May 31, 2000 Page B2 (Tlrv ^lortlaub ffibeeruer Jlurtlanò Metro/Focus Titanic : the Tony award-winner sai Is into Portland c o m Kim it.psrom LURTutBuBll.CMi4iB5tK'lK B ro a d w a y ’s re c o rd -b re a k in g phenomenon is headed to Portland! Eighty-eight years after the R.M.S. Titanic first set sail, the legend o f the greatest sailing vessel the world has ever known is now a remarkable theatrical adventure. The New Yorker dubbed Titanic “the gem o f the ocean,” while The London Spectator called it “a masterpiece.” The story behind the legendary m aid en v o y ag e o p en ed at Broadway’s Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on April 23,1997. Titanic soon went on to win five Tony Awards in 1997, including Best Musical, Best Book, Best Score, Best O rchestrations (Jonathan Tunick) and the Outer Critics Circ le Awards for Outstanding, Scenic Design (Stewart Laing) and Outstanding Lighting (Paul Gallo), Board this ship o f dreams as the lives and yearnings o f the crew, staff and passengers unfold against Titanic's awesome backdrop o f facts more incredible than any fiction. The pride o f nautical engineering, the largest moving object in the world, the “unsinkable” R.M.S. Titanic went down in just two and a half hours after steaming full speed into an iceberg. D irected by Richard Jones, the acclaimed British director. Titanic has a story book by Academy Award- and Tony Award Peter Stone (“ 1776,” g < $ 7 c = Kay Walbye as Ida Straus and S. Marc Jordan as Isador Straus in the Tony Award-winning musical Titanic, story and hook by Peter Stone, music and lyrics by Mury Yeston, and directed by Richard Jones. "Woman o f the Y ear") and music and lyrics by Tony Award-winner Maury Yetson ("N ine," "Grand Hotel”). Choreoography by Lynne Taylor- Corbett, with sets and costumes by Stewart Laing, and lighting design by Paul Gallo. The original Broadway c ast reco rd in g o f T itanic w as produced by RCA Victor on the BMG Classics label. Shortly after the album was released, it became the fastest selling Broadway cast recording in RCA history and was nominated for aGrammy Award. Performances o f Titanic will be at the Civic Auditorium, located at SW 3rd & Clay. Tickets are $ 17.50 - $60 and can be p u rc h a se d by phone at Ticketm aster 503/790-ARTS and Ticketmaster outlets, or the Portland Center forthe Performing Arts on SW Broadway and Main, and at the Portland Opera offices, 1515 SW Morrison. For more information, call503/241 -1407 or see their website at w w w .broadw ayseries.com or www.portlandopera.org. Step back in time at the historic Bybee House on Sauvie Island A summer tradition for more than 30 years, the James F. Bybee House on Sauvie Island opens for visitors June 3,2000. The house will be open on weekends from 12 pm - 5 pm through September 3, 2000. There is a suggested admission donation of $3. The Classical Revival house mirrors theculture and development o f the m id-1800’s settlement period in Oregon and is located in the Howell Territorial Park on pastoral Sauvie Island. Grounds include an Agricultural Museum, PioneerOrchard, wetlands and picnic grounds. The house is furnished as it may have looked between 1858-85 and encompasses the lives ofboth the Bybees and the Howells. The Agriculture Museum, which illustrates typical nineteenth-century fanning practices in Oregon, grown from stock carried over the Oregon Trail, contains more than one hundred different apple varieties. The Oregon Historical Society offer interpretive tours o f the residence and the Agricultural Museum. Metro Parks and Greenspaces operates the park and facilities. The Oregon Historical Society will offer a series o f family programs on select Sundays throughout the summer at the Bybee House. A Day in the Country Heritage Series presents the perfect opportunity for families to ring a picnic lunch and learn about nineteenth century country life. Each program features hands-on activities for children o f all ages and house/ bam tours related to each topic. Specific emphasis for these programs will be on Sauvie Island - it’s past and unique culture and the Victorian Age in general. All programs are from 1 -3 pm. and are free. Someofthe programs require registration, which can be made upon arriving at the park. On June 11, Explore Family History. Learn about the Bybee Family and how to trace your own family line. Registration begins at 12:30 pm. Call 503/ 306-5221. IFCC Gallery and works by Carolyn Mills & Davis McGinty C O S TRIBUTE DSTOR) f or T he P ortland O b se rm r The Interstate Firehouse Cultural C enter presents tw o exhibitions during June from artists Carolyn Mills and Davis McGinty. The shows run June 1-30. The Main Gallery features Carolyn M ills’ exhibition focusing on rape and society’s complicity through silence. Steel and m ixed-m edia sculpture, drawings, and text are utilized to deploy the artist’s creative intent around this difficult subject. The piece, / become silence for example, boldly embodies the subject matter: a stark, white, sculpted, female form set within a framed blood-red backdrop. Provocative texts are used th ro u g h o u t the e x h ib itio n to encourage a societal dialogue. Davis McGinty’s large-scale, acrylic and oil paintings are featured in the Entry Gallery. These valorous works cap tu re the m oral c h aracter o f individual subjects based on the collective experience o f the African- American male from the past glory o f the BuffaloSoldiertothecomplexities o f modem man. Like his paintings, the 44-year old artist, is physically massive. In fact,the nationally recognized body-builder was awarded the Mr. Oregon title in 1984 and in 1991 placed eighth in the Mr. USA contest. For several years McGinty found creative satisfaction singing and playing saxophone in Portland-area blues bands. But after a nearly tw enty year hiatus, he returned to the artistic passion he’d abandoned following college. He describes his work as “black culture art” which contains strong social m essages that reflect his positive upbringing in a family with 20 siblings. In Print \ í l ‘H¡< I Dark Afraid of the Dark • f 4 * — « ’ « »0 • ) I IM »«rt«» Ntghijvnr By Jim Myers Lawrence Hill Books; 2000 Z tó L j Live Music Nightly Redeemer by Davis McGinty, 1998. Acrylic and oil on canvas. I le.irtv Pub Fare OnJunel,from5to7:30pm.,IFCCwill be having a free, public opening reception. IFCC is located at 5340 N. Interstate Avenue (Tri-Met Bus #5). Gallery hours are Tuesday- Saturday, from noon to 5 pm. Spirits /Available in M any Forms Most blacks believe that race still haunts us, and most whites think w e’re getting beyond it. But Americans on both sides are baffled as to why blacks and whites see so many things so differently. Finally, here is the definitive answer for anyone who has contact with people o f another race - in companies, schools, neighborhoods, or other social situations - a book that finally reveals that race is not the unfathomable mystery it is usually made out to be. In a revealing, accessible, and stimulating discussion based on little-known facts and innovative research, Jim Myers explains why whites are uneasy about blacks and how blacks react to this, why blacks suspect the worst from whites and why white explanations don ’ t work, why myths about sex remain so prevalent, why blacks and whites don’t watch the same TV shows, why they often think differently bout their hair and their bodies, and what they can do together to make their relations better. J »>6 \< u lh Russell Slreel, I’oi il.m d , Oregon (><)>) 2 0 2 - 6 » IO u iv u .n u m en,im ins.t oni „ WE’R E OPEN LAQUISHAS BEAUTY SUPPLY ST 309 N.E. WYGANT P h o n e :(5 0 3 )2 4 9 -7 3 2 9 Finding Mr. Write _ Would you buy a house without seeing the inside? Would you buy a car without checking under the hood and taking it for a spin? Probably not. Then why is it that you will choose a mate without knowing w hat’s going on inside him? Most o f you would agree that love letters are a great way into your heart. But though your man fills them with sweet words and promises, do you know what he's really saying between the lines? Stop looking at the words and check out how he writes. Handwriting doesn’t lie. Handwriting isbrain writing; it is frozen body language. Finding Mr. Write is the compass that will aid you in your search for Mr. Right. A n th o n y H u f f O w n er: Tij^uana Hu ff By Beverly East Willard; 2000 M an ager: Q ia n n a E n g lis h S p en d $ 2 5 d o l l a r s a n d g e t $ 3 o f f y o u r p u r c h a s e . F r e e d e liv e r y w i l h p u r c h a s e o f $25 d o l l a r s o r m ore. A New S ian » on S e le c tin g »he P e r fe c t M a te BEV ERLEY 12 P a g e r : 73 1 -0 8 5 9 EA ST À r