Page 8 November 29, 2017 Arts & ENTERTAINMENT Portland’s Singing Christmas Tree is a 350-voice choir performing contemporary and traditional holiday music at the Keller Auditorium with shows continuing through Sunday, Dec. 3. Singing Christmas Tree 55th annual show includes Jefferson Dancers P ierCe g irkin Portland’s Singing Christmas Tree is lighting up Keller Audi- torium for its 55th season with an all-new lineup of songs and per- formances, as well as some old fan favorites. The 350-voice choir performs a two-hour show that showcases both contemporary and traditional holiday music with performances Thursday, Nov. 30 through Sun- day, Dec. 3 at Keller Auditorium. The production will also in- clude dance numbers by the Jeffer- son Dancers, special performanc- es by local actors and musicians, and a cinematic “living nativity” - a Hollywood-esque version of the story of the birth of Jesus Christ. No production of the Singing Christmas Tree is identical year-to- year, said Wes Walterman, director by and CEO of Portland’s Singing Christmas Tree. Walterman spends countless hours during the off-sea- son making sure each year’s show is new and exciting. The Singing Christmas Tree held its debut performance at Benson Polytechnic High School in 1962 with a modest budget of $500. Since then, the show has grown substantially, and has had to relocate multiple times to ac- commodate increasing audience sizes. In 1968, the Singing Christ- mas Tree settled into Keller Au- ditorium, and has been there ever since. In the spirit of holiday charity, the Singing Christmas Tree orga- nization makes sizeable donations to various youth programs and high school music programs, in- cluding Doernbecher Children’s Hospital, the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, and the Snowman Foundation. Despite many of the show’s ex- plicitly religious themes, the orga- nizers and producers of the Sing- ing Christmas Tree have made great efforts to foster inclusivity among religious and secular audi- ence members. The second half is more reli- gious in nature, with a live-scored nativity performance and a hand- ful of gospel tunes. The “cinemat- ic nativity,” as the producers call it, may be the crown jewel of the Singing Christmas Tree. Tickets for Portland’s Singing Christmas Tree are on sale now through Portland’5 Centers for the Arts website. Pierce Girkin is a writer from Metro. Holiday Breakfast Theater The Peppermint Bear stars in Lakewood Theater’s Holiday Magic Breakfast theatre program. Santa’s workshop is in a tizzy when his chair and then magic jingle bells go missing. Lakewood Theatre Company presents an all-new version of their annual Holiday Magic Breakfast Theatre production with the presentation of the Peppermint Bear and the Giant Elf. Performances take place at 11:30 a.m. in Lakewood’s community meeting room on Dec. 2, 9, 10, 16, 17, 22 and 23. There will also be 9:30 a.m. shows on Dec. 9, 16, 22 and 23. The theatre is located at the Lakewood Center for the Arts, 368 S. State St. in Lake Oswego. Tickets are $15 for adults and $12 for stu- dents. Advance reservations are required by calling the box office 503 635-3901 or order online at lakewood-center.org.