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  • Point Loma Playhouse proudly presents the Incomparable Devlin Joined by San Diego favorite, pianist and songwriter Richard James. Actress/Singer Devlin is very excited to bring her New York Cabaret show "Wild Women" to The Point Loma Playhouse on April 8, 2023 at 8:00 p.m., doors open at 7:30. Wild Women combine jazz, blues, emotional ballads and pop songs proving wild women do get the blues, but they also have a hell of a good time along the way. Originally produced and performed in New York City at Helen’s and The Metropolitan Room, Wild Women was arranged, and music directed by the multi award winning arranger, singer and songwriter Rick Jensen. The show was later recorded live and became the CD “Devlin Live In New York”. Photo: Daren Scott Devlin has worked locally for North Coast Repertory Theatre' The Spitfire Grill, San Diego Repertory Theatre' 6 Women With Brain Death, Moxie Theatre' Eternally Bad, Ion Theatre' Sunday in The Park With George, Diversionary Theatre' Hair , San Diego Musical Theatre' The Full Monty and Vantage Theatre' Frankie and Johnny in The Clair De Lune.
  • Sponsored by UC San Diego's Department of Visual Arts and Film Studies Program. "The specific work in question is Wharton’s novel 'The Age of Innocence' (published 1920, set in the 1870s). But Steve Fagin does not set out to adapt this novel in any way, shape or form. To address it, yes. To circle it. Surround it. Question it. Stalk it, even. To treat it as a cultural site (across, literally, its many editions) and also, in a virtual-cubistic sense, an imaginary space that one can inhabit and poke around in. To unsettle its foundations, its comfortable drift into history, including media history."
– Adrian Martin Steve Fagin is an American artist and former professor of Visual Arts at the University of California, San Diego. He has produced a series of feature length videos, including "The Amazing Voyage of Gustave Flaubert and Raymond Roussel," "The Machine That Killed Bad People" and "TropiCola" (the latter produced in collaboration with some of the most important theatre actors and producers in Havana). RSVP: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/515273576137
  • Learn about putting solar panels on your home! Have you ever wished you could have locked in that 1.75% 30 year montage rate or lamented the price of gas today? Inflation is hurting our wallets. Product sizes are shrinking and prices are rising. It costs close to $100 to fill a 20 gallon gas tank. Natural gas and electric rates are at an all time high. SDG&E recently announced that rates are going up even more beginning January 1. Fortunately, there is one way to reverse the effects of inflation and help the environment - solar energy. It is possible to lock in electricity rates that SDG&E charged in 2012. If you have ever wondered how solar could benefit you but wanted more information, don’t miss this informative workshop. Please bring your SDG&E Bill and reusable water bottle/coffee cup. Stay Social! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
  • Misleading and false information is muddying efforts to uncover who is responsible for the deadly blast that killed hundreds of people.
  • The transition to a new power buying system means that nearly 80% of customers now pay for electricity purchased by someone else.
  • Now’s the time to indulge your taste buds and experience some of California’s best Pinot Noir! Join us as Santa Lucia Highlands Wine Artisans presents "Mighty Cool Pinot," at Tower 23, on Wednesday, June 7, 2023. Featuring more than 50 of the best coastal-cooled, Californian-grown Pinot Noirs alongside carefully curated paired bites. Meet the winemakers as you taste your way through these multifaceted wines. Featuring wineries such as Bernardus, Morgan, McIntyre Vineyards, ROAR, Pisoni, Wrath, and more. Tickets are $65. See you at Mighty Cool Pinot! Tower23 Hotel on Facebook / Instagram
  • Must-see visual art exhibitions right now: Tom Driscoll at SIP Art Space; Sofie Ramos at Bread and Salt; Armando de la Torre at Athenaeum Art Center; 'Africa in Context' at Mesa College Art Gallery; and Perry Vásquez at Quint Gallery.
  • L.A. is housing more people than ever, but an even greater number keep falling into homelessness. This first-of-its-kind prevention program calculates who seems most at risk for landing on the street.
  • Wikipedia defines the Lunar New Year as the beginning of a calendar year whose months are moon cycles, based on the lunar calendar or lunisolar calendar. The Lunar New Year as a celebration is observed by numerous cultures. It is featured in the Chinese calendar of the East Asian cultural sphere the Hindu-Buddhist calendars of South and Southeast Asia, the Islamic calendar and the Jewish calendar in the Middle East, and is also celebrated by the indigenous Nisga’a people of Canada. History.com further comments that the Lunar New Year is one of the most important celebrations of the year among East and Southeast Asian cultures, including Chinese, Vietnamese and Korean communities, among others. The New Year celebration is usually celebrated for multiple days—not just one day as in the Gregorian calendar’s New Year. In 2023, Lunar New Year begins on January 22. China’s Lunar New Year is known as the Spring Festival or Chūnjié in Mandarin, while Koreans call it Seollal and Vietnamese refer to it as Tết. Tied to the lunar calendar, the holiday began as a time for feasting and to honor household and heavenly deities, as well as ancestors. The New Year typically begins with the first new moon that occurs between the end of January and spans the first 15 days of the first month of the lunar calendar—until the full moon arrives. This class will be taught by poet Jim Moreno on January 22, the start of the Lunar New Year of 2023. Beginning and seasoned poets will experience a multicultural poetic dance that resonates to the tune of both Wikipedia and History.com definitions. The goal, of course, is to create abundant room for Lunar New Year poets to expand cultural horizons and consciousness. Participants in the class are welcomed to the Container of respect and safety that are the foundation of Moreno’s classes. Chinese poet Lou You, Southern Song Dynasty (1127 – 1279) wrote, In early morning, a north wind brings snow; It’s a blessing from Heaven arriving in time. I haven’t yet raised my half cup of Tusu wine to toast the New Year; Busy writing peach wood charms by lamplight. Contemporary Vietnamese poet Nguyễn Bá Trạc wrote, New Year’s Eve / Seven thousand people beating tin walls in lieu of firecrackers / Sounds of joy mixed with sorrow / Has the nightmare passed yet / When will spring come? What comes after Tết / where will we go… Twelve-year-old Korean poet Amy Shin writes, Before breakfast, every member of the family must respectively worship the ancestors. We set a ritual table that has the ancestral tablet and ritual food on top, Offerings of fresh and colourful herbs, fish, and fruit. To worship the ancestors, we bow, give offerings, and say prayers. We ask the Gods that we may live long and be healthy throughout the year. Moreno has stated that our nation is not a melting pot; it’s a mosaic of multiple cultures. In other words, that makes the opposite of racism, the polarity of truth, that one culture can heal the sickness in another culture, e.g. the Ukranians as models for our country being in unity and moving away from polarity. Perhaps Thich Nhat Hanh, a Vietnamese Buddhist monk and poet’s poem, "Call Me By My True Name," expresses the essence of the Lunar New Year when he writes, Don’t say that I will depart tomorrow—even today I am still arriving. Look deeply: every second I am arriving to be a bud on a Spring branch, to be a tiny bird, with still-fragile wings, learning to sing in my new nest, to be a caterpillar in the heart of a flower, to be a jewel hiding itself in a stone. I still arrive, in order to laugh and to cry, to fear and to hope. These and other poets will serve as a harbinger for how the Lunar New Year may introduce you to a happy and creative 2023. Sign up and pay the fee. Jim will then e-mail the class syllabus to you after Writers Ink forwards your e-mail address to him the day before the class on Saturday, Jan. 21, 2023. You will receive your class syllabus with a bibliography. You will also receive the Zoom ID link to this class when you receive your syllabus. Join Mr. Moreno for this class which resonates with belonging, dignity and respect for all cultures and colors of skin. You will be emailed the Zoom link 24 hours before the start of class. Be sure to check your Spam/Junk folders just in case! If you sign up less than 24 hours before the start of the class, please email Kristen at programs@sandiegowriters.org for your link.
  • Top female surfers from all around the world are in Oceanside this weekend, competing in the Nissan SuperGirl Surf Pro. But the event goes beyond a championship title and is intended to inspire young girls to hit the waves.
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