aged 65 and older. Local offices for the aging will provide assistance over the phone for seniors to make appointments for these clinics, including in Essex and Franklin counties.
Moxie seems designed for the same Gen Z audience as Olivia Wilde’s 2019 film.
Designed for, not created by, mind you:
Moxie has the air of a hipster parent playing their record collection for an indifferent adolescent, asking, “Doesn’t this slap?” It tries, but the dialogue in the film is cringeworthy, particularly when it incorporates AAVE slang. (It’s smart enough not to put “Get the bag, sis” or “That’s fire” in the mouths of its white characters, to be fair.) Learning from the mistakes of the riot grrrl movement,
Moxie does incorporate intersectionality into its feminism in fact, one of the film’s most valuable messages is that the best thing an ally can do is step aside and let marginalized people speak for themselves. But you can still tell a couple well-meaning white ladies wrote the script.