The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current, November 23, 2016, Page 15, Image 15

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Wednesday, November 23, 2016 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
Celebrating at school...
Opera headed to
Sisters Movie House
Continuing its efforts to
bring wide-ranging cultural
events alongside the finest lat-
est release movie fare, Sisters
Movie House is set to bring
Mozart’s comedy “Così fan
tutte” in an “as live” produc-
tion from England’s Royal
Opera House on Thursday,
December 1 at 6:30 p.m.
The operatic jewel offers
a glittering take on the nature
of love in this brand new pro-
duction by director Jan Philipp
Gloger.
Based on a theme of “fian-
cée swapping” which dates
back to the 13th century,
Mozart’s opera follows the
story of two engaged couples
who are thrown into a whirl as
the men try to win the hearts
of the other’s fiancée to win
a bet. But the initial fun pro-
vokes serious consequences
as this “school for lovers”
teaches some hard lessons.
The new production is
staged in a theatre, putting a
spin on the two couples who
find the line between on-
stage and backstage becomes
increasingly blurred. An excit-
ing cast of young internation-
ally acclaimed singers, head-
lined by American soprano
15
Corrine Winters, fuel the stag-
ing, while celebrated conduc-
tor Semyon Bychkov oversees
the symphonic side of “Così
fan tutte” for the very first
time.
We’ve done a couple of
... music events here since
September. Now it’s time
for a real classic.
— Drew Kaza
“We’ve done a couple of
contemporary music events
here since September. Now
it’s time for a real classic,” said
Drew Kaza, managing partner
of Quoin Media & Entertain-
ment, the parent company of
Sisters Movie House. “To kick
off a fresh season of opera and
ballet from our friends in the
United Kingdom at the Royal
Opera House, we couldn’t be
more pleased to have such a
crowd-pleasing comedy. And
of course, you can’t lose with
Mozart.”
Tickets are $12.50 at
www.sistersmoviehouse.com.
PHOTO BY JERRY BALDOCK
Getting a cookie from your forehead to your mouth is not so easy at Sisters Middle School’s
‘End of the Trimester Celebration’ awards and games assembly.
Climate change lawsuit can proceed
EUGENE, (AP) — A fed-
eral judge in Oregon says a
lawsuit brought by young cli-
mate activists against the fed-
eral government can proceed.
U.S. District Judge Ann
Aiken on Thursday denied
requests by the federal gov-
ernment as well as trade
groups representing energy
giants to dismiss the case.
They had argued that law-
makers and federal agencies,
not by the court, should deter-
mine climate change policy.
The lawsuit filed last year
in federal court in Eugene
alleges the federal govern-
ment has known for decades
that carbon pollution causes
climate change but has failed
to curb greenhouse gas
emissions.
The plaintiffs include 21
youths as well as climate sci-
entist James Hansen. They
are seeking a court decision
that finds the government is
violating their constitutional
rights to life, liberty and prop-
erty by allowing dangerous
emissions to be released into
the atmosphere.