September - Entire Issue - The Entertainer Newspaper
Transcription
September - Entire Issue - The Entertainer Newspaper
PAGE 2 • September 2016 • The Entertainer September 2016 Pendleton Round-Up gets set to ‘Let ’er Buck’ P endleton may be the country’s most authentic Western lifestyle vacation destination, and the town will once again welcome guests from across the country to the Pendleton Round-Up, to be held this year from Sept. 14 through 17. Fortunately for Mid-Columbia residents, this highly acclaimed celebration of Western culture is just an hour away from the Tri-Cities. Visitors today still drive into Pendleton on routes established during the Oregon Trail emigration and are met with genuine hospitality. After harvest each year, residents of the Pendleton area come down from the rolling eastern Oregon wheat fields to celebrate the round-up of cowboys, Indians, family members and friends, both new and old. History and culture are on full display in recognition of the indomitable spirit of horses and the men and women who ride them. The 106th annual Pendleton RoundUp will be America’s largest four-day PRCA Rodeo, but it remains true to its origins. The action takes place on a pristine grass infield, where colorful wooden chute gates create a picturesque backdrop. It’s where top cowboy competitors recline in the sun and cheer each other on, just as they might have done 100 years ago. The Umatilla, Cayuse and Walla Walla tribes of Native Americans were rounding up horses in the area long before the rodeo began. Tribal participation at the Pendleton Round-Up provides historic cultural context with a living display of more than 300 tipis, or tepees, plus traditional foods, music and artisans. This year is the 106th Pendleton Round-Up and the 100th year of the Happy Canyon Indian Pageant and Wild West Show. Weeklong celebration A team of oxen pulls a covered wagon through the streets of downtown Pendleton in the Friday RoundUp Westward Ho Parade. Although the rodeo arena heats up starting Sept. 14, there are activities all week long. Events kick off on Saturday, Sept. 10, with the downtown Dress-Up Parade at 10 a.m. and an outdoor concert by countrymusic Lee Brice at 7 p.m. On Monday, Sept. 12, there’ll be a golf tournament at 8 a.m.The Banner Bank PBR Classic features two nights of bull riding on Monday and Tuesday.. The five-night Happy Canyon Indian Pageant, Sept. 14-17, portrays the epic story of the old West each night, with authentic Native American traditions followed by wild west hijinks. The Westward Ho! Parade at 10 a.m. on Sept. 16 is an iconic display of wagons, stagecoaches and buggies. Adults may wet their whistles at the Round-Up’s historic “Let ’er Buck Room” or dance the night away at Goldie’s Bar at the Canyon. For information and ticket sales, visit pendletonroundup.com, and make plans to ride into the old West at the Pendleton Round-Up. As the locals say, “Let ’er Buck!” Lee Brice will kick off Round-Up festivities on Saturday Country star will perform in the Happy Canyon Arena Pendleton Round-Up Week begins Sept. 10 with a concert by country star Lee Brice at 7 p.m. in the outdoor Happy Canyon Arena. Brice has released three albums for Curb Records: “Love Like Crazy,” “Hard to Love”and “I Don’t Dance.” He has also released 11 singles, of which four have charted at number one on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs and Country Airplay: His song “Love Like Crazy” was the top country song of 2010, according to Billboard Year-End, and broke a 62-year-old record for the longest run on the country chart. “I Don’t Dance” was the lead single to his third studio album of the same name, which he produced himself. “I Don’t Dance” became Brice’s fourth number-one hit. The closeness of the arena venue creates great energy and close-up seating. The Let ‘er Buck ticket includes a great meal before the concert, stage-side seating and all your beverages. Tickets are on sale now at pendletonroundup.com. Dayton welcomes you Oct. 1 for ‘Dayton on Tour’ Once a year, the historic southeast Washington community of Dayton literally opens its doors for the Dayton on Tour event, a full day of historic home tours, art shows, art demonstrations and a family fall street festival. Always the first Saturday in October, this festival features some of Dayton’s greatest sources of pride — its history and its artisans. History Dayton boasts three historic districts, 117 buildings and homes on the national and state historic registers, four museums, the oldest working county courthouse in the state and the state’s oldest existing train depot. On the day of the Dayton on Tour event, Oct.1, you can visit the Dayton Historic Depot Museum, the Boldman House, Smith Hollow School and the Palus Artifact. For $15, you can visit historic private residences that are open to the public. The historic home tours are a long-running and very popular event. Art and artists Dayton also loves its talented local artists. On Dayton on Tour day, upwards of 10 downtown venues will participate in the Art Crawl, displaying the creations of dozens of artists. You can get a map to travel to each venue, peruse the art and get a stamp on your Art Crawl stamp card. When you have visited all of the venues, you’re eligible to win framed art by local artists. In addition, the Dayton Historic Depot Museum houses an art The historic Dayton Depot Museum show and sale in its carriage rides you’ll meander through upstairs gallery and hosts artists Dayton’s beautiful tree-lined streets as demonstrating their craft in the courtthe drivers share a bit of the town’s yard. history with their riders. Spend a day in Dayton, where you Fall festival can always “expect the unexpected.” A free, fall-themed outdoor festival is For more information about Dayton on the perfect location for the kids to get Tour, the region and other Dayton their faces painted, decorate a pump- events, visit www.historicdayton.com kin and join in some autumn-themed or contact the Dayton Chamber of activities. On the free horse and Commerce at (509) 382-4825. This Month’s Features Prosser’s big weekend Sept. 23-25 ... 4 ‘The Complete Hstory of America ....... 5 Michale Jr. comedy benefits clinic ....... 5 Richland Players will stage Cyrano .... 7 Local write will read play in Germany . 7 CBC plans fallarts events .................... 8 Earh-like exoplanet discovered ........... 8 Shakespeare comedy presented ....... 9 Dayton presents Columbia Co. Fair ... 9 Buddy Walk aids Down syndrome .... 10 Greenwood Faire changing location . 11 Othello hosts Adams County Fair ..... 11 Toyota Center busy with fall concerts 13 HBATC sponsors Parade of Homes 14 Fall Home Show coming to TRAC ... 14 VTC stages Shakespeare spoof ....... 15 Power House Theatre offerings ........ 15 Central State Fair opening in Yakima . 16 Ellensburg hosts film festival ............. 17 ‘Scaregrounds’ opens in October ...... 18 Walla Walla Diversity Day planned .... 18 Sunnyside holds Sunshine Days ...... 19 Wallowa Valley celebrates art ............ 20 Visual arts tour coming in October ..... 20 Master instructors to teach glass art’ . 21 Convention Center features tattoo art 21 Movies: Don’t Breathe is scary, good . 22 Battelle Film Club schedule set ......... 22 Books: Two novels reviewed .............. 23 Dance: Walla Walla celebs compete . 24 Auditions being held for Nutcracker .. 24 Rolling Hills Chorus will put on show 25 3 Rivers Folklife fall events begin ...... 25 Prosser will host beer & whiskey fest 26 Mastersingers will sing in B Reactor . 27 Common travel misconceptions ........ 28 Fort Walla Walla displays quilts ......... 29 Odesss holds annual Deutschesfest 29 Union County invites tourists ............. 30 Excursiont train offers exciting rides .. 30 Hood River has the fresh-hop brews . 31 Health: Handling pain without drugs . 32 Recovery Center has new programs . 33 Marine General greets his teacher .... 34 Philly Robb’s annual NFL forecast .... 35 Getting back to the garden ................. 36 Quincy’s farmers meet consumers ... 36 Maryhill Museum hosts Concours ..... 37 Calendar Of Events Monthly Entertainment Planner ... 38-39 The Entertainer Staff Publisher/Editor: Dennis Cresswell Graphics/Production: Nathaniel Puthoff Sales: Deborah Ross, Aubrey Langlois Webmaster: Bobby Walters Contact Us At: 9228 W Clearwater Dr., Ste 101 Kennewick, WA 99336 Phone: (509) 783-9256 Fax: (509) 737-9208 www.theentertainernewspaper.com info@theentertainernewspaper.com Distribution 21,000 copies distributed monthly within the Tri-Cities, as well as Prosser, Sunnyside, Toppenish, Walla Walla, Dayton, Pendleton, Hermiston and Umatilla. The Entertainer gladly accepts any article submissions or calendar event listings. Use of submitted material is at the discretion of the Entertainer. The deadline to submit ads and articles is the 20th of every month. Pick up the Entertainer at more than 400 locations in the Tri-Cities, Southeastern Washington and Northern Oregon, including: the libraries in Pasco, West Richland, Kennewick and Walla Walla, Legends Casino, Wildhorse, Arrowhead Truck Plaza, Albertson’s, Starbucks, Circle K stores, 7-Eleven Richland, Sterling’s, Chapala Express, Zip’s, Red Apple, Chico’s Tacos, Brickhouse Pizza, Country Gentleman, Woo’sTeriyaki, Emerald of Siam, Magill’s, Adventures Underground, the Roxy, Richland Red Lion, Lucky Bridge Casino, Columbia Point Golf Club and Dayton Mercantile. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the express written consent of The Entertainer Newspaper. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 3 PAGE 4 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Balloon pilots float low over still waters in the Great Prosser Balloon Rally. Prosser: 3 great events in one great weekend! I t’s early on a cool, crisp, lateSeptember morning. The winds are calm, and soon you see one colorful hot-air balloon, then another and another floating over the Yakima River and above the valley’s fields and orchards. This magical sight is the beginning of the Great Prosser Balloon Rally. The hot-air balloons will take to the skies Friday through Sunday, Sept. 23, 24 and 25, launching at sunrise each morning from the Prosser Airport. (All launches are weather-permitting.) To get a good view of the balloons, you’re encouraged to arrive at the airport by 6:15 a.m. Facebook updates will be posted each morning of the rally weekend to give you status updates. Balloon pilots from across the United States will participate. If you arrive even earlier, you’ll be able to watch the pilots inflate their balloons and prepare to launch them. Some lucky spectators are even asked to assist the pilots in this process or help chase and recover the balloons. This is a great photo opportunity, so don’t forget your camera! The popular Night Glow happens on Saturday evening at Art Fiker Stadium. As music plays, balloons are anchored and illuminated from within against the dark night sky, and the experience is breathtaking. Parking and admission are free, but pets are not allowed in either the airport field or in Art Fiker Stadium during the Night Glow. p.m. You can find handcrafted items and ballooning memorabilia, and shop with specialty vendors. There’ll be a variety of food booths, kids’ games, pony rides and live entertainment throughout the day. On Saturday from 8 a.m. to noon, a farmers market will be available, located between the library and City Park. The Harvest Festival runs from 9 to 6 on Saturday. After the morning balloon launch on Sunday, breakfast will be served at 8 a.m. at the Prosser Senior Activity Center on 7th Street, and the Harvest Festival runs from 10 to 3. Chalk art And there’s more. The Caren Mercer-Andreason Street Painting Festival happens on 6th Street on Saturday and Sunday. During this fun event, you can watch regional chalk artists bring their images to life — many working for 8 to 12 hours on a single creation. Enjoy three great events in one weekend, Sept. 23-25 — the Great Prosser Balloon Rally, the Harvest Festival and the Street Painting Festival To learn more about these events and other happenings in Prosser, visit tourprosser.com. Harvest Festival But let’s get back to Friday, because the balloon rally is being held in conjunction with other weekend events. After the balloons have flown on Friday morning, your next stop is the Harvest A street artist creates a chalk-art Festival on the streets of historic masterpiece in downtown Prosser. downtown Prosser from 11 a.m. to 5 The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 5 The three “cheeky clowns” of the Reduced Shakespeare Company.come to Yakima. Hundreds of years of our history in 6,000 seconds! H istory will never be the same. From Washington to Watergate, from the Bering Straits to Baghdad, from the New World to the New World Order, The Complete History of America (abridged) is a 90-minute rollercoaster ride through the glorious quagmire that is American history, reminding us that it’s not the length of your history that matters — it’s what you’ve done with it! This hilarious spoof o is the work of the Reduced Shakespeare Company, and the troupe is bringing the show to the Capitol Theatre in Yakima for one performance on Oct. 14 at 7:30 p.m. The three cultural guerillas of the Reduced Shakespeare Company tackle such controversial questions as: Who really discovered America? Why did Abe Lincoln free the slaves? How many Democrats does it take to screw in a lightbulb? “An apt description of what the company does is intellectual vaudeville,“ wrote Stephen Holden of the New York Times. “They are smart, cheeky clowns who present themselves as a collective repository for most of American mass culture.” For tickets or more information on what is happening at the Capitol Theatre in Yakima, call (853).ARTS (2787) or visit.capitoltheatre.org. Funny man Michael Jr. brings family comedy to the Tri-Cities Event at Bethel Church will benefit Grace Clinic Comedian Michael Jr. is telling stories on stage. “My four-year-old son said to me, ‘Dad, I want to be a doctor when I grow up’. I was like, ‘All right! Yes!’” he says in a proud dad voice….“Then he said, ‘Or a dino- Comedian Michael Jr. covers topics ranging from growing up poor to what women look for in men. saur!’” The crowd erupts in laughter. The story, and the appreciative audience response, are typical for Michael Jr., who does family-friendly comedy about the universal themes that connect us all. He calls it comedy with a purpose, and he’s taking a detour from his national tour to headline the “Bringin’ the Funny” event on Oct. 7 from 7 to 9 p.m. at Bethel Church in Richland. The event will raise funds for Grace Clinic. The Michigan-born performer has guest-starred on “The Tonight Show,” “Jimmy Kimmel Live” and the Comedy Central network. He’s also a soughtafter performer at top comedy clubs, universities, churches and corporate events. He appeared in the 2015 movie War Room. Comedy about family situations comes naturally for the happily married father of five. The local band Michelle Jarrett & Prevail will open the evening. The band is a favorite at Creation Northwest, a Christian music festival that attracts thousands of fans annually. Grace Clinic provides free healthcare for Tri-Citians who have no health insurance and little ability to pay. The clinic has had more than 55,000 patient visits since 2002. It is operated primarily by volunteers and entirely funded by the community, including individuals, businesses, churches, service clubs and United Way. Tickets to the “Bringin’ the Funny” event are $22 in advance for adults and $25 at the door. For youth 12 and under, it’s $15 in advance and $18 at the door. Get tickets online at justhelpsomeone.org, in person at Ranch & Home in Kennewick or at the door. For more information visit Grace Clinic’s Facebook page or gracecliniconline.org. PAGE 6 • September 2016 • The Entertainer The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 7 Richland Players begin season with classic Cyrano de Bergerac R omance, action, comedy, tragedy! The play Cyrano de Bergerac,”written by Edmond Rostand in 1887, has it all. And the Richland Players production of this timeless classic opens on Sept. 9 at the historic Players Theater in Richland. Cyrano de Bergerac reminds us that you can’t judge a book by its cover. Cyrano is a French soldier who is bold and brilliant — a brash, strong-willed man of many talents. He’s also a gifted poet who can write and deliver romantic verse as deftly as he wields his dueling sword. But in spite of his renown, he has a deep-seated fear of romantic rejection because of his long nose. Cyrano longs for the affection of the beautiful heiress Roxane, but self-doubt prevents him from expressing his love for her. He knows that Roxane admires him only for his intellect and wit. Christian, a handsome new cadet, is also eager to win Roxane’s heart but admits he lacks the eloquence to woo her. Cyrano, meanwhile, has written a beautiful love letter to Roxane — but before he can deliver it, Roxane confesses that she’s enamored of Christian. Christian wooing her. The theatrical history of Cyrano de Bergerac is one of the longest and most distinguished. The play is still able to engage audiences with its timeless themes of romance and unrequited love. But it’s not just a love story. Audiences love action, and Cyrano de Bergerac delivers it with the battle scenes. Director Richard Reuther teamed up with a stage combat specialist, Anna Newbury, to tutor the actors in combat and choreograph the thrilling fight scenes. This classic play is the kick-off to the Richland Players’ 2016-2017 Other actors observe a fight-scene rehearsal by Deven Austin, on the left as Cyrano, season. The cast features Deven and Matt Grygiel as Valvert. They were tutored by a stage combat specialist. Austin as Cyrano de Bergerac in his first role on the Players’ stage. KelleyCyrano is broken-hearted, but he Christian soon decides that he Margaret Smith is Roxane and Peter sees a way to express his own love wants to woo Roxane with his own Adams is Christian. The company is through the other man. He gives words. But he has underestimated her anchored with dozens of familiar faces Christian the unsigned letter to send to attachment to the beautiful language of from prior Players shows. Roxane as his own, beginning a love that Cyrano created for him. Evening performances are on Sept. pattern of deceit. Cyrano continues to Cyrano saves the day by hiding under 9, 10, 16, 17, 23, and 24 at 8 p.m., write beautiful letters and impassioned Roxane’s balcony and whispering with matinees at 2 p.m. on Sept. 18 speeches that Christian memorizes, words that Christian repeats. Soon he and 25. Online ticket sales begin Sept. and Roxane falls in love with the man gives up on that and delivers the words 7 at richlandplayers.org. You can also she believes is so romantic and himself, and in the dark of night call the Richland Players box office at eloquent. Roxane believes it’s still her beloved (509) 946-1991. Walla Walla playwright will present his work at conference in Germany Walla Walla playwright Bradley Nelson will present a staged reading of his original play at a conference in Odenwald, Germany, on Sept. 3. A Gay SDA Play is a documentarystyle play based on two dozen interviews Nelson conducted of LGBT individuals with a connection to the Seventh Day Adventist religion that he was raised in. The play adapts verbatim dialog from the interviews into vignettes and monologues that explore the many challenges people face when their religion does not support their sexuality. A Gay SDA Play was first presented as a staged reading in 2015 as part of a series presented by Shakespeare Walla Walla at the Gesa Power House Theatre. Since then, there have been two semi-private readings of the play with groups in California. The reading in Germany will be part of “European Kinship Meeting 2016,” an annual conference of Seventh-day Adventist Kinship, a support group for current and former gay Adventists. “I have continued to rewrite and edit the script since the first public presentation at the Power House,” Nelson said. “The version I will present in Germany is probably shorter by a third — and I feel much better for it.” Nelson is a graduate of Walla Walla University and also holds a master’s degree in theater from Ohio University. He works as a freelance marketer in Walla Walla. Union-Bulletin photo by Greg Lehman Playwright Bradley Nelson of Walla Walla PAGE 8 • September 2016 • The Entertainer CBC Arts season begins with racism presentation S New faculty Members By Bill McKay eptember is always an exciting time at the CBC Arts Center. We are thankful to the Tri-Cities community for the continued support of our events in music, theatre, art and our community lecture series. Thanks, as well, to those who attended our Summer Showcase theatre events. Fiddler on the Roof was a major success for the Arts Center, with almost 2,700 patrons attending over the six evenings. The dinnertheatre event was also an amazing event, and both shows were artistically wonderful. We look forward to a new season. I would like to welcome some new faculty members to the CBC Arts Center. In the Department of Art, we look forward to the energy and ideas Cozette Phillips and Rachel Smith will bring to CBC. In the Department of Music, Russ Newbury will be directing the CBC Jazz Ensemble and the Concert Band as a part-time faculty member. Dr. Bryant Smith has accepted another position. We all wish you a great start to the Bill McKay is Dean of Arts and Humanities at Columbia Basin College. Scientists discover Earth-like exoplanet By Erin Steinert Community Lecture On Sept. 15, the Richland Public Library will host a Humanities Washington presentation by Eva M. Abram entitled “Defeating Racism Today: What Does it Take?” Abram has performed in schools, theatres and history museums throughout the Northwest. As an actress, public speaker and avid lover of history, Abram writes and performs stories about people and events that have shaped our state and our nation. Abram’s dramatic presentations tell compelling, little-known stories of African-Americans and illustrate how business, government, and public policy affect social practices. She holds a bachelor’s degree in business and public policy from the University of Washington. Abram’s presentation focuses on the questions: “Does the eradication of racist laws really combat institutionalized racism?” and “How does subtle and sometimes hidden institutionalized new school year. The dual mission of the Arts Center is to provide our community with educational, entertaining and thought-provoking events and to give our students opportunities to share their talents. Through these events, you have been able to see and hear many students who have gone on to have amazing professional careers in the arts, both as practitioners and teachers. Eva M. Abram racism affect the citizens, economy and future of Washington State?” She talks about the history of racism and how it affects specific groups in our society. She explores how the painful experiences under Jim Crow laws and slavery might ultimately inspire pride and achievements among contemporary generations of African-Americans. She also discusses how the invisible divide of racism — fed by both knowledge and ignorance — continues to exist despite recent progress to eradicate it. Conversation and cooperation can inspire progress and action to defeat that divide, and during this discussion she suggests how to achieve that goal. Visit columbiabasin.edu/artscenter for up-to-date information on our other upcoming events. Have you ever wondered about our place in the universe? If there are other planets beyond our own solar system, orbiting distant stars? And if some of those planets might look anything like our own pale blue dot? You are not alone! Scientists have been on the hunt for Earth-like planets for years, and have already discovered thousands of other planets around other stars in our Milky Way Galaxy, mostly with the help of several orbiting space telescopes. Most of these planets, which we call exoplanets due to their location being outside of our solar system, are thought to be gas giants, similar in size to or larger than Jupiter. This would mean that they are most likely uninhabitable, at least to us humans. NASA and other agencies around the world are searching for what seem like needles in a cosmic haystack — planets that are roughly the same size as Earth and that orbit their parent star at just the right distance so as not to be too hot or too cold. This area around a star, called the habitable zone, could ‘Planet’ continues on Page 9 CBC PLANETARIUM SEPTEMBER MOVIE SCHEDULE Sept. 1: Black Holes, 10 a.m.; Supervolcanoes, 11 a.m. Sept. 2: Secrets of the Sun, 7 p.m.; Cell! Cell! Cell!, 8 p.m. Sept. 3: The Little Star That Could, 2 p.m.; Dynamic Earth, 3 p.m. Sept. 9: Black Holes, 7 p.m.; Bad Astronomy, 8 p.m. Sept. 10: Stars of the Pharaohs, 3 p.m.; Secret Lives of Stars, 3 p.m. Sept. 16: Oasis in Space, 7 p.m.; Dynamic Earth, 8 p.m. Sept. 17: The Little Star That Could, 10 a.m.; The Enchanted Reef, 11 a.m. Sept. 23: Black Holes, 7 p.m.; Fractal Explorations, 8 p.m. Sept. 24: Two Small Pieces of Glass, 2 p.m.; Supervolcanoes, 3 p.m. Sept. 30: Stars of the Pharaohs, 7 p.m.; Dynamic Earth, 9 p.m. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 9 Rude Mechanicals Shakespeare company will stage classic comedy A Comedy of Errors will open on Sept. 22 at the Uptown Theatre A ridiculously fun story involving slapstick comedy, puns and mistaken identity — this could be the Three Stooges, a sketch from “Saturday Night Live” or an episode of “Friends.” However, it is actually one of Shakespeare’s very first comedies! The Comedy of Errors tells the story of two sets of identical twins that were Judges examine the 4-H sheep entries at the Columbia County Fair in Dayton. accidentally separated at birth. Antipholus of Syracuse (Cameron Milton) and his servant, Dromio of The Columbia County Fair: Syracuse (Hayley Purvis), arrive in Ephesus, which turns out to be the home of their twin brothers, Antipholus of Ephesus (Patrick Killoran) and his Few county fairs in the West have Then, from 11 to 1 on Saturday you servant, Dromio of Ephesus (Ashley been going for as long as the Columbia can lunch on “the best barbecue you’ll Purvis). County Fair in Dayton, which is holding ever have” and enjoy the livestock sale When the Syracusans encounter the its 126th annual event this year. That’s and activities in the KidzZone and Old friends and families of the twins, a why this year’s theme is so appropriMcDonald’s Farm. series of wild mishaps based on ate — “From Pioneer Days to Modern That evening will see plenty of action mistaken identities causes chaos and Ways.” Livestock and agriculture have at the Jackpot Rodeo, and after the comedy. been always been mainstays of this rodeo you can enjoy the The Rude Mechanicals, the Trismall-town fair, but the live entertainbeer garden until 10:30 p.m. Cities’ premiere Shakespeare theatre ment, food and vendor booths have a The fair is open from 9 to 5 on company, will present this fast-paced, modern appeal. Sunday, and again the day begins with family-friendly comedy at The Uptown This fair kicks off on Friday, Sept. 9, a free breakfast with your paid admisTheatre in Richland from Sept. 22 with the Columbia County Cattlemen’s sion, sponsored by Northwest Farm through Oct. 1. The show is cobreakfast, which is free with your gate Credit Services. An open horse show directed by company members David admission, from 6 to 9 a.m. There’s a in the arena, church in the Chicken Goss and Cyndi Kimmel, both of whom livestock show that morning, followed Chapel, a demolition derby at noon have acted on stage in The Rude by the day’s entertainment and and a livestock costume competition Mechanicals’ productions of Much Ado carnival-style games. On Saturday, the are some of the Sunday activities. About Nothing and Othello. gates open at 7 a.m. .You can catch up on the activities and Tickets go on sale on Sept. 10. On Saturday you can again start the demonstrations you’ve Ticket prices range from $5 for day with breakfast from 7 to 9 a.m., missed, and sit down for an ice“Groundling” seats to $50 for Royal provided by the 4-H Marksman Club. cream social at 3 p.m. Gallery seats. General admission The Rascal Rodeo, for riders of all Single-day admission is $10 for tickets are $18, with a discounted ages with mental and physical disabili- adults 13-59 years of age, $4 for ties, starts at 9:30 a.m. This is a free seniors 60 and over, $5 for kids from 7 event for all involved, including the through 12 and free to children 6 and participants who will be partnered with younger. Three-day admission is $22 volunteers. The different faux rodeo for adults and $10 for seniors and stations inclede stick-horse barrel kids 7-12. racing, roping, cow milking, bull and You can access the Columbia bronc riding, and horse and pony County Fair information from the rides.The events are very safe. historicdayton.com website. ‘From Pioneer Days to Modern Ways’ ‘Planet’ Continues from Page 8 allow for a planet to have liquid water oceans, which we know are crucial to life existing here on Earth. As of today, a few dozen exoplanets have been detected that could potentially be Earth-like, both in size and location in their parent star’s habitable zone. Before this year, the closest of these planets was hypothesized to be some 12 light years away (or over 72 trillion miles!). However, it was announced on August 23 that scientists have confirmed the signal of an Earthlike planet orbiting the closest star to our own, Proxima Centauri, which lies only 4.2 light years away. This detection was a long time in the making. It was found by combining data taken from 2000 to 2008 by the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES), and observations made by the High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS), from 2005 to 2014 and earlier this year. The data suggest that the planet, dubbed Proxima b, is about 1.3 times more massive than the Earth and lies about 4.7 million miles from its star, right in the middle of its habitable zone. Whether or not this means any form of life exists or has existed on this distant planet remains to be seen, Illustration by ESO/M. Kornmesser An artist’s impression of the planet Proxima b in our Milky Way Galaxy. but this discovery is an encouraging one for planetary scientists. Proxima b is close enough to us that scientists may soon be able to see it directly, and one day send a future space probe out for a visit. Want to learn more about exoplanets and Earth’s place in the universe? Come see one of the public shows at the CBC Planetarium. They run every Friday at 7 and 8 p.m. and Saturdays at 2 and 3 p.m. Tickets for all events and memberships can be purchased online prior to show time. If seats are available, you may obtain tickets at the door. Visit columbiabasin.edu/planet for more information. Erin Steinert is the planetarium outreach specialist at Columbia Basin College. Cameron Milton and Hayley Purvis rehearse a scene for Rude Mechanicals’ upcoming Shakespeare play. ticket of $15 available for students, seniors, military personnel and teachers. Backstage pass tickets are available for an additional $10, providing a special “behind the scenes” look at the production and an entertaining presentation by Artistic Director Ellicia Elliott before the show. Her presentation will help you understand the story, the characters and the concept, and will make the overall experience that much more enjoyable. Evening performances are on Sept, 22, 23, 24, 29, 30 and October 1 at 7 p.m. Matinee performances are on Sept. 24 and Oct. 1 at 2 p.m. For more information, visit rmtheatre.org or find the Rude Mechanicals on Facebook. PAGE 10 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Annual Buddy Walk fundraiser to be held Oct. 1 A&E ‘Born This Way’ cast member will make a guest appearance F or the 10th year, the Down Syn drome Association of the MidColumbia (DSAMC) will participate in the annual fundraiser called the Buddy Walk, which was established in 1995 by the National Down Syndrome Society. In addition to raising funds, the walk helps promote awareness and inclusion of people with Down syndrome. The walk will be held on Oct. 1 at 10 a.m. in Howard Amon Park in Richland. Kasey McComas, who chairs the organizing committee, said that Sean McElwee, a cast member of the critically acclaimed A&E television show “Born This Way,” will make a guest appearance at the Mid-Columbia walk. The event includes a one-mile walk plus plenty of other activities — booths, performances, prize drawings Special guest Sean McElwee of A&E’s “Born This Way” series. Camaraderie and fun are keys to the success of the annual Buddy Walk. and more. It’s open to all ages and abilities, and for those who don’t walk the course, there are places to sit down, relax, watch the excitement and cheer on the walkers. McComas is expecting more than 2,000 participants this year, partly because it’s the first year online registration has been available. You can visit dsamc.donordrive.com to sign up, and anyone can participate. Whether you have Down syndrome, know someone who does or just want to show your support, you can register and have fun participating. You can join a team or register as an individual. Register early to be sure you receive a Buddy Walk tee shirt in your size. Shirts will be available in limited quantities for on-site registration. If you will be registering a family but don’t want to join a team, select “individual” as your role and you can add additional family members after you’ve completed the first registration. The registration fee is $15 ($17 if you need an XXL or XXXL tee shirt), which includes lunch. Registration is free to individuals with Down syndrome. “We encourage people to register online,” McComas said. “And you can pick up your tee shirts September 30 from 5:30 to 7:30 at Shelby’s Floral, one of our sponsoring organizations for 10 years in a row.” After you register, you can customize your personal fundraising page and send email messages to friends and family members through your Fundraising Portal. A direct link to your personal page will allow them to easily make donations on your behalf. There are even some sample email messages to help you get started. You can also show support by registering as a “virtual walker” or simply making a charitable donation to DSAMC. Money raised through the Buddy Walk helps fund DSAMC programs including support groups, a lecture series, emergency medical help, classroom support, play groups for Down syndrome children, workshops and even scholarships. DSAMC also helps fund the Children’s Developmental Center and the Arc. To learn more about the organization, visit dsamc.org or look for Down Syndrome Association of the MidColumbia on Facebook. IN BRIEF Wineries hold ‘Giving Garden Progressive Soiree’ On Sunday, Sept. 4, from 5 to 8 p.m., the wineries of Benton City will have a progressive dinner party. Twelve wineries and vineyards have created gardens to grow vegetables to support the Benton City Food Bank. This unique wine and dinner experience will showcase four of the gardens. You’ll enjoy wine and appetizers at three gardens and then meet at the fourth garden for a summerinspired dinner created by Castle Event Catering. The cost is $50 per person and tickets are limited, so reserve your spot right away. Today. All proceeds will go to the food bank. For tickets, visit .tricitiesfoodbank.org. Wildhorse offers Pendleton Round-Up shuttle During the Pendleton Round-Up, you can catch one of the many shuttles from downtown to Wildhorse Resort and Casino. The Wildhorse Sports Bar will have Westbound 50 taking the stage on Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 13 and 14. The Jessie Leigh Band will be playing great country music Friday and Saturday nights. You can bring any Pendleton Round-Up event ticket (concert, PBR, rodeo, Happy Canyon, etc.) to Wildhorse and be entered into the “Last Hooray Giveaway.” One lucky guest will receive a valuable Round-Up prize package. Visit wildhorseresort.com The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 11 Renaissance Faire is moving! In its 30th year, Ye Merrie Greenwood Renaissance Faire will relocate from Richland to Columbia Park T By Marjorie Kunigisky here have been a number of changes this past year for Ye Merrie Greenwood Renaissance Faire. The two most obvious are our new dates, Sept. 24 and 25, and our new location, Columbia Park in Kennewick. The best part is that it’s a wonderful location and it’s three times the space than we had before. We have been looking over the new site and it’s been very exciting to visualize where our “village of Greenwood” will be and what it will look like now. The period merchants and food vendors who have been at the Greenwood Faire these past 29 years will also be enjoying larger spaces than before. More good news is that we have some great new acts to add to our presentation, in addition to some new programs by our well-loved performers. Clay Martin will be back with his puppets, and this year he has a pirate story. This should be a lot of fun for the whole family. We also have Veritas, a group of fighters who specialize in historically correct presentations. In addition to their fights, they will present information about the weapons of the times and their uses. The Society for Creative Anachronism will be on hand as well as the Roman Legion and the Crew, our pikemen (spear throwers). There will be lots of different styles of fighting to watch and enjoy. Don’t forget the jousting. We will also have a new group of boffer weapon fighters Tri-Cities Amtgard chapter of Valley of the Trident, a larping community located here that will give fight presentations. They will have some chainmail armor and some boffer weapons in stages to show people how they are made. Unlike fighting with steel or rattan weapons, boffers are well-padded PVC versions of swords. It will be fun to see them and learn about their group. . We will have Zinger the Magic with us, as well as Master Payne and Matthew Van Zee who will likewise entertain with magic. Bryan Sapphire, Bill Barr and Adria will be back to juggle. Of course, there is the very tall Harley who is so well loved by the children, as well as Princess Lolly and Fae Hollow. Master William Shakespeare and James the Obscure will be on hand to tell stories. as well as Michaella and the Greenwood Storytellers. There will be four groups of dancers this year, and the Greenwood Throbbing Red Hand Musicians will be playing for one of them. There will be the Sherwood Renaissance Singers and many, many musical groups as well. Unfortunately, we thought it would possibly be too cold for the “Dueling Buckets,” so we have brought our pillow fight on a log, which we call “Twillzie Wop.” There will be other games to play as well. If we can find a really sunny spot that’s not on grass for next year, perhaps Dueling Buckets will return. We expect that being in this beautiful park, with so much more space, will give us plenty of great ideas for the future. It will, without a doubt, be great fun. For more about the faire, visit yemerriegreenwoodfaire.org. The Adams County Fair: Something old, something new! This year’s Adams County Fair in Othello will run from Sept. 14 through 17, with the Western theme “Boots, Chaps ’n Cowboy Hats.” Members of the Fair Board have worked hard to bring you another great family event, and they welcome you to Othello to see for yourself. The first thing you’ll notice is the smell of wonderful things that bring back memories. It’s the aroma from the food booths, the smell of the barns, the straw and the animals the kids are showing that bring back memories of past fairs. The contests, the carnival rides and the will remind you of last year’s fair. But then you’ll be eager to see what’s new, and you won’t be disappointed. This year the livestock board made some selfie features from the Looney Tunes cartoons. You and the kids will have fun taking pictures or selfies by posing with the cut-out faces of cartoon characters. A new food booth features deep-fried macaroni and cheese. And there’s a new ticket booth and a new dressing room and storage unit from Old Hickory Sheds Northwest in Othello. Entertainment this year is Nashville recording artist Cale Moon, who will perform on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Making a comeback by popular demand will be Predators of the Heart. In the horse arena, the Draft Horse Pull will be at 5 p.m. on Friday, followed by the Sequins and Spurs Drill Team at 6. On Saturday, Dusty Roller’s horse-training clinic will be back at Mutton bustin’ at the Adams County Fair in Othello 1 p.m. Other entertainment on the grounds will include one-man-band Eric Haines, Adam the Great, mutton bustin’ with Frank Rendon’s sheep, a mechanical bull and Lanky the Clown. There will be lots more for adults and kids to do and see — a pie-eating contest, a diaper derby and a new contest this year called a “sawhorse contest” at the Poultry Barn. Come out and see what that’s all about. And there’s nothing like a great fair for brining old friends together and making new friends. Adult ticket prices are $7 daily and $21 for the whole week. Seniors (60plus) pay only $5 and $15. And kid from 7 to 11 year of age are admitted for $5 daily or $15 weekly. Children 6 and under are always admitted free. Wristbands for the Davis Shows carnival are $21 for advance purchases and $26 at the fair. For more information, visit the website adamscountyfair.org. PAGE 12 • September 2016 • The Entertainer The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 13 FALL EVENTS AT TOYOTA CENTER Chase Rice performs at the adjacent Toyota Arena A n artist who not only “knows his audience,” according to USA Today, but also lives, breathes and works right alongside them, Chase Rice is taking the rallying message of his new single “Everybody We Know Does” to heart and hitting the road this fall. Rice, who has headlined four tours and opened for country superstars Kenny Chesney and Dierks Bentley, will bring his tour to Kennewick for one show on Oct. 15 at 7:30 p.m. in the Toyota Arena next to Toyota Center. Rice’s new single has already caught the attention of fans and critics. Taste of Country called it “a countryrock anthem that grabs you with guitars and keeps you with a unifying message.” The publication wrote that the has the potential to be a career song for Chase Rice. “When I first heard ‘Everybody We Know Does,’ I was immediately reminded of all the songs I listened to growing up, the songs my dad and I would listen to out on our farm, and it just put me right back at home in those moments,” said Rice. “It’s a message that I needed to hear, and from the feedback we’ve been getting already, I think fans feel the same way.” Within a few short years of moving to Nashville, Rice has already built a loyal fan base across the country through his energetic live shows. His album “Ignite the Night” debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and No. 3 on the all-genre chart. That album produced a pair of Top 5 hits, including the Platinum-certified “Ready Set Roll” and “Gonna Wanna Tonight.” After supporting Kenny Chesney’s Big Revival Tour 2015, Rice consistently sold out 2,500-3,000-seat venues on his JD and Jesus Tour. All tickets for the Oct. 15 show will be $32.50 with festival seating only (open floor), with limited seating upstairs in the Toyota Arena. Tickets are available at all Ticketmaster outlets, including the Toyota Center box office, and online at ticketmaster.com. Chase Rice, a rising country star and former finalist on CBS’s “Survivor,” will come to Kennewick on Oct. 15. JOIN OUR VIP CLUB AND WIN FREE TICKETS! Text “ENTERTAINER” and “BRICE” to the number 78816 and you’ll be entered in our drawing for a pair of tickets to this concert. And you’ll be the first to receive information on all of our ticket giveaways on your mobile device. Dierks Bentley concert is Sept. 23 at Toyota Center Christian rock band Casting Crowns last performed at Toyota Cente in 2011. Christian Band Casting Crowns will play on Oct. 1 Contemporary Christian rock band Casting Crowns will include Kennewick on the band’s fall tour, “The Very Next Thing.” They will perform at Toyota Center in Kennewick on Oct. 1 at 7 p.m. Special guests on the tour are Matt Maher and Hannah Kerr. Maher is a Canadian music artist, songwriter and worship leader who has written and produced seven solo albums to date. Kerr is a singer and songwriter with a Christian pop style of contemporary worship music. Casting Crowns was formed in 1999 by youth pastor Mark Hall, who serves as the band’s lead vocalist. The band has toured extensively and has been a frequent featured act at the annual Creation Fest. The band’s message remains rooted in the student services Hall has led on a weekly basis since 2001 at Eagles Landing Baptist church near Atlanta. Their chart-topping songs include “Who Am I,” “Voice of Truth,” “Praise You In This Storm,” “Until The Whole World Hears,” “Glorious Day (Living He Loved Me),” “Courageous” and “Jesus, Friend of Sinners.” The band has sold more than 8 million albums. Tickets for the Toyota Center performance, brought to you by LMG Concerts, range from $46 up to $279 and are available at the Toyota Center box office, all Ticketmaster outlets and online at ticketmaster.com. For phone orders call (800) 745-3000. Country star Dierks Bentley’s iSomewhere on a Beach Tour will make a stop at Toyota Center in Kennewick on Sept. 23 for one performance at 7 p.m. Bentley is a busy guy. His self-titled debut album and its follow-up, 2005’s “Modern Day Drifter,” were both certified platinum. A third album in “Long Trip Alone,” is certified gold. It was followed in mid-2008 by a “greatest hits” package, and his fourth album, “Feel That Fire.” was released in February 2009. A bluegrass album, “Up on the Ridge,” was released in 2010, and then a sixth album, “Home,” followed in February 2012, as did a seventh one, “Riser,” in 2014. His eighth and latest album, entitled “Black,” was released this past May. Bentley graduated from Vanderbilt University in Nashville in 1997, and worked at the Nashville Network (now Spike TV) while also pursuing his music career. His debut album’s first single, “What Was I Thinkin’,” reached number one on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts, and he was on his way. His second album, “Modern Day Drifter,” spawned two number-one singles, “Settle for a Slowdown” and “Come a Little Closer.” Dierks Bentley In 2005, Bentley won the Country Music Association Award Horizon Award (now Best New Artist) and was invited to be a member of the Grand Ole Opry. He is the third youngest member, after Carrie Underwood and Josh Turner, to earn that honor. Bentley’s ninth and latest album, “Black,” includes the hit single “Somewhere on a Beach,” which gave him the name for his current tour. He co-hosted the 51st Annual Academy of Country Music Awards in April and was also nominated for Male Vocalist of the Year and Video of the Year. Tickets to the concert are available at the Toyota Center box office, all Ticketmaster outlets, and online at ticketmaster.com. For phone orders, call (800) 7453000. Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith bring their Christmas-season concert to the Tri-Cities Once again rekindling their holiday music magic, multi-platinum Grammy winners Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith will co-bill their popular Christmas tour this year, joined by Republic recording artist Jordan Smith, Season 9 winner of NBC’s “The Voice.” The concert will be held at Toyota Center in Kennewick on Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. This seasonal crowd-pleaser incorporates a full symphony orchestra with each performance and draws hundreds of thousands of people each year. Grant and Smith have a vast collection of critically acclaimed holiday albums between them, and their joint Christmas tours are among the most anticipated events of the holiday season. The Christmas show will also help benefit Operation Christmas Child, known for distributing more than 135 million shoeboxes of Christmas gifts to children in need in 150 countries. “Christmas is my favorite time of year, and performing these holiday shows each November and December is a major highlight for me,” said Grant. “I’m thrilled to share the stage with Michael and Jordan, and I’m so glad some new audiences will be able to join in the Christmas spirit with us this year. I can’t wait!” Tickets can be purchased at the Toyota Center box office or through Ticketmaster outlets. Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith PAGE 14 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Parade of Homes tour will feature 17 area homes The annual Parade of Homes returns to the Tri-Cities this month, showcasing 17 stunning homes by some of the area’s best builders. These homes range in size from 2,052 square feet up to 4,739 square feet and are located throughout the Tri-Cities. Featuring the latest in technology, architecture and interior design, the Parade homes are the perfect place to gather ideas and inspiration for renovations to your current home. And if you are in the market for a new home, you may find it waiting for you on this year’s route. It is also the perfect setting for finding the builder, suppliers and subcontractors to make your dream home a reality. The five-day, scattered-site event is open to the public on the weekends of Sept. 10-11 and 17-18 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Wednesday, Sept. 14, from 1 to 7 p.m. Tickets are $10 and go on sale at area Circle K stores on Sept. 5. When you get your ticket you’ll receive a full- This beautiful home can be seen on the Tri-Cities Parade of Homes tour. color Parade of Homes guide, which includes descriptions of all the homes and a map of the route. The “Parade Craze” mobile app will be available for free download on Sept. 5. The app includes information on the homes and builders along with an interactive map. This year will be the second year for the new house marker signs. If you were accustomed to seeing the large one-sided yard signs in previous years, look for the homes that are marked with two-sided flag-style signs. They will bear the Parade of Homes logo and will be easier to spot. “This is a great event for the entire Tri-Cities region,” said Jeff Losey, executive director of the Home Builders Association, “Not only do our participating builders get to showcase their best work, but it also reenforces to all our local residents what a great area we live in. If you’re looking to renovate, redecorate, purchase or build a home, this is a can’t-miss opportunity.” Chefs on Parade will return for its sixth year on Sept. 15 and 16, but the event is currently sold out. To be placed on the waiting list, call the Home Builders Association at (509) 735-2745. The area’s most talented chefs will prepare samples in 10 Parade home kitchens over two nights. For more information on the 2016 Parade of Homes, visit hbatc.com. Another great HBATC event coming in October — the Fall Home Show Following on the heels of the Parade of Homes is the fifth annual Fall Home Show presented by the Home Builders Association and Rick’s Custom Fencing and Decking. It will be held on Oct. 7, 8 and 9 at the TRAC Center in Pasco and will feature a variety of vendors from builders and remodelers to home product suppliers and service providers. “The Parade of Homes is a chance for people to not only shop for a home, but to get terrific ideas they can implement in their own homes,” said HBATC Executive Director Jeff Losey.“ The Fall Home Show is a great way to help the public find the contractors and suppliers to make it happen.” Admission is $5 for adults and free for kids under 16. Educational seminars are included in the price of admission. The are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and 10 to 4 on Sunday. Job’s Nursery will be hosting an indoor pumpkin patch. The first 500 children aged 12 and under will receive a free pumpkin. A pumpkin-decorating area where kids can personalize their pumpkins is sponsored by A-One Refrigeration and Heating of Pasco. This year’s show will also feature a raffle to benefit the Benton-Franklin Humane Society. Parker Construction will be constructing a one-of-a-kind cat tree, and New Tradition Homes will be building a custom crafted doghouse. Raffle tickets are $5 each and are available now at the Home Builders Association and the Benton-Franklin Humane Society. They will be available at the show as well. You can select which drawing you want to enter, and drawings for both items will be held at 3 p.m. on Sept. 9. For more information about the Fall Home Show and other Home Builders Guests at last year’s Fall Home Show Associaion events, visit hbatc.com. receive mortgage information from HAPO. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 15 Backstage team members prectice their quick-change artistry at a Valley Theater Company rehearsal of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged)[revised], which opens Sept. 9 at Prosser’s Princess Theatre Fast costume changes not a problem for backstage ‘Shakespeare’ crew T he Valley Theater Company will open with The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged)[revised], at the Princess Theatre in Prosser on Sept. 9. Audiences will see just three actors make their way through all 37 of the Bard’s works, each of them playing from 11 to 18 roles in 97 minutes. What they won’t see is what it takes backstage to get the players’ costumes, wigs and props changed and get the actors back on the stage, sometimes in literally seconds. Director Candace Andrews revealed some of the secrets of making that possible, and one of the first things she mentioned is that “Shakespeare” costume changes are much like pit stops in automobile racing. “They are choreographed,” said Andrews. “It’s just like NASCAR.” Andrews said everyone involved has a specific task that’s coordinated with the tasks of others. The crew executes the costume changes with just two- or three-member backstage teams they call Team Patty, Team SueEllen and Team Mark. Actor Mark Humann’s crew is Dana Andrews, Nicole Pietz, and Tamara Pomponio. Cast member Patty Cook relies on Doreen Grassl, Heidi Dagle and Connie Hull. And SueEllen Davis has a two-member crew, Kacie Askew and Linda Pietz. “SueEllen does more narration,” said Andrews. “She only plays one character in the second act.” Still, with about 50 props, 24 costumes and 10 wigs to keep track of, the production needs some additional help. Fortunately, VTC has been able to recruit a Genie (with a capital “G”) to provide it. Genie St. John, who assists stage manager Amy Householder, has worked with the Richland Players in the Tri-Cities. “I usually do costuming,” said St. John. “This is my first time stage managing.” Her organizational approach to keeping things running smoothly is summed up in four words. “We colorcode everything,” she said, referring to costumes, wigs, and props. The actors and their crews also have the help of costume coordinator Carolyn Parker, together with costume assistants Susan Webber, Joyce Burke, Charlene Dunnington, Debbie Barham and Linda Jordan. Marcie Wall coordinates props with assistant Heather Ruane, and the wigs coordinator is Suzy Kephart. The show is produced by Marcia Hopkins. Performances will take place Sept 9, 10, 16, and 17 at 7:30 p.m., and Sept. 11 at 2:30 p.m. The show is rated PG 13. Tickets are $12 for adults and $10 for seniors (65-plus) and students. They are available at Adventures Underground in Richland, Patnode’s True Value Hardware in Benton City, Sixth Street Art Gallery and Bonnie’s Vine and Gift in Prosser, Bleyhl Farm Service in Grandview, MOM’s Candy Apples in Sunnyside and at the door at the Princess Theatre. To purchase online, visit the website ThePrincessTheatre.net. Walla Walla’s Power House schedules great entertainment for all age groups The Gesa Power House Theatre continues to bring world-class entertainment to Walla Walla. Here’s what’s coming up soon: Sept. 9-10 at 7 and 10 p.m., Walla Walla Rocky Horror Live! This live theatrical musical production was inspired by the cult-favorite movie Rocky Horror Picture Show. This show by a local cast will include all the songs you remember such as “Time Warp”). Dress up! Call out! Bring props (no food)! Reserved seats are $20 to $35, and the after party is an additional $10. Sept. 17 at 7 p.m., Seattle Rock Orchestra plays Pink Floyd The Seattle Rock Orchestra will pay a symphonic tribute to psychedelic rock through a retrospective that spans from Pink Floyd’s debut album “The Piper At the Gates of Dawn” to their bestselling double-album “The Wall.” The concert includes a complete performance of “The Dark Side of the Moon.” Reserved seats are $38 to $44, and are available online or by calling the box office at (509) 529-6500. Sept. 22 at 7 p.m., Sharron Matthews: Superstar “Superstar” features the best songs, stories, medleys and mash-ups from musical comedienne Sharron Matthews’ recent world tours. She serves up her signature irreverent wit in a comedic tour-de-force concert, with jaw-dropping vocals, pop culture punches, and melody mash-ups of hit songs by artists ranging from Queen to Beyoncé. Reserved seats are $25. Sept. 30 at 7 p.m., Broadway magician Adam Trent Adam Trent is revolutionizing the modern world of magic with a performance style that blends innovative stage illusions, witty dialogue, original ‘Power House’ continues on Page 37 PAGE 16 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Central Washington State Fair: All kinds of entertainment to be featured in Yakima H ot new pop singer Rachel Platten track at the fair. Those races are set for the opening Friday and Saturday and the Grammy Award-winning evenings, Sept. 23 and 24, at 6 p.m. \ group Boyz II Men are You can take in the among the many bigGiant Demolition Derby on name artists set to Saturday, Oct. 1, at 7 p.m, perform at this year’s and the Truck Football Central Washington State Demo Derby on Sunday Fair in Yakima. Boyz II the 2nd at 2 p.m. Free Men will appear at the fair seating is available for all on Tuesday, Sept. 27, and the motorized events Platten will perform on during the fair. Thursday the 29th. Both Rachel Platten Other entertainment concerts are at 7 p.m. offered to fairgoers includes daily The fair runs from Sept. 23-Oct. 2. Three rock bands from different eras performances by the Olate Dogs, will also play at the fair this month. The winners of the million-dollar first prize in the seventh season of “America’s 1970s rock band Foghat will perform Got Talent” in 2012. The dog act is on the Corona Stage on the opening wildly entertaining and fun for the Friday night, Sept. 23, at 7:30 p.m. whole family. Hinder, a band formed in 2001, will Returning fair favorites include the perform on Wednesday, Sept. 28, at 7 racing pigs, the huge wildp.m., and Grand Funk animal display Walk On Railroad, another 70s The Wild Side, and — group, will be performing new this year — Creature on Friday, Sept. 30, at Feature, with more than a 7:30 p.m. hundred different reptiles, Concerts by a couple of amphibians and other big-name country stars creatures. will take place on the Boyz II Men General-admission opening and closing bleacher seats for all fair concerts on Saturdays of the fair — Clay Walker on the Corona Stage are free with admisSept. 24 and Clint Black on Oct. 1. sion to the fair, but limited reserved Both of those performances begin at seating is available for purchase at the 7:30. All the concerts are part of the State Fair Park box office, all U.S. Cellular Concert Series. TicketsWest outlets and online at ticketswest.com. For phone orders, Racing, demo derbies call (800) 325-7328 (SEAT). Concert Racing fans will get a chance to see reserve seat tickets do not include fFair admission. limited modified races and the hotFor more information on this year’s wheeling sprint cars racing around the Coca-Cola Grandstand quarter-mile dirt fair, visit fairfun.com. IN BRIEF The Emerald to host benefit for Hanford worker On Sept. 10 from 5 to 8 p.m., the Jami Cooper Band, along with guitarist Michael Parker and the three-member band the Coast, will perform a benefit at the Emerald of Siam in Richland for Seth Ellingsworth, a Hanford worker who was sickened by toxic vapors a year ago while performing routine work in the tank farms. The artists are based in Richland. For information, call the Emerald of Siam Thai Restaurant at (509) 946-9328. Walla Walla senior picnic lunch will be indoors The third annual Labor Day Picnic at the Walla Walla Senior Center will be held on Sept. 2 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. It will be indoors in air-conditioned comfort. The fare will include hamburgers or vegetarian burgers, sweet potato fries and salads. The Senior Center Is at 720 Sprague Avenue at Jefferson Park. The picnic is sponsored by the Quail Run Retirement Community, and all ages are welcome. There is no cost to senior citizens 60 and over, and the cost for all others is $7. Call (509) 527-3775 for information and directions. Presenters sought for women’s conference The Tri-Cities Women in Business Conference is seeking speakers, presenters and panelists for a leadership conference on Jan. 25 at the TRAC Center in Pasco. The Women in Business Conference is Eastern Washington’s largest conference of its kind for women. It is hosted by the Tri-City Regional Chamber of Commerce and premier sponsor Washington River Protection Solutions. The conference promotes personal and professional development and advancement, inspiring women to seek their highest level of personal and professional growth. Call (509) 736-0510 for an application form. JOIN OUR VIP CLUB AND WIN TICKETS TO THE ELLENSBURG FILM FESTIVAL! Text “ENTERTAINER” and “FILM FESTIVAL” to the number 78816 by Sept. 20 and you’ll automatically be entered in our drawing for a pair of tickets or three-day passes to the Ellensbug Film Festival on Sept. 23 in Ellensburg (see facing page 17). When you join our VIP Club, you’ll begin receiving tips, alerts and secret deals from the Entertainer on your mobile device. Join our VIP Club to win a pair of tickets! The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 17 Ellensburg hosts its popular annual film festival Twelfth annual event moves to new venues on the CWU campus T he Ellensburg Film Festival was begun in 2004 and has grown to become a major Northwest film and arts event. The three-day festival is noted for its outstanding selection of new and classic films and a relaxed atmosphere in which to enjoy them. This year’s 12th annual festival will be held on Oct. 7, 8 and 9 in a new venue — the McConnell Theatre complex on the Central Washington University campus. The films shown at the festival promote diversity and dialog, and they often go on to win prestigious awards. Audiences are exposed to a variety of issues, and students are given an opportunity to network with filmmakers and exhibit their own work. The event has broad support from the community and is funded by a coalition of public and private organizations. It is supported by the Laughing Horse Arts Foundation of Ellensburg and the CWU Film and Video Studies Program. The Ellensburg Film Festival showcases feature-length films and short films made here in Washington and in many other countries. This year’s offerings include the British-made Dark Horse, about a group of working-class men who venture into the “sport of kings,” horseracing, plus the Spanishlanguage film Embrace of the Serpent and a New Zealand tale called Hunt for the Wilderpeople. The festival categories are “feature length dramatic,” “documentary,” short,” and “made in A highlight of the 2016 Ellensburg Film Festival will be the award-winning documentary Dark Horse, the remarkable story of the racehorse Dream Alliance. Washington State.” “Each year, we’ve gotten more than a thousand people attending,” said event coordinator Ralla Vickers. “It’s growing bigger every year.” And there’s more to offer each year, including some surprises. On Saturday at 7 p.m., McConnell Auditorium will host an exclusive showing of a “secret” film — a cast and crew rough-cut of a new project, The filmmaker will attend to present his work. A gala cocktail party will be held on Friday evening from 5 to 7 in the historic 420 Building in downtown Ellensburg, and evening screenings in the McConnell Complex will including alcoholic beverages. But there are children’s activities as well, including a free showing of The Jungle Book in the Hal Holmes Center adjacent to the Ellensburg Public Library. “On Saturday at noon, we’ll show teen films put together at a teen film workshop in August,” Vickers said. The teens filmed murder scenarios and tackled diverse subjects such as high heels, the FBI and the gun culture. Some highlights of the festival include these films: Oct. 7 Embrace of the Serpent, 7:30 p.m., McConnell Hall. This Spanish-language film with English subtitles tells the story of the relationship between Karamakate, an Amazonian shaman who is the last survivor of his people, and two scientists who work together over the course of 40 years to search the Amazon for a sacred healing plant. Oct. 8 The Burden, 11 a.m., McConnell Hall. This short documentary explores fossil-fuel dependence as a national security threat and the leadership of the military in the transition to clean energy. The Messenger, 4 p.m., Milo Smith Memorial Tower Theatre. This feature-length documentary explores our connection to birds and warns that the uncertain fate of songbirds such as thrushes, warblers, orioles, tanagers and grosbeaks might mirror our own future. Searchdog, 5:30 p.m., McConnell Hall. This feature-length documentary tells the story of Matthew Zarrella, a Rhode State Police sergeant who rehabilitates "pound dogs" and turns them into search-and-rescue dogs. There are extradordinary moments in the film as Matthew trains the dogs to find missing persons. Oct. 9 Dark Horse, 4:30 p.m., Milo Smith Memorial Tower Theatre. This feature documentary is the inspirational true story of a group of Welsh villagers who decide to take on the elite “sport of kings” and breed a racehorse. The horse, Dream Alliance, unexpectedly rose to the top ranks of the sport. Hunt for the Wilderpeople, 7 p.m., McConnell Hall. This feature film depicts a national manhunt for a rebellious kid and his foster uncle who go missing in the wild New Zealand bush. The Ellensburg Film Festival is three full days of viewing carefully selected new and classic films. For tickets and information, visit the website ellensburgfilmfestival.com, and check back periodically for changes in screening schedules and venues. PAGE 18 • September 2016 • The Entertainer A s summer morphs into autumn, some frightening or merely cute and funny decorations will start appearing on front lawns as creepy reminders that Halloween is coming. Where, you may ask, is the best place to enjoy this delightfully morbid season by being scared out of your wits? We have the answer: Scaregrounds! Over the past year, the Scaregrounds think tank has designed the transformation of more than 15 acres of the Benton County Fairgrounds, adding newer, bigger and more terrifying attractions. And all of this extra effort was done with one goal in mind — to nearly rip the soul from your body. Scaregrounds, in other words, is not for the faint of heart or for those with a weak constitution. The attraction’s only goal is to scare you senseless and to see you shame yourself by running away crying. It’s a wonder anyone makes it out alive! “Terror Behind the Screen” is brought back to life for its fifth triumphant season, thanks to the guys at Atomic Screen Printing and Embroidery. They easily transport their victims into a screaming world of evil and possession amidst a backdrop of isolated cabins in the middle of nowhere. They beg you to try not to let the darkness consume your soul. Clowns not your thing? Don’t worry, these are not the usual kind. Loni’s Sign Service offers “Freakshow 3D,” and at four times the size of previous years it gives the side-show freaks more room to chase you through the giant bigtop! The freaks dare you not to get lost in the Cotton Candy Room. And did we mention that everything will be in 3D? science facilities, fighting to save humanity. Your survival is paramount, but the zombies are fast...and they’re starving! “Hillbilly Hell” draws its prey into the warped realm of the Hatchet family farmstead during the haunting time of the Great Depression. The locals call the horrible place Devils Hollow, and with good reason. Many who venture too far into the cornfields and fog are never seen again. No one knows what they’re farming, and you’ll hope to escape before you find out. If the haunted circus, zombie wasteland, demonic possessions and evil inbreds leave you foaming at the mouth for more, be sure to try “Outbreak: Zombie Paintball” by Red These zombies are out to get you, but you Dot Paintball, for a totally immersive can stop them with paintballs. experience atop a battle-ready wagon mounted with 15 paintball turrets. Tear The zombies in “InFected” aren’t the escaped zombies apart in three your typical milling-about, rotting, different glow-in-the-dark scenes with languid corpses. Thanks to Tri-City awesome, vibrantly exploding Lumber and an aggressive virus that paintballs designed to keep the murders 75 percent of its hosts, these outbreak at bay. Ammo and equipment ravenous mutants are out to devour are provided, and extra paintballs can your body. You, the 2-percent immune, be purchased. will scramble through decimated The events will run every Friday and Saturday in October (including Halloween night) from 7 to 11 p.m., and the schedule will be extended to include Wednesday and Thursday from 7 to 10 p.m. during the final week. In addition to all the scariness, add food, beverages, merchandise, ATMs, selfie stations, cellphone charging stations and roaming haunters and you’ll have an unforgettable night. As a bonus, the Tire Factory of Pasco and Richland will bring back the acclaimed Kids’ Day on Oct. 22 and 29 from 1 to 4 p.m. to offer children under 13 the fun and enjoyment of a “lighter,” less scary haunt. You can find prices and information about other events at Kids’ Day on the scaregroundstc.com website. Ticket options for Scaregrounds include VIP passes that allow you unlimited re-entry and line-cutting privileges, limited to 50 such tickets per night. Gate ticket sales begin at 6:30 each night, and you can purchase passes in advance at terrorbehindthescreen.com, where you’ll also find all the dates, times, prices, rules and general information. Be afraid…be very afraid! Walla Walla Diversity Day will be held in Pioneer Park The 23rd annual Diversity Day festival will be held in Pioneer Park in Walla Walla on Sunday, Sept. 25, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. This year’s festival includes two activities, “Diversity Wear” and “Diversity Where?”, which involve fun and prizes. High-quality entertainment is planned throughout the day, includ- ing music and dance performances reflecting the traditions and artistic influences of diverse cultures and nationalities. Games and activities for youngsters and young adults make Diversity Day an enjoyable family experience. The festival is organized by the Walla Walla Diversity Coalition, which was formed in 1994 to promote com- munication, respect and understanding among all members of the community. The coalition works to prevent discrimination and promote cooperation among residents regardless of culture, color, religion, gender, sexual orientation, national or ethnic origin, age, disability or other differences. To learn more, visit promotediversity.org. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 19 First WSU Leadership Academy will fit the training to the student B usiness professionals will learn how to become effective leaders during Washington State University TriCities’ first Leadership Academy Sept. 19-23 at the Consolidated Information Center on the Richland campus. “Leadership in the 21st Century” will help professionals at all levels develop their natural style of leadership. Through cutting-edge curriculum, participants will gain the necessary tools to become highly effective leaders. Participants will be administered the EQi-2.0 leadership assessment as part of the workshop curriculum — a $500 value. Course instructor Misipati “Semi” Bird is internationally recognized as a dynamic public speaker and educator. He has more than 23 years of military service, including service in the Army Special Forces, where he received the Bronze Star for valor and the Purple Heart for wounds received in combat. He has held several senior positions in training and leadership development for sectors including government, banking Sunnyside will celebrate annual Sunshine Days Sept 16-18 The three-day celebration of “Sunshine Days” in Sunnyside will be held this year on Sept. 16, 17 and 18. Main events are the Sunshine Days Parade, the Miss Sunnyside Pageant and the Sunshine Days Car Show. On Friday night, meet the Seattle Seahawks’ SeaGals downtown in Centennial Square for autographs and pictures, along with entertainment and food vendors. The carnival will be open from 3 to 10 p.m. Saturday morning begins early with the Fireman’s Breakfast from 7 to 10 a.m. at the fire station, followed by the Farmers Market at 8 a.m. The parade begins at 10 and winds its way through the downtown area. It will begin at the high school on the corner of 16th Ave. and Edison and proceed down Edison and past Central Park to end at the Law and Justice Center. Bring a blanket or chair, gather your family and friends and wave to the Miss Sunnyside royalty and other parade participants. After the parade, it’s off to Central Park, on 5th Avenue behind the Safeway store, for an up-close look at the cars and motorcycles and browse among the vendors. The carnival opens at 11 a.m. and will be open until 10 p.m. Entertainment in the park begins at noon with various dance groups and a lip-sync competition. Then, on Saturday night, it’s the Miss Sunnyside Pageant in the Sunnyside High School Auditorium. The Littlle Miss Sunnyside pageant is held on Sunday in Central Park, beginning at 1 p.m. And the final event on Sunday night is the Community Dinner, an opportunity for community members to have a meal in the park and enjoy some community fellowship. The Miss Sunnyside Committee, along with Miss Sunnyside and her court, will be selling baked potatoes with an assortment of toppings to choose from. The cost is $10. For more information about Sunshine Days, visit sunnysidechamber.com or call the Chamber of Commerce at (509) 8375939. IN BRIEF Legendary Tanya Tucker to perform in Pendleton Tanya Tucker will be live in concert at Wildhorse Resort and Casino on Saturday, Oct. 15, at 8 p.m. (Doors open at 7). Tucker is a country-music legend who charted hit songs such as “Delta Dawn,” “Two Sparrows in a Hurricane” and “What’s Your Mama’s Name.” For four decades she has been one of the most admired and respected female vocalists in country music. Tickets are $39 ($49 for premium seating) and can can be purchased in person at the Wildhorse Gift Shop or online at wildhorseresort.com. Cyber Art 509 is exhibiting at Cheese Louise Misipati “Semi” Bird and education. He holds certifications in emotional intelligence, behavior analysis, human resources and organizational performance, and is an executive in residence at WSU. To register and for more information, visit tricities.wsu.edu. A new exhibit by local artists is hanging at Cheese Louise on the Parkway in Richland. You can see 27 paintings and photographs by Ed David, Greg Ashby, Margo Fox, Barb Sutton, Carol Betker, Gail Roadhouse, Linda Hoover, Sophie and Patrick Calvey, Diana McPherson, Dianna LeRoy, Sally Green, Barb Thrall, Danny Patterson, Trisha Pena, and Patricia and Pat Fleming. These artists are members of Cyber Art 509, a local online art cooperative. The works will hang through September. The exhibit is free and appropriate for all. Visit Cyber Art 509 on Facebook and at cyberart509.com. City of Prosser celebrates ‘States Day’ States Day, which dates back to the earliest days of Prosser’s history, will be celebrated this year on Sept. 5, beginning with the Grand Parade through the downtown area at 10 a.m. Other activities will be held in City Park, including carnival rides (Sept. 2-5), food and the “Valley’s Got Talent” competition. Discounted carnival wristbands can be purchased at Cook’s Ace Hardware or the Prosser Chamber of Commerce office For information, visit tourprosser.com. PAGE 20 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Four-day art event is in Joseph T he 34th annual Wallowa Valley Festival of Arts will welcome about 90 local, regional and national artists Sept. 14-18 at the Joseph Community Center in Joseph, Ore. The festival showcases established, award-winning and emerging talents, and is recognized as one of the finest juried art exhibits in the Pacific Northwest. At Friday’s opening-night reception from 7 to 10 p.m. you can visit with the artists while enjoying wine and hors d’oeuvres. Tickets are $20 in advance and can be purchased online at wallowavalleyarts.org. All the daytime festival activities are free from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and 10 to 2 on Sunday. Artist demonstrations and live music will be going on during the day. In the evening, the Night of the Quick Draw is a popular event in which you can watch as artists create and complete a work of art in 1½ hoursm and you can bid on the works through a silent auction. Live music, food and a Exciting, free visual arts tour coming in October An artist works on a drawing during the Night of the Quick Draw. no-host bar make this a highlight of the festival. Admission to the Quick Draw is $5 per person. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the artists begin working at 7. These other activities will take place over four days: En Plein Air competition on Wednesday and Thursday, with a special reception and art hanging at the Josephy Center for Arts and Culture from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday. An afternoon-evening Joseph Gallery Walk on Main Street, Sept; 15 from 4 to 6 p.m. Ruby Peak Film Festival at the Josephy Center for Arts and Culture, on Sept. 14 at 7 p.m.; Sept 16 at 3 p.m. and Sept. 17 at 1 p.m. Local Youth Arts Showcase. For more information, visit wallowavalleyarts.org or contact Jeff Costello at (510) 390-2121 or jeffcostello1234@yahoo.com. Save the dates Oct. 21 and 22 for Tour de Arts, a new Tri-Cities visual-arts event. From 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on those two days, more than 30 artists will be showing their work at selected venues or opening their own studios to the public. This is a free, self-guided tour. Artists working in painting, pottery, wood-turning, glassblowing, tapestry, fiber arts, photography, encaustic painting and jewelry will be showing their latest creations, You can explore works of art that will suit any taste, from traditional realism to contemporary abstract. Maps will be available online at psharp71.wixsite.com/tourdearts and at sponsoring organizations’ locations — Allied Arts Gallery at the Park at 89 Lee Blvd. in Richland, You & I Framing and Gallery at 214 W 1st Ave. in Kennewick, Tucannon Cellars Winery at 40504 Demoss Rd. in Benton City, and Columbia Clipper, Inc., at 6855 West Clearwater in Kennewick. Cyber Art 509, a local artists’ collective, is hosting this event to showcase local talent. Many of these artists are new to our area, and together they bring a wide variety of styles and media to the area’s burgeoning arts scene. On the tour, you will be able to meet the artists, talk with them about their work, learn how the work is created, and purchase high-quality fine art. In some venues, there will be hands-on art opportunities for you to express your own inner artist. Columbia Clippers is sponsoring a drawing for $100 to be used toward the purchase of a work of art. You can enter at each venue you visit. More details are available on the website. Sponsorship opportunities are available for supporters of the arts. Contact Pam Sharp vie the website. Acrylic by Heidi Elkington Hey The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 21 Richard Parrish, left, and Morgan Madison will teach classesa at db Studio. Master instructors will teach glass-art classes D eborah Barnard’s db Studio at Barnard Griffin Winery in Richland will be welcoming “master” instructors for workshops in glass art in September and October. Morgan Madison will teach “Creative Concepts in Kiln Forming” Sept. 16-19 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The cost for all four days is $500, which includes the instruction and materials. Madison is a Seattle artist with a bachelor’s degree in studio art from Lewis and Clark College in Portland. He uses a variety of processes and is inspired by colors, textures and landscapes. Through group exercises and oneon-one attention, the class will take you from the development of an idea to executing it and firing it in the kiln. From Oct. 28 through 31, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Richard Parrish will conduct a workshop titled “Fear No Color.” The cost is $850 for instruction and materials for all four days. Parrish, an artist and architect from Bozeman, Mont., finds inspiration in the landscape of the mountain West. His students will learn to master color techniques in fused glass design All db Studio workshops allow you to Convention center hosts three-day tattoo show Tattoo artists and fans of body art from all over the Northwest will convene for the 7th annual Three Rivers Tattoo Convention on Sept. 23, 24 and 25 at the Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick. The event will feature seminars, contests, live tatooing demonstrations and vendors. And there’ll be plenty of food, drinks and entertainment. If you’re a tattoo artist or an aspiring artist, this is the place to learn.It’s also the place to check out different artists for some future body art. The event kicks off at noon on Friday, Sept. 23. On Saturday, the doors open at 11 a.m., and the tattooing and demonstrations continue throughout the day and evening. Demonstrations will highlight sleeve, portrait, traditional and both small and large color art. On Sunday, the floor opens at 11 and closes at 6 p.m. Admission is $15 per day, or $35 for all three days. Tickets are available at the Toyota Center box office, all Ticketmaster outlets and online at ticketmaster.com. For a schedule and information, visit threeriversconventioncenter.com. celebrate your creative side while making keepsakes for your friends and family members. Other classes include “1st Glass Fusing,” on Sept. 7 from 5 to 7 p.m., “Drape Vase” on Sept. 14 from 5:30 to 7 p.m., and “Beadmaking” Sept. 24 from 10 to 5. Reserve your place by calling (509) 627-0266, or visit db Studio at barnardgriffin.com. You can also stay in touch via Facebook and Twitter. PAGE 22 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Don’t Breathe is a terrifyingly good horror movie! robbery is inevitable from the beginning because of poor defensive tactics and t the new Fairchild Cinemas on bad gunmanship on Money’s part. The Queensgate, I watched Don’t rest of the movie is made up of “jump Breathe while sinking in a recliner, with scares” and high-tension situations as added footrest and ample leg room. It the audience wants to see the tattooed was, by far, a life-changing experience, blond, Rocky, free of this house of and older theaters should take heed of horrors. this lounging trend that’s worth the few Director and producer Fede Alvarez’s extra bucks. genius shows in the depth of his When down on their luck, three characters and a less-is-more apmillennials with severe cash-flow proach to the verbal script. The film is a problems break into stately homes to definite notch on his belt. It is hypersteal goods that their obvious alphaterrifying and suspenseful, and there male leader, Money (Daniel Zovatto), are a few twists in the plot that will fences for an unfair price. When leave you thoroughly disgusted at how stealing hot Rolexes isn’t meeting the immersed in the story you’ve become. need, he asks for some tips from his In the end, Don’t Breathe was a fencer. genuinely excellent movie with a good This is how a security firm owner’s cast, great writing, and incredible son Alex (Dylan Minnette), an camera angles. The cast’s chemistry alcoholic’s battered daughter Rocky Dylan Minnette and Jane Levy in the home-invasion horror film Don’t Breathe. was electric from start to finish, but (Jane Levy), and a wannabe gangster Stephen Lang stole the entire screen thug who tries too hard end up scoping From the get-go, there are several Even with the keys to the alarms, they with his commitment to the character out the home of a reclusive military issues with how these run into obstacle after he played. He easily drew the audience veteran named Norman Nordstrom three young adults obstacle with almost in, forcing them to both empathize and (Stephen Lang). He’s a blind, older execute their highly no coincidental good entirely reject the crazed blind man all shut-in who’s grieved and depressed flawed plan to find luck, even when Alex at the same time. over the loss of his daughter. And he $300,000 supposedly cheats fate several You can rent the film after it hits Bluowns a giant Rottweiler that could hidden somewhere in times. ray, but unless you’re reclining to easily have body-doubled as Stephen the falling-apart home. The foiling of the watch it, you are missing out! King’s Kujo. A By Aubrey Langlois Battelle Film Club schedule focuses on foreign films The Battelle Film Club begins its Fall 2016 Film Series on Friday, Sept. 9, continuing through Dec. 16. The eight-film series includes: Sept. 9: Pride (2014). Rated R for language and brief sexual content. In 1984, a group of gay and lesbian activists raises money to support striking miners in the UK, but union leaders reject their support. Undeterred, the LGBT group visits a mining village in Wales to deliver their donation in person. The result is the true story of a partnership between seemingly alien communities. Sept. 23: One Million Dubliners (2014). Not rated. One Million Dubliners reveals the often unspoken stories of love, loss, death and the afterlife. An engaging tour guide explores opinions and beliefs as he shepherds his charges through the headstones and monuments of Glasnevin Cemetery. Oct. 7: Embrace of the Serpent (2015). Not rated. This story, told in several languages, centers on an Amazonian shaman — the last survivor of his people — and the two scientists who build a 40-year friendship with him. The film was inspired by the journals of explorers Theodor Koch-Grünberg and Richard Evans Schultes. Oct. 21: About Elly (2009). Not rated. About Elly is an Iranian drama in Persian and German languages. With the return of their friend Ahmad from Germany, old friends reunite for an outing by the Caspian Sea. Sepideh has brought Elly along in the hope of setting her up with Ahmad. but Elly suddenly vanishes. Her mysterious disappearance sets in motion a series On Sept. 9, the Battelle Film Club will feature the British film Pride, in which an LGBT group supports striking miners. of deceptions and revelations. Nov. 4: The Dark Horse (2014). Rated R for language and drug use Not to be confused with the British race-horse documentary Dark Horse, this New Zealand film is the portrait of a man searching for the courage to lead in spite of mental illness. A brilliant but troubled chess champion finds purpose in teaching the game to Maori children. Conflict with his brother and a violent gang threaten to ruin his progress. Nov. 18: East Side Sushi (2014). Rated PG for brief violence, suggestive content and language. Juana, a Latina single mother, is forced to give up her fruit-vending cart. She lands a position in a Japanese restaurant and discovers a new world of cuisine and culture. Her attempts to become a sushi chef, however, are thwarted because she’s the “wrong” race and gender. Against all odds, she embarks on a journey of self-discovery. Dec. 2: Swades (2004). Not rated. Mohan Bhargava (Shah Rukh Khan) is a bright young NASA scientist who returns to his native India on a quest to find his childhood nanny. His simple quest becomes a journey in search of that metaphysical and elusive place called “home.” Dec. 16: The Chorus (2004). Rated PG-13 for some language, sexual references and violence. This French-language film takes place at a school for troubled boys, where new music teacher Clement Mathieu finds he is unprepared for the harsh discipline and depressing atmosphere. He’s able to spark his students’ interest in music, but he determination to change his students’ lives puts him at odds with the school’s overbearing headmaster. All films are on Friday nights beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the Battelle Auditorium in Richland. Tickets are available at the door for $4 for adults and $2 for children. Season passes are $16. A complete schedule and film descriptions can be found online at tricityfilmclub.org. The indies are coming! The indies are coming! The annual Tri-Cities International Film Festival (TRIFI) will kick off Oct. 1 in Walla Walla and Oct. 13 in Richland, with “free film night” at the HAPO Community Stage in John Dam Plaza. The independent film festival runs through Oct. 16 and will include more than 160 films from the U.S. and more than 20 foreign countries. Screening venues include the Uptown Theater in Richland, the nearby Confluent Space and the Richland Community Center. TRIFI was born when the Columbia Basin Video Festival and the RadCon Fan Film Festival combined in 2008 to form the Tri-Cities International Fantas- tic Film Festival. The name was changed to TRIFI in 2015. The 9th annual TRIFI will spotlight “indie” short and feature films made by filmmakers on limited budgets but unlimited imagination. They include many film genres — sci-fi, comedy, animation, fan film, horror and documentary. Pick up the next issue of the Entertainer at the beginning of October for a schedule and information about the submitted films. On Saturday, Oct. 15, the festival will host a filmmaker’s workshop titled “Making a Web Series” and will feature Seattle filmmaker Kelly Hughes and former Richland residents (now Holly- wood filmmakers) John and Sarah Fitzgerald. Tri-City Herald movie reviewer Gary (Mr. Movie) Wolcott will serve as the master of ceremonies. A meet-and-greet reception will be held at 8 p.m. that evening. An all-festival pass is available online through Oct. 10 at an early-bird price of $10, which includes admission to the meet-and-greet at the Uptown Theater. The early-bird price for single-day passes is $5. Prices will be $15 and $10 after Oct. 12. Visit trifi.org for a link to ticket sales, and watch for schedules and updates on the site. Mark your calendar now. The Indies are coming! The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 23 Period novel invokes intense emotion Magruder’s Curiosity Cabinet, a Novel, by H.P. Wood, Sourcebooks Landmark, 2016 T By JoDean Jordan urn-of-the-century Coney Island quickly becomes both a nightmare and a home for teenager Kitty Haywood. Kitty and her mother set out on a journey from England to explore the rising, infamous Dreamland amusement park at Coney Island. But when Kitty’s mother vanishes from her hotel room and everyone claims not to know anything about it, she is left alone in a strange place with no money, food or support — and, worst of all, without knowing what happened to her mother. All alone on Coney Island and away from her native England is a very scary place to be. The last people Kitty expects to help her are the sideshow acts and inhabitants of Magruder’s Curiosity Cabinet, the place where, for a nickel, you can behold all the oddities from around the world. She is quickly surrounded by giant men and bearded women, flea wranglers, men with no legs and men who stand two feet tall. Lion tamers, con men and a worldfamous he/she become her new friends and rally around her to either help her or use her. She’s not sure which, but all she wants is her mother and answers. She’ll do whatever it takes to get them, even if it means struggling to stay alive in a place that is being ravaged by a foul and deadly sickness that is quickly spreading throughout Coney Island. Dreamland is about to become a nightmare. But, where there is adversity, heroes emerge and true colors sneak out. That is exactly what happens when the “bad” guys become good, and the “good” guys break the rules to stand up for what they believe. And the indifferent remain glaringly so. It’s what happens when adversity is thrust upon the cast of characters of Magruder’s. It’s when you find out that it’s not what’s on the outside that counts. Magruder’s Curiousity Cabinet is a debut novel that is full of imagination and heart. It is a creative piece of art that is put together like a delicate puzzle. The characters are full of life, and just when you think you know them, they surprise you. It is the characters that truly make this story as spectacular as it is, and coupled with the unique setting, it’s a book that is charming and one that’s easy to lose sleep over. In this debut novel, it is obvious that H.P. Wood did the research. It is full of facts and historical insight about a very different place and time, and even though the history is accurate, the story is original. The politics of Coney Island at the turn of the century, put together with the human element of what it meant to be a “freak” at that time, evokes intense emotion. Characters are thrust together in a situation that, in this day and age, they might never encounter, let alone have to fight the world together, all the while staying true to themselves and keeping their dignity intact. This dilemma became true even for Kitty, who is an educated, sophisticated, beautiful girl, trapped in a place where no one seems to understand her except for those who really shouldn’t. This book is beautiful and tragic and is a must-read for anyone who can appreciate the marriage of humor, powerful friendships, overcoming adversity, and unbridled wonderment and adventure. Magruder’s Curiosity Cabinet can be downloaded to a Kindle for $7 or via iBooks in audio form for $26.95. It can also be purchased from Amazon in hardcover for $34.75. Fast-paced novel explores plane-crash mystery Before the Fall, by Noah Hawley, Grand Central Publishing, 2016 By JoDean Jordan Sixteen minutes is all it takes for a private plane leaving from Martha’s Vineyard to plunge into the icy waters below, killing nine people. Struggling artist Scott Burroughs and the fouryear-old son of a multimillionaire media mogul are the only survivors of the horrific crash. Scott swims for shore with the newlyorphaned JJ on his back, and the grim reality of their unlikely survival and the wretched fact that they are leaving behind nine victims sets in. Their future is murky. The heroic 15-mile swim and rescue is one for the books, and of course one for the media. In this age of social media and 24-hour news cycles, Scott is plunged into a media frenzy in which everything about the crash is called into question. What was he doing on a plane with millionaires? Was he having an affair with JJ’s mother? Why is he grieving, reacting and behaving the way he is? Did he have anything to do with the crash? Do his paintings of tragic disasters, which have been seized by the FBI, give clues to the crash? It’s too much for any man to handle, especially one whose memory is failing him and whose answers are satisfying no one. To make matters worse, Bill Cunningham, a corrupt talking head, desperately tries to clear the name of his boss, JJ’s father. He’ll do anything for ratings, including dragging anyone through the mud for his own selfish gains. Suspicions and conspiracy theories arise among the American public, and fingers are pointed. Someone needs to be held accountable for the horrific demise of the victims on that plane. Was it the fault of the Wall Street criminal on the flight, who was about to be indicted? Did it have something to do with a previous kidnapping? Or was the family’s Israeli bodyguard not to be trusted? Did the privileged copilot have drugs in his system? More questions than answers arise in the chaos and in the grueling investigation. Meanwhile, JJ will only speak to Scott as he tries to adjust to his new life with his aunt and her loser husband, who is elated at the fact that JJ comes with a $103-million-dollar trust fund. The media, shifty friends, the tabloids and families all have something to gain from this tragic accident. The question is, will Scott and JJ survive twice? Before the Fall is a fast-paced, complex novel. With every answer comes new questions, and it’s impossible to stop reading until the mystery is revealed. The author delves into the back story of each crew member and passenger and carves out brilliant characters who are connected by fate long before the crash ever occurs. The novel illustrates the vast differences between the “haves” and “have nots” and what it means to be extremely wealthy in a society where money is revered no matter how it’s obtained. Scott Burroughs, the protagonist, is an interesting character full of flaws. He’s a former college swimmer turned artist and alcoholic. His insistence on living a simple life, devoid of social media and even a cell phone, has made him a relic in a fast-moving world. His outlook is thoughtful and insightful, and gives the readers a different perspective on what they are faced with every day. Noah Hawley brilliantly constructs the story piece by piece until the surprising climax. It’s a very exciting read full of heart and suspense. Before the Fall can be downloaded to a Kindle or via iBooks for $13.99 or purchased from Amazon in hardcover for $15.60. Sign up now for Rivers of Ink conference The 2016 Rivers of Ink writer’s conference on Oct. 7 and 8 at the Richland Library will feature authors Terry Persun and Suzanne Selfors as keynote speakers, as well as authors from the Tri-Cities and across the Northwest. Persun writes in a varitety of genres and has received seven novel and poetry awards over the years. Suzanne Selfors is a national best-selling author who writes for kids of all ages. This year’s conference is set to include two tracks — “Craft” and “Marketing.” Craft workshops will cover topics such as characters, dialogue, voice and connections with authors such as Jason Bond and Steve Wallenfels.. Marketing workshops will include advice on independent publishing, author websites and blogging, with titles such as “Set Up and Maintain an Author Website” and “Guaranteed to Sell: How to Write a Book Agents and Editors WANT to Read.” To register online, visit the website riversofInk.net, and you can also join the conversation on Facebook. Movies New Releases Playing in Theaters September 2016 2nd Solace The Light Between Oceans Skiptrace 9th When the Bough Breaks Sully 16th Snowden Bridget Jones's Baby 23rd Storks The Magnificent Seven 30th Deepwater Horizon Masterminds Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children The Edge of Seventeen October 2016 7th The Birth of a Nation Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life The Girl on the Train 14th Desierto Kevin Hart: What Now? The Accountant 21st Jack Reacher 2 Never Go Back Ouija 2: Origin of Evil A Monster Calls Boo! A Madea Halloween Keeping Up with the Joneses 28th Rings Inferno Releases New DVD Releases September 2016 6th Money Monster Love & Friendship The Darkness Now You See Me 2 13th Captain America 3 Civil War The Conjuring 2 Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping De Palma The Fits 20th Ma Ma Free State of Jones Neighbors 2 Sorority Rising Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2 Out of the Shadows 27th Central Intelligence The Shallows Warcraft October 2016 4th X-Men: Apocalypse The Purge: Election Year Swiss Army Man Into the Forest 11th The Legend of Tarzan The Infiltrator 18th Alice Through the Looking Glass Our Kind of Traitor 25th Captain Fantastic PAGE 24 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Power House will host ‘Dancing with the W2 Stars’ S ome of Walla Walla’s local “celebrities” will take to the stage at the Gesa Power House Theatre on Oct. 8 for the first-ever “Dancing with the W2 Stars,” a fundraising event for Valley Residential Services. Local participants will be paired with professional dancers and have a week of rehearsals to learn a ballroom dance routine. They’ll perform the routine for an an audience and a panel of judges. The Walla Walla “stars” to compete will include Katie Christianson, dean of students at Willow Public School; Amy Figgins of Leonetti Cellar; Terra Luthi, general manager of the Courtyard Marriott Walla Walla; Andrae Bopp, owner of Andrae’s Kitchen; Lawson Knight, co-founder of Intermountain Impact Investments; and Nabiel Shawa, Walla Walla city manager. Judges will include Jazzercise instructor Janet Byerley, Zachary Fraser, president of the Walla Walla Sweets baseball club, and Damien Sinnott of Washington State University Tri-Cities. In addition to the “stars” competi- tion, there will be a performance by their professional instructors, the dancers of the Utah Ballroom Dance Company, including excerpts from their award-winning dance showcase called “Ballroom Fever.” This dance troupe features some of nation’s top ballroom dancers who perform nationally and internationally more than a hundred times a year. Dancers in the Utah company have received numerous accolades and awards, including coveted trophies for both Latin American and standard ballroom dancing in the U.S. National Formation Championships. In their showcase performance you can expect to see breathtaking lifts, hundreds of costumes, theatrical story lines, and a variety of ballroom dance styles from the sexy Cuban salsa to the energetic American swing and the elegant Viennese waltz. Funds raised will help Valley Residential Services provide personalized support in safe, comfortable, home environments for developmentally disabled individuals as well as rehabilitation residences for veterans and family assistance services. Tickets are $40 for reserved seating, and $85 for reserved seats plus admission to a VIP after party that will include appetizers, a beverage and dancing with the performers. For information and tickets, visit phtww.com or by calling the box office at (509) 529-6500. Auditions scheduled for performances of The Nutcracker ballet in Walla Walla The Walla Walla Symphony and the Eugene Ballet Company will hold auditions for The Nutcracker on Friday, Sept. 16, from 4 to 8:30 p.m. at the Dance Center, 129 E Alder, Suite B, in Walla Walla. Auditions are open to all dancers ages 5-18. Students must be available for all rehearsals and performances. Rehearsals will be on Saturdays from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Dance Center and will be conducted by Idalee Hutson-Fish. Performances take place on Saturday, Dec. 10, at 2 and 7:30 p.m. in Cordiner Hall. Interested dancers should bring a completed registration form to the audition, along with a $5 registration fee. Registration forms and additional information, including roles and the audition times for the various roles, can be found on the symphony’s website, wwsymphony.org. Click on “Nutcracker Auditions.” If you have questions, call the Dance Center at (509) 525-0815. Moscow Ballet to perform Nutcracker in Spokane Tickets are already on sale for the Nov. 14 performance of the Moscow Ballet’s Great Russian Nutcracker at 7 p.m. at the INB Performing Arts Center in Spokane. The original, direct-from-Russia ballet features some of the world’s greatest dancers along with larger-than-life magical props, a 60-foot growing Christmas tree and spectacular Russian-made costumes and sets. Ticket prices range from $28 to $175, and group tickets can be purchased. Tickets are available at all TicketsWest outlets and online at ticketswest.com. For phone orders, call (800) 325-SEAT. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 25 3 Rivers Folklife Society activities for this month By Micki Perry Preparing for life after Tumbleweed Music Festival The members of the all-woman Rolling Hills Chorus, affiliated with Sweet Adelines. LIVE…From KRHC Radio… ‘The Barbershop Hour’ E VOCAL LESSONS ach year since 1980, the Rolling Hills Chorus has produced an original show that features a cappella four-part harmony in the barbershop style. This year, these Sweet Adelines are bringing back the golden age of radio with a 1950s-style radio variety hour featuring favorites from the 40s and 50s. The show will be staged Oct. 7 at 7:30 p.m. in the Princess Theatre in Prosser, and Oct. 8 at 2 p.m. at Faith Tri-Cities Auditorium in Pasco. You’ll enjoy the chorus, a variety of local talent and guest quartets. There will be a silent auction at the Pasco show. Advance tickets for “LIVE…From KRHC Radio – ‘The Barbershop Hour’ ” are available from any chorus member or online at rollinghillschorus.org. They are also being sold at Sister to Sister in Prosser, Adventures Underground in Richland and the Bookworm in Kennewick. For information, call (509) 420-6754 or send an email message to info@rollinghillschorus.org. START OCT 27 Rolling Hills Chorus wants to share the joy of singing a cappella in four-part barbershop style with women who love to sing. You can get acquainted with the chorus through a five-week series of free vocal lessons starting on Oct. 27. The lessons culminate with the annual free Christmas show, in which you will sing with the chorus. Rolling Hills Chorus is part of Sweet Adelines International, with members drawn from Yakima to the Tri-Cities and Hermiston. Prospective members are welcome at rehearsals on Thursday evenings at 6:45 p.m. at the Pasco Senior Center, 1315 N. 7th Ave. in Pasco. For more information, visit the website rollinghillschorus.org. The 3 Rivers Folklife Society has spent most of the summer gearing up for the Tumbleweed Music Festival on Labor Day weekend, with not many other events except the monthly sing-alongs. This month we will have Tumbleweed on Friday through Sunday of Labor Day weekend. In September will will also have our Sea Song Singalong, and we will kick off the coffeehouse and concert seasons. For information about the Tumbleweed Music Festival (schedule and bios of performers, etc.) or information about other 3 Rivers Folklife Society events, visit our websites at 3rfs.org or tumbleweedfest.com. You can also call (509) 5282215. Annual Tumbleweed Music Festival Sept. 2-4 The 20th annual Tumbleweed Music Festival will be held in Howard Amon Park in Richland on Sept. 2, 3 and 4. The festival is produced and sponsored by 3 Rivers Folklife Society and the City of Richland, with additional support from local and regional sponsors. A free concert on Friday night on the North Stage, beginning at 6:30 p.m., will feature local youth bands and talented single performers with an eclectic mix of acoustic folk and indie rock genres represented. Tumbleweed is a family-oriented festival. It is the only one of its kind in the Tri-Cities and has become one of the most popular acoustic music festivals in the Northwest. There will be an eclectic mix of about 110 local, regional and national acts on six outdoor and indoor stages. Festival participants will conduct free music and dance workshops, and there will also be an indoor dance stage inside the adjacent Richland Community Center. In addition to music and dance performances, workshops and jam sessions, there will be arts and crafts booths and an assortment of festival foods available. There is something for everyone at Tumbleweed! The festival is free during the day. The only paid events are the Saturdayevening concert with Trillium -239, Michael “Hawkeye” Herman, and Dan Maher, and Sunday evening’s contra dance. The complete schedule and details are on the Tumbleweed website. Songwriter Jamie Cooper will perform on Sept. 9 The 3 Rivers Coffeehouse is an ad hoc coffeehouse venue held on the second Friday of each month from September through April at the All Saints Episcopal Church, 1322 Kimball in Richland. The coffeehouse usually begins at 7:30 p.m. with an open-mic session. Come early to sign up for a performance slot. The suggested donation at the door is $8 ($6 for seniors and students). Our featured performer for the September coffeehouse is local singer and songwriter Jamie Cooper. Jamie has been performing at our coffeehouse venues since she was a teenager. in the 1990s. She plays a variety of styles including jazz, folk, blues and country music, and some of her original songs have Christian and spiritual themes. Sea Song Singalong to be held on Sept. 10 The First Friday Folkie Free-for-All, usually held at my home, will not be held this month because it would conflict with the Tumbleweed Festival’s New Horizons Concert. The Second Saturday Sea Song Singalong will be on Sept. 10 at Round Table Pizza in Richland. The singing of mostly sea songs and shanties begins around 7 p.m. There is no cost except for your food and beverages. Concert season kicks off with Burgundy Pearl Burgundy Pearl, a folk duo from Seattle, will kick off the 3 Rivers Folk Society’s concert season on Sept. 17 at 7:30 p.m. at the Community Unitarian Universalist Church, 2819 West Sylvester in Pasco. Tickets are available in advance at the Bookworm in Kennewick and Octopus’ Garden in Richland. You can also get tickets at the door for $14 general admission and $12 for seniors and students. Burgundy Pearl is sometimes a duo and sometimes a trio with the addition of bassist Robin McGillvery, but this concert will feature the husband-and-wife duo of Ron Dalton and Peggy Sullivan. They perform a mix of “mongrel Americana” music with tight harmonies and clean, pleasing guitar arrangements. Ron and Peggy are both songwriters and composers. Their music is influenced by 1920s and 30s old-time blues and contemporary folk and pop music, but with swing and jazz overtones. Their performances are an exciting mix of the old and the new. They will also be performing at the Tumbleweed Music Festival. Visit their website at burgundypearl.com. PAGE 26 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Prosser will host third annual Beer and Whiskey Festival T he Prosser Chamber of Commerce, in partnership with the Port of Benton, Blue Flame Spirits, Whitstran Brewing and Horse Heaven Hills Brewery, is organizing the third annual Prosser Beer and Whiskey Festival. The festival will be held on Saturday, Oct. 8, from 4 to 10 p.m. at the Prosser Wine and Food Park on Lee Road. Several Northwest breweries and distilleries are scheduled to be on hand to offer you a wide selection of beers and whiskeys for tasting. The exciting event has been well-attended in its short history and continues to grow each year. Tickets for this year’s event are on sale now and are already selling fast. The festival features live music, food vendors and a rib cook-off to be judged by local chefs. Ticket packages start at just $15 for general admission, which includes entrance and a logo glass. A $50 VIP ticket includes 20 tokens for food and drink purchases and access to the VIP cigar lounge. The $75 all-access IN BRIEF Grape vines ‘smoked’ to test taint from wildfires Wine grapes may appear fine after a harsh wildfire season. But if grapes have smoke taint, the finished wine may taste and smell awful — an unpleasant surprise for growers and wine lovers alike. In a new study, WSU Tri-Cities assistant viticulture professor Tom Collins is exposing vines to smoke to better understand how the chemical composition changes, a problem that affected California grapes in 2008. Collins wants to know how much smoke it takes to create smoke taint in wine grapes and wine, as well as how to lessen the problem. He uses a smoker to expose 60 riesling vines, and a second set of vines acts as a control group. He is doing the same study on cabernet grapes. Smoke taint is created by compounds in the smoke that bind with sugar molecules to form glycosides, but Washington wines not been affected. Gingko Forest Winery to hold dinner, wine sale passes are limited to 100 and include a logo glass, 25 tokens for food and drink, access to the VIP cigar lounge and a pre-event distillery tour at Blue Flame Spirits, with bus transportation. Tickets for the event can be purchased online at tourprosser.com, where you can also find more information about this event and other Prosser happenings. You can also call the Prosser Chamber of Commerce office at (509) 786-3177for tickets to the festival. To celebrate its 9th anniversary, Gingko Forest Winery is holding a dinner and wine sale on Sept. 3 from 5:30 to 10:30 p.m. in its Mattawa tasting room The winery will offer award-winning wines, a tri-tip dinner, and music and karaoke, all for a ticket price of $20, to celebrate nine years of making and sharing wines. For tickets, call (509) 932-0082. The winery’s anticipated annual wine sale will take place throughout the Labror Day weekend. You can buy one case at the regular price and pay $2 per bottle for the second case. The tasting room is at 22561 Rd T.7 SW just north of Mattawa Connell Fall Festival includes Jr. Livestock Show The Columbia Basin Junior Livestock Show will be held concurrently with the Connell Fall Festival on Sept. 8, 9 and 10. The Fall Festival will include a grand parade, a pet parade, craft and food vendors, a street dance and more. For information, visit connellfallfestival.com The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 27 Mastersingers present historymaking concerts at B Reactor T he Mid-Columbia Mastersingers and the National Park Service are collaborating on an exciting set of concert events inside Hanford’s historic B Reactor, the centerpiece of the newly created Hanford unit of the Manhattan Project National Historic Park. These concerts are Department of Energy Program Manager Colleen part of a celebration of French posed with the Mastersingers inside B Reactor the 30th anniversary of at the dedication of the national park last year.. the Mastersingers and the 100th anniversary of Mastersingers’ subscription season, the National Park Service. which includes an eclectic range of Mastersingers Artistic Director Justin Raffa and Colleen French, the Depart- concerts. The season starts with a ment of Energy’s manager for Manhat- presentation of music from Canada, followed by a delightful holiday concert tan Project National Historical Park with harp and flute, a visit from profesProgram, have been working to bring sional choir Chorosynthesis, a perforabout these unique events, which will mance by the Mastersingers’ take place on Friday, Sept. 30, and Women’s Choir and Boys’ Choir, and a Sunday, Oct. 2. Friday’s concert includes dinner and concert celebrating Latino culture. The Mastersingers always welcome Sunday’s concert includes light new singers, and the beginning of the refreshments, catered by Ethos season is a great time to join. Audition Trattoria. Bus transportation will be information is available on the provided to carry concert-goers from Richland to the Hanford Site. Music to Mastersingers website. The MidColumbia Boys’ Choir is open to boys be performed includes works by Triin 4th through 8th grades, no audition Cities composer Reginald Unterseher required, and their rehearsals are and past Washington State Poet Mondays from 4:30 to 6 p.m. beginLaureate Kathleen Flenniken, as well ning Sept. 19. as works by Eric Whitacre, Joseph Information about auditions and the Gregorio and Samuel Barber. The Boys’ Choir, and tickets for the B Mastersingers will be joined by soReactor performances and prano Molly Holleran and a string Mastersingers season passes are quartet on “Hanford Songs” by available online. Unterseher and Flenniken.! Visit the Mastersingers’ website at The Hanford concerts are a special MidColumbiaMasteringers.org. curtain-raiser to help kick off the PAGE 28 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Some common travel misconceptions debunked! your space. And if you know when you want to go and where you want to go, why would you wait? Grab it while it’s still available. ing and becoming a smaller place. I know first-hand about traveling with people with disabilities, because I did it with my husband for years while he Misconception No. 2: It really was living. There are certainly some things you doesn’t matter when you plan to shouldn’t consider doing, such as a travel, as things are usually river cruise (your power scooter won’t priced the same. work well on cobblestones) but there Off-season travel continues to be a are lots of fun things you can do! great savings, and off-seasons are a We are so lucky to live in the United great time to travel. The airline seats States. The Americans with Disabilities Misconception No. 1: You get are usually discounted or sell for less. Act changed everything in this country. Hotels are hungrier for your business. a better deal if you wait till the Bathrooms have to be accessible. Cruise ships offer specials because last minute because the prices Airline seats must be achievable and the kids are back in school. And the will always go down. your wheelchair or scooter has to be best part is that you can enjoy the This isn’t a department store. Not gate-checked at no cost to you. sights without the usual crowds. There everything eventually goes on sale. The big key to successful traveling may be a nip in the air, but it’s still the Maybe it will, but more than likely that with a disability is advance planning. best time to go see the world. ship or resort hotel will be sold out in Sondra Wilson, veteran traveler, Every component of your trip has to be Misconception No. 3: Travel the blink of an eye, and you’ll be out of Entertainer travel writer and president of thought out so there aren’t any surluck. Things relating to vacations fill up agents don’t give you anything Travel Leaders in our area. prises. Need transportation to your better than what you can do on quicker than ever, and it’s not uncomhotel and you have an electric scooter? your own. mon to be booking a year in advance. You have to be sure that the company can look online and be confident Really? Then why are so many Periodically, there are specials for because of the pretty pictures, but are picking you up has room to transport everything, and there will be an offer to people convinced they don’t want to you, your luggage and your scooter. you an expert on the world? Do you travel without the help of a travel get you to commit — a room upgrade Once you’ve done it, it becomes know every ship and every destination, or a free beverage package on a cruise agent? easier, and almost any destination is and can you match the perfect vacaYou work hard to save for your ship, for example. A deposit will be possible with advanced planning. We’re tion to your own reality? vacation. Why would you risk not required, but it’s usually a small here to help. That’s what travel professionals do amount that will be required to hold making it perfect? You may think you Misconception No. 7: I don’t every day. They consider every componeed travel insurance. Why nent from your airline seats to your transfers to your hotel or ship. You bother? could never replicate what we do at Wow! This is an easy one to reTravel Leaders. And our fee? $25 per spond to. In today’s world why would person. That’s less than a movie ticket you consider traveling without buying and popcorn. travel insurance? Sure, you could skate Misconception No. 4: I can by and you probably can, but when you need it you really need it. avoid baggage problems by The list of what the insurance covers checking my bags all the way is endless. For elderly parents at through to my destination. home, for a sick or injured travel If you are searching for the lowest companion — even for yourself — you fare online and find that it’s on a should have travel insurance when you combination of carriers, it is possible travel. Strikes, erupting volcanoes and that the two airlines don’t have a even terrorism would be reasons baggage agreement with one another. This means you will have to claim your enough for you to buy travel insurance. Did you know that when you put a bag and recheck it, and it also means deposit down on your trip you have a you will be charged twice to check in window of two weeks to purchase travel your bag. You will have to clear insurance for your trip? If you don’t, you security more than once and hope to have enough time between flights to do are not covered for pre-existing conditions. If you have had a medical issue all this. Be careful. It’s a minefield out there. for a while and you don’t buy the insurance, you will not be covered if Misconception No. 5: Travel agents get paid extra from their you have a related medical issue on suppliers for selling a particular your trip. There are many ins and outs to trip, making them way more travel insurance, and you will need the willing to put you on a trip that help of a professional. may not be the best for you. There is more to consider in navigatWe do work with suppliers, and our ing the minefield that is travel today, relationships with these tour and cruise but I don’t mean to scare you or companies are certainly important. But convince you not to travel. Personally, I it’s those relationships that insure you will always travel until I’m no longer the best prices at the best places and able to do so. An educated traveler, allow us to offer the trip that best fits however, is a better-equipped traveler, your needs. and that’s our every-day job at Travel Travel agencies live on referrals and Leaders. repeat business, just like your doctor I hope you will see the world and or lawyer. If an agent puts the needs of change your life. Call us and we’ll help clients first, they’ll talk about what a you get there. fantastic trip they had and refer the agency to friends and family members. Sondra Wilson is president of Travel Misconception No. 6: I have a Leaders in Richland, Kennewick and physical disability, so my travelYakima. She can be reached at ing days are over. Sondra@televar.com That is not true. The world is chang- I By Sondra Wilson t’s a minefield out there. Sometimes it helps, if you are planning to travel, to have a roadmap to help you along the way. I hope you will be equipped to navigate the minefield that is travel today, and that you’ll seek professional expertise. This is all about the travel misconceptions that can complicate your vacation planning. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 29 Odessa Deutschesfest celebrates 46th anniversary in September Fort Walla Walla opens Heritage Quilt Exhibit What could be better than celebrat- America, some settled in the wheatfarming areas of Washington state. ing Oktoberfest in September? he exhibit “Sewn Into History: A Not much, according to the citizens Entire families came to the Odessa, Century of Quilts” will open on Wash., area in the early 1900s, of the small Eastern Washington Saturday, Sept. 10, at the Fort Walla bringing their German culture with farming community of Odessa. They Walla Museum, and will be on display them. are in the process of putting together through December. Today, the town celebrates its the 46th annual Odessa The exhibit includes more than 20 Deutschesfest, which will kick off with German heritage with the annual quilts from the museum’s collection, Odessa Deutschesfest. Local busipre-festival activities on Thursday, dating from the mid-19th century nesses and organizations throw open Sept. 15. through the 1930s. They include some the doors to welcome the thousands of That’s when locals and visitors new acquisitions as well as old visitors who arrive every year to sample gather on downtown sidewalks to favorites. And most of the quilt makers watch kids’ chalk drawing and tricycle the food, the activities and the homeare known to the museum, which is town hospitality of this annual event. races, grownups’ bed races and not often the case with historic quilts. New to the festival this year are Picklefest, in its second year of pickleOn exhibit will be a recently donated some great kids’ activities and vintage tasting competition. quilt made by the 1934 Mill Creek and antique dealers at the Old Town That excitement will be followed up Ladies Club, which includes more than by the official opening of the block-long Hall. 300 hand-embroidered names. Also Odessa is at the crossroads of State Biergarten, starting off with a set of The popular Whig Rose quilt will be on included are both of the museum’s Highways 28 and 21, just 18 miles polkas and waltzes played by display in September at the museum. regional Red Cross quilts made in north of Interstate 90. It’s only 100 Odessa’s own Oom Pas and Mas. 1918. Red Cross chapters around the miles from the Tri-Cities and From that point on, it’s one activity country often made similar quilts as welcome back the American Truck Wenatchee, and 110 miles from Walla after another, with a German bake fundraisers, and local people purHistorical Society for a large-scale Walla. sale, a Friends of the Library book chased the opportunity to have their antique car show, organized by the For more information and schedules, sale, street vendors, authentic locally names on them. society’s Blue Mountain Chapter. If visit deutschesfest.com. made German cuisine, indoor and Also on display will be the popular you have a truck or love to learn about outdoor entertainWhig Rose quilt, made in 1854 by trucks, plan to attend this special ment and much Mary K. Clark. This intricate quilt event. more. contains more than a quarter-million A watercolor class for beginners 9 to Under the rule stitches, which is part of the reason it 15 years of age will be offered on of German-born has held up incredibly well over the Sunday, Sept. 25, from 1 to 3 p.m. No Catherine the past 162 years. artistic talent is required. Students will Great, Russia learn about the materials and the use opened its Last call for war exhibit of color in an atmosphere that allows borders to each child to be successful. Inspiration German farmers, The “Walla Walla and the World and subject matter will be taken from and many settled Wars” exhibit will be taken down on the on-site artifacts at the Fort Walla in the Black Sea Sept. 5. If you haven’t seen it yet, take area near Old this last opportunity to view more than Walla Museum. This class will be led by local artist World Odessa. 400 photographs, uniforms, artifacts and teacher Joyce Anderson. Slots will When later and stories of Walla Walla’s associaGerman culture comes alive every year in the small Eastern fill up quickly, so be sure to sign up generations tion with World Wars I and II. early! The fee is $15 for museum Washington town of Odessa during the annual Deutschesfest. emigrated to members and $20 for non-members. T Other activities On Sept. 17, the museum will Women maintained military aircraft in Walla Walla during World War II. The World Wars exhibit ends on Sept. 5. After-hours presentation If you’ve ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes at the museum, stop by to hear Executive Director James Payne recount how the museum came to possess some of its most important artifacts and special collections. This free presentation will be held on Thursday, Sept. 29, at 5 p.m. Fort Walla Walla Museum is on Myra Road in Fort Walla Walla Park. It’s open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through October and will close an hour earlier beginning in November. For admission prices and other information, visit fwwm.org or call (509) 5257703. You can also reach the staff via email to info@fwwm.org. PAGE 30 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Union County’s comng events celebrate ag, alumni and more! U nion County, Ore., has many events taking place throughout the months of September and October to entice you for a visit. First, you can bring your friends and family to Max Square in La Grande for Celebrate La Grande, on Sept. 8 from 5 to 8 p.m. It’s an end-of-summer community block party with free food, family fun and live music. Northeast Oregon’s 22nd annual Premier Golf Tournament will be happening at the La Grande Country Club Sept. 9—11. This three-day, 36 hole stroke play event has both men’s and women’s divisions. For more information or to register, call (541) 963-1431. A Swift Night Out takes place at Max Square, September 9th, beginning at 5:00 pm. Join us as we celebrate Fall and the migration of the Vaux’s swift. There’ll be live music, a raffle, food and drink, a guest speaker, kids’ activities and much more from 5 p.m.to dusk. Visit Union County in October for community celebrations You can help celebrate 67 years of tradition at the annual Farmer Merchant Banquet at the Blue Mountain Conference Center on Oct. 25. More than 250 people will gather to celebrate the accomplishments of some of the best, brightest and hardest working farmers and ranchers in Union County. This event is the traditional program that recognizes outstanding stewardship and agricultural innovation — and it’s the best way for businesses to say “thank you” to Union County’s agricultural and ranching community. It’s Eastern Oregon University sponsored by the Union County Chamber of Commerce. On the weekend of Oct. 20-22 you can take in both The Eastern Oregon Film Festival and Eastern Oregon University’s homecoming weekend. The three-day film festival will be held in La Grande and will feature a great lineup of independent films, music, and conservations . The EOU Alumni Association invites all alumni, family members and friends for the special activities to celebrate homecoming on the campus. Play in the Mountaineer Athletic Association Golf Scramble, run in the Homecoming 5K or 10K, tailgate in the John J. Howard & Associates Tailgate Zone, and attend the big football game vs. University of Montana Western! Former EOU wrestlers are invited back for special reunion activities. And special reunion festivities are being planned for former players of Coach Sharon Campbell. Return to your alma mater, and bring your family! Information on events is available at the Union County Visitors Center by calling (541) 963-8588 or visiting unioncountychamber.org. Excursion train offers fun options this fall The Eagle Cap Excursion Train operating out of Elgin, Ore., has several fun train rides planned for the colorful fall season, beginning with the History Train on Sept. 3. Guest historian Linda Casady will talk about the history and importance of the Joseph Branch Railroad On Sept. 17, guest photographer Eric Valentine leads an on-board photography session for passengers wanting to learn how to take exceptional photos. You will have a special drive-by opportunity to photograph the train at Rondowa Bridge. Copper Belt Winery is the featured winery for the Wine and Cheese Train on Oct. 1. The family-run winerystarted making wine in 2010 and opened a tasting room this summer in historic downtown Baker City. Visit copperbeltwinery.com Also on board the Wine and Cheese Train are Brent and Yvonne Carroll of Umapine Creamery, a small dairy and artisan cheese maker west of Milton-Freewater. Visit them online at Umapinecreamerycom The train departs from Elgin at 3 p.m. for this early-evening ride, a when the scenery is captivating and wildlife comes out of the shadows. The Gold Rush Bandits are expected to rob the train during the Oct. 8 train ride, causing lots of excitement and laughs. On Oct. 15 the Brews and Brats Train will feature a tasting of Terminal Gravity beer, along with bratwurst and sauerkraut. Book early for this train ride — it’s going to sell out quickly! Ticket prices are $70 for adults, $65 for Seniors 60-plus, and $35 for youth. Tickets include the food and beverages. Check the website for trip times and details and book online at eaglecaptrainrides.com or call one of the ticke agents at (800) 323-7330. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 31 Hood River Hops Fest showcases fresh-hop beers New for 2016: The ‘People’s Choice’ and ‘Top of the Hop’ awards the trumpet, sax, trombone, flute, drums, bass, keys and vocals. Other live groups include Tony Smiley and Will West and the Friendly Strangers. O Make a weekend of it! n Saturday, Sept. 24, downtown Hood River, Ore., will again become the epicenter for fresh-hop beers with the return of the Hood River Hops Fest, presented by CH2M. Now in its 13th year, this one-day festival features one of the largest fresh-hop beer selections in the nation, showcasing more than 60 varieties from three dozen Pacific Northwest breweries. Freshly harvested hops infuse the wide range of seasonal brews showcased annually at Hood River Hops Fest. The resulting varieties are both unpredictable and limited in quantity, luring festival goers back year after year. Numerous local breweries — including Double Mountain Brewery, Full Sail Brewing and pFriem Family Brewers — will showcase their 2016 fresh-hop ales alongside regional and national heavyweights. A small selection of local hop ciders will also be on tap, along with select wines from Naked Winery. A full list of participating breweries will be announced soon. New for 2016 is the Hood River Hops Fest Awards, which include “People’s Choice” and “Top of the Hops” awards. The Oregon Beer Awards’ new Fresh Hop category will also be judged during the event, with festival and non-festival beers alike vying for Gold, Silver and Bronze medals, to be presented at the Oregon Beer Award ceremony in Portland next February. “Hood River Hops Fest is a celebration of our region’s numerous craft breweries, which love creating unique, seasonal beers with fresh, local hops,” The crowd seems to like what they’re pouring at the Hood River Hops Fest. said Mike Glover, CEO of the Hood River County Chamber of Commerce, host of the event. “We’re excited to take the festival excitement and competitive spirit up a notch this year with the new Hood River Hops Fest awards, which will let festival-goers call out their favorites. We’re also thrilled to partner with Oregon Beer Awards as they launch their new Fresh Hop category. They recognize that the Hood River Hops Fest is the place to be to taste the best fresh hop-beers Oregon has to offer!” The Hood River Hops Fest features local cuisine, arts and crafts vendors, live music and a children’s play area, which is open until 5 p.m.. Children are welcome throughout the afternoon, but the venue is open only to adults from 5 to 8 p.m. This year’s headline act is the Seattle funk band Polyrhythmics — a high-energy eight-piece group featuring Autumn is one of Hood River’s showcase seasons. The summer crowds have dissipated, fall harvest is in full swing, and the trees in the Gorge and Hood River Valley are turning beautiful fall colors. Visitors can easily turn Hops Fest into a long vacation weekend by going apple picking along the Hood River County Fruit Loop, biking the scenic Historic Columbia River Highway State Trail from Hood River to Mosier, and feasting on farm-to-table dinners at local restaurants. Beer lovers who want to go to the source can visit more than 10 independent breweries on both sides of the Columbia River. Breweries in the Gorge (BIG) offers a map and passport on its website, breweriesinthegorge.com. For more top Hood River autumn activities, visit hoodriver.org. You can also link to hotels from the site, and many will be offering Hops Fest packages. The beer will be cold and the music hot at the Hood River Hops Fest Sept. 24.. PAGE 32 • September 2016 • The Entertainer September is designated ‘Pain Awareness Month’ I By Sara Nelson, DPT n the 1990s, the medical system adopted “pain” as a fifth vital sign. The result of this attention has been a rise in opioid addiction and death from use of prescription medications. This outcome is the result of our response to pain. The general attitude toward pain is that it’s bad and shouldn’t have to be felt at all. We forgot that the desire to numb the pain is one root cause of addiction, and attempts to suppress pain with medications and procedures alone will ultimately fail. There is a way to be aware of pain, to learn from it and become more at ease. Here are some ideas to get you started: Determine the source of your pain. A new and persistent pain is not to be ignored. Have it evaluated by a professional. Remember that a physical therapist can be your first line of treatment for musculoskeletal problems. We tend to rely on imaging results — but, frankly, most of us have changes in our skeletal systems that don’t necessarily mean we will be in pain or that we It may be a result of how you are moving, and you can learn how to move differently with the help of a movement specialist such as a physical therapist. Pain may also be a result of tension from emotion or mental stress. Talk to a counselor or practice relaxation. The more you recognize the triggers, the more solutions you will have to alleviate the pain. Respond to the pain with self care. If your pain has been evaluated and you have been given an all-clear, start doing things to feel better. There are lots of things you can do that are more powerful than any pill or procedure you can get. If that statement surprises you, and you are in pain, you should visit a physical With the help of a physical therapist, you therapist. can manage pain without medication. I have pointed you toward a physical therapist several times. That is because rehab services are your best can’t get ourselves out of it. Pay positive attention. Pain is a solutions for pain relief. So if you or someone you love is generic word that really reflects a dealing with pain, celebrate Pain thousand different things. Name what Awareness Month by making an you are feeling as precisely as you appointment with a physical therapist can. Name it from as many different today! perspectives as you can. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Sara Nelson graduated from the University of Utah in 1990 and has been a physical therapist for more than 25 years. She has a master’s in orthopedic manual therapy and a doctorate in physical therapy. She is also a certified lymphedema therapist, a board- certified women’s health specialist and a theory instructor for the Dr. Vodder School International. She owns Therapy Solutions, a multi-disciplinary clinic treating pelvic health, lymphedema, cancer recovery, orthopedic and pain conditions in The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 33 Recovery and Wellness Center offers new programs R ecovery and Wellness Center of Eastern Washington is celebrating its one-year anniversary and the second round of intensive outpatient programs for those struggling with depression and anxiety. The center’s first program, which ran from mid-June to the end of July, proved to be successful in helping eight individuals. The next program starts on Sept. 6 for adults and Sept. 19 for students and young adults. Complimentary The Recovery and Wellness Center is at 3104 assessments are now being offered. W. Kennewick Ave. in Kennewick, across from The center’s intensive the Safeway Shopping Center, and online at programs are different from recovery andwellness.org. those of a typical support group. The student and young adult program is on a six-week rotation and Wellness Center staff takes pride in provides participants with 18 treatment ensuring that the whole person is being cared for — not just mentally, sessions per cycle of treatment. The but physically as well. programs are skills-based, run three Each participant will be provided a days per week for three hours a day, free individual assessment to assure and include snacks on each of those days. The adult program runs for seven the appropriate fit for the program, and upon admission will attend an initial weeks and provides participants with individual treatment planning session 21 treatment sessions per cycle of to formulate collaborative treatment treatment. goals. All other treatment is groupSuccess in recovery is based on based, with various groups aimed at collaborative care, so clients are required to have a primary care physi- teaching and applying concepts and cian and an outpatient therapist. If they skills to decrease symptoms and do not have established providers, the improve overall quality of life. The Recovery and Wellness Center client will be scheduled with one of the is at 3104 W. Kennewick Ave. in therapists at the Recovery and Wellness Center, or the staff will assist Kennewick. For more information, visit recoveryandwellness.org or call with establishing relationships with (509)-619-0519. area providers. The Recovery and PAGE 34 • September 2016 • The Entertainer Famed general reunites with Tri-Cities PE teacher O f the many fans who met with legendary “warrior monk” Gen. James Mattis during his visit to Washington State University in August, perhaps few stood out as much as Rex Davis of Pullman. That’s because, from 1955 to 1960, Davis was Mattis’ sgrade-school PE teacher in Richland. The retired four-star Rex Davis, left, and former Richland student Marine Corps general who once led the United States’ Gen. James Mattis, USMC, Ret. most high profile military blow that whistle,” said the 65-yearcommand was a student at Jason old retired general. Lee Elementary School, where After teaching PE in grade school Davis had him climbing ropes, and high school, Davis, now 84, doing jumping jacks and playing became a celebrated tennis coach kickball. at WSU until retiring in 1994. Fifty-six years later, the two “I’ve had many, many students were reacquainted when Davis over the years,” he said. “But I still attended a reception hosted by remember how well (Gen. Mattis) WSU’s Office of the Provost. could climb those ropes.” “I remember how you used to IN BRIEF Dust Devils end season on Sept. 5 The Tri-City Dust Devils will play their final series of the season against Vancouver on Sept. 3, 4 and 5 at Gesa Stadium in Pasco. There will be a postgame fireworks show on Sept. 3, presented by McCurley Integrity Dealerships. On Sept. 4, the first 500 fans through the gates will receive a baseball card team set presented by North Wind. On Sept. 5, the final game of the season, postgame fireworks will be sponsored by Lourdes Health. Great seats for the series are available for by calling the Dust Devils’ front office at (509) 544-8789 or by visiting dustdevilsbaseball.com to purchase tickets. Pasco offers sports activities for the family Pasco Parks and Recreation offers a variety of options to get involved in sports. There are adult and youth leagues, clinics, classes and drop-in programs that offer everything from instructions on getting started to just casual drop-in play. Adult flag football starts this month and continues through November. Adult volleyball also begins in September and will be played through December. Join a team, meet new people, and enjoy an organized, competitive, physical activity. For information and registration, visit pascoparksandrec.com. Ams’ hockey season begins this month The Tri-City Americans’ season play begins Sept. 24 against Spokane on the Ams’ home ice at Toyota Center in Kennewick. The next home games will be Oct. 2 against Everett and Oct. 8 against Lethbridge. Visit amshockey.com for ticket options, which include season passes, a weekend “mini-plan” option for those who can’t attend during the week, plus “flex” tickets, group sales and of course single-game tickets. You can also buy tickets in person at the Toyota Center box office and other Ticketmaster outlets, or online at ticketmaster.com. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 35 Philly Robb’s vision has Cardinals, Patriots in Super Bowl year as a head coach in Buffalo. If the wins don’t start matching the bravado, he first month of fall is here, and that means everything stops for the he’ll be on the unemployment line. National Football League. Gone after AFC North Super Bowl 50 is Peyton ManThe Bengals are a good club — ning, joining John Elway as playoff-challenged but regular the only other quarterback to season-tested. They should ride off after a Super Bowl win this division in the last win. week or two of the season Gone, too, is Tom Brady, over the Steelers. for the first four games of Pittsburgh is still adjusting the season, after the to being known for offense Deflategate drama finally ran over defense. If Ben its course. Back are a number of Roethlisberger was healthy last teams with a legitimate chance to play season the Steelers may have made it in Super Bowl 51 and arguably the to Super Bowl 50 instead of the worst predictions for the coming Broncos. season. Here we go: The Browns have some real positives building coming into the season, AFC East but I don’t know if it will be enough to It doesn’t matter if Tom Brady avoid the basement in a tough division. misses the first four games of the The Ravens are a good veteran team season, but it would matter if he that will be in the hunt, but probably missed the first 10. Jimmy Garoppolo won’t damage the Patriots’ chances of third. winning their 14th, and 7th straight, AFC South division title during the Brady era. The Colts bounce back in a division The New York Jets have talent and of haves and have nots. The Colts and will be better with Ryan Fitzpatrick Texans have talent on both sides of the back at QB. They could give the Pats ball, but because the Colts have the a run, but Geno Smith whining in the better quarterback in Andrew Luck over locker room could become an issue if the newest Texan under center Brock they don’t part ways with him before Osweiler, they get the nod at the top of the season starts. the AFC South. The Dolphins and the Bills are Gus Bradley continues the progress almost the same team. Both have too in Jacksonville for a solid third, while many issues for their talent to overTennessee finishes in the basement come. Rex Ryan could be in his final again. T threat than their namesakes. Jay Cutler is…well…Jay Cutler. And the Lions now move on without Calvin Johnson, someone who always needed to be accounted for on the field. By ‘Philly’ Robb Francis NFC South Tom Brady: Can he come off of a fourgame suspension and lead the Patriots to Super Bowl LI? AFC West Minus Manning plus Sanchez equals no division title. The Chiefs win their first title under Andy Reid as the Broncos settle for second. The Raiders will be fun to watch and could make a run for second while the San Diego “Super” Chargers will be anything but. NFC East If the Cowboys stay healthy it should be their division, but that is a big if. The Redskins no longer have a QB controversy and have an elite cornerback in Josh Norman. The Redskins will be in it until the end, and will be the first team in the NFC East to repeat since 2003-04. I’m thinking it will be Dallas, even though the only thing in this division that does repeat is Romo on the injury list. The Giants have a new head coach and still not much defensively, but overall more than the Eagles, who also have a new head hoach and more areas of concern. NFC North The Green Bay Packers are the still the best team in the division, but for the first time in some time there may be another team with something to say. The Minnesota Vikings have something in Teddy Bridgewater, and as long as Adrian Peterson is upright he is a threat. The Packers’ defense is a little better. but the Vikings will make it a race. The Bears and Lions are less of a It should be Cam Newton and Carolina atop the division for the fourth year in a row. Kelvin Benjamin returns after a season-ending injury and the offense should be even more dangerous. The defense takes a hit without Josh Norman. The Falcons take the second-place battle over the Saints and Buccaneers. Tampa will be interesting with Dirk Koetter as the new head coach. Jameis Winston’s development at quarterback will be on his watch. NFC West The Arizona Cardinals are the best team in the division, with the Seahawks a close second. The Cards have fewer questions on offense than Seattle with no Marshawn Lynch and Thomas Rawls and Jimmy Graham returning from injuries behind another revamped and brand new offensive line. The defense is a year older with some players along the defensive line needing to show they belong. The Rams return to Los Angeles to finish third while Chip Kelly will surprise no one with the 49ers. AFC Playoffs Wildcard Jets (6 seed) at Bengals (3 seed); Steelers (5 seed) at Chiefs (4 seed). NFC Playoffs Wildcard Vikings (6 seed) at Packers (3 seed); Seahawks (5 seed) at Cowboys (4 seed). AFC Playoffs Divisional Steelers (5 seed) at Patriots (1 seed); Bengals (3 seed) at Colts (2 seed). NFC Playoffs Divisional Seahawks (5 seed) at Panthers (1seed); Packers (3 seed) at Cardinals (2 seed). AFC Championship Colts at Patriots NFC Championship Cardinals at Panthers Super Bowl LI Cardinals vs. Patriots PAGE 36 • September 2016 • The Entertainer For many, September means getting back to the garden I By Micki Perry f you are a gardener and had a hard time keeping up with your garden in the heat of the summer, September is a great time to get back to it. It was just too hot this summer to even think about thinning out the iris, and that’s one job I hope to tackle after Labor Day. I have tried to keep up with deadheading the gloriosa daisies (rudebekias), which sure don’t look very glorious when they are all dried up and shaggy-looking. The beds and borders they are in look so much better when they are trimmed back to the first good-looking leaves or new buds, and they will keep on blooming if you deadhead them. Hollyhocks will also re-surge and recover, and even re-bloom, if they are trimmed back after they have gone to seed. Hot weather in August put my roses in a slump, and some of the new growth has powdery mildew again. They need to be cut back drastically. Tomatoes are finally ripe and need daily picking. My garden “to do list” gets longer every day. One thing on my September to-do list will be ordering spring bulbs. I never seem to get around to ordering Volunteer sunflowers: both a blessing and a curse from August through October. bulbs from garden catalogues, but that is where you will find the more unusual species, and if you order in quantity they are usually cheaper and of better quality than bulbs you can buy locally. October is a good month to plant them, and September is a good month to order them or buy them locally. Some plants on my September “wish list” are chrysanthemums and fall asters. I need more mums for fall color, as the little potted ones you can buy in the spring have usually finished blooming by fall. The basket mums are preferable because they eventually make nice mounds, but probably not the first year. Don’t ever expect florist mums to flourish in your garden unless you pinch them back to almost nothing or grow them from cuttings. I have lots of asters in my borders, but most are the tiny purple ones that tend to flower in August and are done before fall. I want to replace them with real Michaelmas daisies and other asters with more color and better behavior. Hybrids don’t seem to spread as rapidly and aren’t as gangly, but most asters are prone to powdery mildew in our climate. Boltonia asteroidides is a white aster-like flower I also plan to add to my fall garden. One of my favorite fall plants that I hope to buy more of is Caryopteris clandonensis, commonly known as bluebeard, which is a fairly lowgrowing. somewhat shrubby plant that blossoms in late August and early September with beautiful clear blue flowers. Another beautiful blue flowery shrub is Perovskia atriplicifolia, or Russian sage. Their blue flowers set off nasturtiums, coreopteris, the orange and yellow calendulas that usually bounce back in the fall, and marigolds that hang on until killing frosts — as well as gloriosa daisies, gallardia (blanket flower), and, of course, sunflowers. Sunflowers are a blessing and a curse in my garden. I haven’t planted any for years, but they volunteer. They bloom profusely from mid-summer to fall, and they’re so cheery and pretty that I can’t bear to pull them up. The birds love them, and so do the bees — and I’m allergic to bees, so that’s a problem for me. I am also allergic to most sunflowers, so I sneeze a lot from August until October. That’s another job on the list — to pull up some sunflowers — but not yet. I’m not the only one who loves them, and a photographer has asked to take a high-school girl’s senior pictures in my sunflower garden. As I write this, I am looking forward to having Labor Day and the Tumbleweed Music Festival behind me and getting back to my garden! Micki Perry produces concerts and the Tumbleweed Music Festival (September 2-4) for the Three Rivers Folklife Society. She has been a gardener all her life, and a Master Gardener since 1997, though she is now retired. Who doesn’t love a parade? This one is just part of the fun, educational FarmerConsumer Awareness Day in Quincy. Take the family for an outing and show the kids where their food comes from. It happens on Sept. 10. Quincy opens its community and farming tradition to visitors The annual Farmer-Consumer Awareness Day will be held at the Quincy High School festival grounds in Quincy on Sept. 10. Great food, a parade, live entertainment, fresh produce at farm prices, a car show, a tractor pull and a giant fireworks show are all part of this fun and educational festival Quincy’s Farmer-Consumer Awareness Day (FCAD) dates back to 1981. That’s whey a Quincy farmer heard a consumer tell radio commentator Paul Harvey that her food just appeared in the supermarket, and she didn’t know where it came from. A group of Quincy farmers and officials decided to do something to educate consumers about farmiing. Over the past 35 years, the event has grown to include tours of area foood processing plants and farms, displays of farm equipment, informational booths and a farmers’ market. The celebration has been expanded to include the Grand Parade, the Farm to Market Fun Run, live entertainment, cook-offs, arts and crafts, a car show and booths that showcase locally grown products..There will also be kids’ games, a petting zoo and much more. The celebration is always held on the second Saturday in September. On the Friday evening before the big day, a Chef Extravagamza will be held at White Heron Cellars, starting at 6 p.m. Local ingredients will be collected from within 10 miles of the winery and placed in the hands of an accomplished chef. Live music will be provided by Mugsy’s Groove, a “Cascade Mountain Funk” band. The cost to attend is $25 at the door, which includes the live music and all you can eat. For farmers, FCAC is a chance to show the fruits of their labors. For consumers (and that includes all of us) it’s an opportunity to connect with growers and see how food gets to our tables. For schedules and entry forms, visit quincyfarmerconsumer.com. The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 37 Maryhill Museum hosts ‘Concours’ T he Concours de Maryhill is an annual event that is now in its 18th year. With the Maryhill mansion as a backdrop, this is the car show that will make you feel like you’ve just embarked from a vintage luxury sedan into the 1920s. The show is on Oct. 1, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. It’s open to all makes and models, but this year’s featured car will be from 1945 or earlier. The entry fee is $20 per car, and you’ll receive two passes to the Maryhill Museum with your entry. If you register before Sept. 24, the registration fee is only $15. A vintage race car display will be featured from noon to 2 p.m. by the Maryhill Loops Vintage Hillclimb Association, and you can join in a drive up the historic Maryhill Loops Road. It will be open to drive between from noon to 2. There’ll be trophies, dash plaques, and various articles raffled off, including a 32-inch TV. Items in a silent auction include local wines, motor oil, a wine tour and many more items and services. The event is presented by the Goldendale Motorsports Association a nonprofit organization dedicated to motorsports of all kinds, including hot rods, vintage colector cars, race cars, trucks, motorcycles, tractora and almost anything else on wheels. For more information about the organization or the Concours, visit goldendalemotorsports.org. ‘Power House’ Continues from Page 15 pop music and dancing into a show that is part magic show, part concert, part stand-up comedy routine. Reserved seating is $27 to $30. Oct, 12 at 6:30 p.m., Aaron Nigel Smith The Little Watts Children’s Series continues with a concert by Aaron Nigel Smith, whose simple mission is to empower children, families and communities through music. In 2002, he founded FUNdamentals of Music and Movement, an arts program in more than 100 early-education centers in major cities. His concerts are reggae-inspired, lively and fun for the whole family. Aaron Nigel Smith Reserved seating tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for kids 12 and under. More information and ticket sales for Gesa Power House Theatre events can be found at phtww.com. You can also call the box office at (509) 529-6500. PAGE 38 • September 2016 • The Entertainer MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE, CONT. TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep 1 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 pm Sep 1 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 1 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 pm Sep 2 Dan Myers (The Sonic Shaman) - Ambient, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ....... 5 pm Sep 2 Nerve Center Band, Jokers Night Club (509-943-1173), Richland ........................................ 9:30 pm Sep 2 Classical Harp Evenings, The Kitchen at Barnard Griffin (509-627-0266), Richland ................ 7 pm Sep 2 Will West & the Friendly Strangers - Modern Americana, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), .. 9 pm Sep 3 All Ages Open Mic Jam W/Vaughn Jensen, R.F McDdougalls (509-205-4767), Richland ..... 9 pm Sep 3 Four on the Floor w/Atomic Winds - Funk/Rock/Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328) ... 9 pm Sep 3 Kenny Day - R&B/Soul, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ........................................ 5 pm Sep 4 Afternoon Live Music & Jam w/ Mondo Ray, Longbranch (509-205-4767), Finley ............... 5 pm Sep 6 Amber & Amber Show - Karaoke & More, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .......... 8 pm Sep 7 Open mic jam w/ Vaughn Jensen 18+, Jokers Night Club (509-205-4767), Richland ............. 8 pm Sep 7 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 6 pm Sep 7 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Sep 8 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 pm Sep 8 Open Mic Jam w/Vaughn Jensen 21+, Whiskey River Bar (509-205-4767), Richland ........ 8 pm Sep 8 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 8 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 pm Sep 8 Pamela Thomas-Martin, Olive Marketplace Cafe (509-526-0200), Walla Walla ....................... 6 pm Sep 9 Classical Trumpeter Jeff Peterson, Kitchen at Barnard Griffin (509-627-0266), Richland ........ 7 pm Sep 9 Tim Fast - Singer/Songwriter from Minnesota, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ... 5 pm Sep 9 Vaughn Jensen Band, Jokers Night Club (509-943-1173), Richland ..................................... 9:30 pm Sep 9 Comanche Joey/Adventure Dirt Team/Paul Abner/Lorraine Simpson, Emerald of Siam ........ 9 pm Sep 10 All Ages Jam w/Vaughn Jensen, R.F. Mcdougalls (509-205-4767), Richland ......................... 9 pm Sep 10 The Shades & Colorblind ‘End of Summer Bash’, Clover Island (509-586-0541), Kenn ......... 6 pm Sep 10 Jami Cooper Band, The Coast & Michael Parker, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328) .............. 5 pm Sep 10 DBST w/Supper Club - Funktronic Soul, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............. 9 pm Sep 11 Afternoon Jam & Live music w/Mondo Ray, Longbranch Bar & Grill (509-205-4767), Rinley 5 pm Sep 11, 25 Ballroom Dancing, live swing music, Pasco Eagles (509-946-6276), Pasco ........................... 1 pm Sep 12 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 13 Amber & Amber Show - Karaoke & More, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .......... 8 pm Sep 14 Rockin’ Wednesday Jam w/Vaughn Jensen 18+, Jokers Night Club (509-205-4767) ............ 8 pm Sep 14 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 6 pm Sep 14 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Sep 15 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 pm Sep 15 Jam Night W/Vaughn Jensen 21+, Whiskey River Bar & Grill (509-205-4767), Richland ....... 8 pm Sep 15 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 15 The Lark and Loon - Acoustic, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ......................................... 5 pm Sep 16 Ballroom Dancing, Easy Swing Dance Band, Community Center (509-946-5385), Richland 1 pm Sep 16 Carrington MacDuffie - Singer/Songwriter, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .......... 5 pm Sep 16 Scott Pemberton Trio - Psychedelic funk rock, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .. 9 pm Sep 16 Fall Out, Jokers Night Club (509-943-1173), Richland ............................................................ 9:30 pm Sep 16 Pamela Thomas-Martin, Market at the Parkway (509-205=0330), Richland .......................... 10 am Sep 17 Pamela Thomas-Martin - Americana with Soul, Smasne Cellars (509-786-0060), Prosser6:30 pm Sep 17 All Ages Open Mic Jam & Live music, R.F. Mcdougalls (509-205-4767), Richland ............... 9 pm Sep 17 American Ruse (MC5 tribute) w/Camacho - Rock, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), ........... 9 pm Sep 17 Steve Haberman with Brandy Larsen - Jazz, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .... 5 pm Sep 17 American Ruse (MC5 tribute) w/Camacho - Rock, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), ........... 9 pm Sep 18 Musicians’ Jam w/mondo ray 21+, Longbranch Bar & grill (509-205-4767), Finley ............... 5 pm Sep 18 Live jazz for dancing/listening, Pasco Eagles (509-943-9414), Pasco ...................................... 1 pm Sep 19 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 20 Amber & Amber Show - Karaoke & More, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .......... 8 pm Sep 21 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Sep 21 Open Mic Jam w/ Vaughn jensen 18+, Jokers Night Club (509-205-4767), Richland ..................................... 8 pm Sep 21 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 6 pm Sep 22 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 pm Sep 22 Vaughn jensen’s Open Mic jamc, Whiskey River Bar(509-205-4767), Richland ..................... 8 pm Sep 22 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 22 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 pm Sep 23 Hoyer Brothers w/Wabi Sabi - Funk, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................... 9 pm Sep 23 Three Rivers Saxtette - Saxophone Quartet, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ..... 5 pm Sep 23 Killer Keyz Dueling Pianos, Jokers Night Club (509-943-1173), Richland ............................ 9:30 pm Sep 24 All Ages Open Mic Jam w/Vaughn Jensen, R.F. McDougalls (509-205-4767), Richland ..... 9 pm Sep 24 Dorado w/The Coast - Funk rock, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ....................... 9 pm Sep 24 Barefoot Randy - Acoustic, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................................... 5 pm Sep 25 Jam@5, live music, food & more w/Mondo Ray, Longbranch (509-205-4767), Finley .......... 5 pm Sep 26 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 27 Amber & Amber Show - Karaoke & More, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .......... 8 pm Sep 28 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Sep 28 Jam Night w/ Vaughn Jensen & Friends 18+, Jokers Night Club (509-205-4767), Richland . 8 pm Sep 28 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 6 pm Sep 29 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 pm Sep 29 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 29 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 pm Sep 29 Speed Dating (Reservations required), Plumb Cellars (509-529-9463), Walla Walla ............... 7 pm Sep 30 Pamela Thomas-Martin, Food Truck Friday (509-205-0330), Pasco ...................................... 11 am Sep 30 Classical Trumpeter Jeff Peterson, Kitchen at Barnard Griffin (509-627-0266), Richland ........ 7 pm Sep 30 Cindy McKay - Songs from an Angel, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................ 5 pm Sep 30 Zindu w/ Mr. Vague - Psychedelic Funk , Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .......... 9 pm Sep 30 Zindu w/ Mr. Vague - Psychedelic Funk, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .............................. 9 pm Sep 30 The Band Joker, Jokers Night Club (509-943-1173), Richland ............................................. 9:30 pm Oct 1 Dance, WineNotes Wine Bar/Chicken Shack (509-967-1807), West Richland ......................... 7 pm Oct 1 Yak Attack w/Noah Peterson - Livetronica/Sax looping , Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), .. 9 pm Oct 5 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Oct 5 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Oct 12 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Oct 18 Jake “The Snake” Roberts - Comedian/WWE Wrestler, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), ... 9 pm Oct 19 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Oct 26 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Nov 2 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Nov 9 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Nov 16 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 pm Nov 23 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco 5 pm Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec Dec 7 10 14 17 21 24 28 31 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 Pamela Thomas-Martin, Sapolil Cellars (509-520-1273), Walla Walla ....................................... 6 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 Pamela Thomas-Martin, Sapolil Cellars (509-520-1273), Walla Walla ....................................... 6 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 Pamela Thomas-Martin, Sapolil Cellars (509-520-1273), Walla Walla ....................................... 6 Musician’s Circle Open Mic, American Legion Post #34 (509-544-1200), Pasco .................... 5 Pamela Thomas-Martin , Sapolil Cellars (509-520-1273 ), Walla Walla ..................................... 6 pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm CONCERTS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep 2- 4 Sep 3 Sep 3 Sep 5 Sep 10 Sep 17 Sep 17 Sep 23 Sep 30, Oct Oct 1 Oct 1 Oct 4 Oct 7 Oct 8 Oct 12 Oct 15 Oct 15 Oct 22 Nov 4 Nov 17 Nov 19 Feb 25 Mar 21 May 5 Tumbleweed Music Festival, Howard Amon Park (tumbleweedfest.com), Richland Chris Isaak, Maryhill Winery Amphitheater (maryhillwinery.com), Goldendale ....................... 7 pm Sawyer Brown, Outdoors, Clover Island (cloverislandinn.com), Kennewick .......................... 5 pm ‘Valley’s Got Talent’competition, City Park (509-786-3177), Prosser ......................................... 2 pm Lee Brice, Happy Canyon Arena (pendletonroundup.com), Pendleton ...................................... 7 pm Tears for Fears - Rescheduled, Maryhill Winery (maryhillwinery.com), Goldendale .............. 7 pm Seattle Rock Orchestra Performs Pink Floyd, Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), .......... 7 pm Dierks Bentley, Toyota Center (ticketmaster.com), Kennewick .................................................. 7 pm 2 Mastersingers at B Reactor, Hanford Site (MidColumbiaMasteringers.org), Richland Casting Crowns, Toyota Center (ticketmaster.com), Kennewick .............................................. 7 pm MC Symphony, Beethoven’s Fifth, Richland HS (509-943-6602), Richland ........................ 7:30 pm Mark O’Connor & WW Symphony, Cordiner Hall (wwsymphony.org), Walla Walla ............... 7 pm Rolling Hills Chorus, Princess Theatre (rollinghillschorus.org), Prosser .............................. 7:30 pm Rolling Hills Chorus, Faith Assembly (rollinghillschorus.org), Pasco ........................................ 2 pm Family Concert: Aaron Nigel Smith, Gesa Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), ............ 6:30 pm Chase Rice, Toyota Arena (ticketmaster.com), Kennewick ............................................... 7:30 p.m. Tamya Tucker, Wildhorse Resort (wildhorseresort.com), Pendleton Rodney Carrington, Wildhorse Resort (wildhorseresort.com), Pendleton ........................ 7 & 10 pm Tenore, Community Concerts, Faith Assembly (509-547-6243), Pasco .............................. 7:30 pm Amy Grant Holiday Show, Toyota Center (ticketmaster.com), Kennewick .............................. 7 pm Quartetto Gelato, Gesa Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), Walla Walla ............................. 7 pm Brass Roots Trio, Community Concertsm, Faith Assembly (509-547-6243), Pasco ......... 7:30 pm Women of the World Quartet, Community Concerts, Faith Assembly (509-547-6243) ....... 7:30 pm Adam Trent, Community Concerts, Faith Assembly (509-547-6243), Pasco ..................... 7:30 pm PERFORMING ARTS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep 3-11 ‘Compete Works of Shakespeare’, Princess Theatre (ThePrincessTheatre.net), Prosser . 7:30 pm Sep 8 Shanghai Acrobats of China, Capitol Theatre (509-853-ARTS), Yakima ............................................ Sep 9-25 ‘Cyrano de Bergerac’, Richland Players Theater (509-946-1991), Richland ............................ 8 pm Sep 9, 10 Rocky Horror Live, Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), Walla Walla .................................. 7 pm Sep 9, 10 Rocky Horror Live, Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), Walla Walla ................................ 10 pm Sep 22-Oct 1 ‘A Comedy of Errors’, Uptown Theatre (rmtheatre.org), Richland ........................................... 7 pm Sep 30 Adam Trent - Magician, Gesa Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), Walla Walla ................. 7 pm Oct 14 ‘The Complete History of America’, Capitol Theatre (capitoltheatre.org), Yakima ................ 7:30 pm Nov 5 ‘Once’, Capitol Theatre (509-853-ARTS), Yakima Nov 11 Collision of Rhythm - Bronkar and Aaron , Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), ........... 6:30 pm Nov 11, 12, 18, 20 MCMT ‘Ragtime’, Richland HS (midcolumbiamusicaltheatre.org), Richland COMEDY TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep 1- 3 Sep 8- 10 Sep 15- 17 Sep 22 Sep 22- 24 Sep 29- Oct Oct 7 Oct 14 Cliff Barnes & DB Freeman, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ......................... 8 Lucas Seeley, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ................................................ 8 Frances Dilorinzo, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland .......................................... 8 Sharron Matthews in ‘Superstar’, Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), Walla Walla ............ 7 Vince Royale, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ................................................ 8 1 Kul Black & Sinn Rella, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ............................. 8 Michael Jr., Bethel Church (gracecliniconline.org), Richland ..................................................... 7 ‘The Complete History of America Abridged’, Capitol Theatre (509-853-ARTS), Yakima pm pm pm pm pm pm pm SPECIAL EVENTS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep 1- 5 Sep 2 Sep 2- 4 Sep 9 Sep 9- 10 Sep 9- 11 Sep 10 Sep 10 Sep 10-11 Sep 10- 14 Sep 14- 17 Sep 14- 17 Kittitas Co.Fair, E (kittitascountyfair.com), Ellensburg Labor Day Picnic, Senior Citizens Center 720 Sprague Ave (509-527-3775), Walla Walla ... 11 Tumbleweed Music Festival, Howard Amon Park (tumbleweedfest.com), Richland “Break the Silence and Stop Violence” DVS Golf Tourn., Canyon Lakes (509-735-1295), ..... 8 Wheelin’ Walla Walla, Downtown (509-529-8755), Walla Walla .................................................. 9 Columbia County Fair, Fairgrounds (historicdayton.com), Dayton Farmer-Consumer Awareness Day, (quincyfarmerconsumer.com), Quincy Denim & Diamonds, Yellow Rose Nursery (509-788-6042), Prosser ................................... 5:30 Annual Hood River Fly-In, 600 Air Museum Road (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 8 Parade of Homes, (hbatc.com), Tri-Cities Main Street Show, Main St. (541-278-9332, MainStreetCowboys.org), Pendleton .................. 2 Adams County Fair, Fairgrounds (adamscountyfair.org), Othello am am am pm am pm ‘Calendar of Events’ continues on Page 39 The Entertainer • September 2016 • PAGE 39 The historic Elgin Opera House in Elgin, Ore. Season set at historic opera house M ermaids, leg lamps, spectacular coats and pirates are all on the menu for the Friends of the Opera House’s 2016-2017 season at the historic Elgin Opera House in Elgin, Ore. The season starts with the Disney spectacular musical The Little Mermaid opening on Sept. 2 and running through Sept. 24. With a cast of 75 talented actors and brilliant sets, costumes and choreography, this show is a sure winner for family entertainment. This December, treat yourself to the new heartwarming comedy Broadway musical A Christmas Story based on the classic movie featuring Ralphie and his Red Ryder BB gun. Time Magazine called the show “An unexpected delightful holiday musical with a slew of sprightly songs.” A Christ- ‘Calendar of Events’ mas Story runs from Dec. 2 through the 24th. If you’re a dreamer, don’t miss Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat next February. This family favorite, based on the biblical story of Joseph and his coat of many colors, will delight and entertain all audiences. The musical tells the story of Joseph, his journey, his brothers, and of course his amazing coat. Opening in March is the highly acclaimed and Tony-nominated tPeter and the Star Catcher. The New York Times called it “the Most exhilarating Broadway story telling in decades! You must experience it for yourself.” It will play live next Spring at Eastern Oregon’s favorite family theater, the Elgin Opera House. Tickets for all these productions are now on sale. Call (541) 663-6324 or visit ElginOperaHouse.com. Continues from Page 38 SPECIAL EVENTS, CONT. CLASSES & ACTIVITIES, CONT TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep 15 Sep 16- 18 Sep 16- 18 Sep 16- 18 Sep 17 Sep 17 Sep 23- 25 Sep 23- 25 Sep 23- 25 Sep 23- Oct Sep 24 Sep 24, 25 Sep 24, 25 Oct 1 Oct 1 Oct 2 Oct 7- 8 Oct 7- 9 Oct 7- 9 Oct 8 Oct 8 Oct 8 Oct 15 Oct 17 Oct 29 Nov 12 Dec 10 Night on the Bayou, Music & Creole Food, Barnard Griffin Winery (509-627-0266), Richland 6 pm Walla Walla valley quilt show, Fairgrounds (541-938-6130), Walla Walla ............................... 10 am Sunnyside ‘Sunshine Days’, Downtown (509)837-5939), Sunnyside Deutschesfest, (deutschesfest.com), Odessa ........................................................................................ Model A Day at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR .................. 10 am Palouse Days Show & Shine Car Show, City Park (509-878-1852), Palouse, WA ................ 9 am Prosser’s Great Balloon Rally, Prosser Airport (tourprosser.com), Prosser ........................... 6 a.m. Prosser Harvest Festival, Downtown (tourprosser.com), Prosser 3 Rivers Tattoo Convention, Convention Center (threeriversconventioncenter.com), Kenn . 11 am 2 Central Wash. State Fair, Fairgrounds (fairfun.com), Yakima ........................................................... Hood River Hops Fest, (hoodriver.org), Hood River ............................................................................ Sage Bluff Alpacas Open Farm Days, 8401 S. Steele Rd (509-786-4507), Prosser ............. 11 am Ye Merry Greenwood Faire, Columbia Park (yemerriegreenwoodfaire.org), Kennewick Buddy Walk, Howard Amon Park (dsamc.org), Richland ......................................................... 10 am Concours de Maryhill, Maryhill Museum (goldendalemotorsports.org), 9 am ................................... PNW Mustang Club Concours d’Elegance , Columbia Crest (509-591-9285), Paterson ........ 9 am Rivers of Ink Conference, Richland Library (riversofInk.net), Richland ............................................. Fall Home Show, TRAC (hbatc.com), Pasco ............................................................................ 10 am Ellensburg Film Festival, CWU campus (ellensburgfilmfestival.com), Ellensburg ............................ Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 am ‘Dancing with the W2 Stars’ Fundraiser, Power House Theatre (509-529-6500), Walla Walla 7 pm Prosser Beer & Whiskey Festival, Wine & Food Park (509-786-3177), Prosser ..................... 4 pm Making Strides Against Breast Cancer, Columbia Park (509 783 1574), Kennewick .............. 9 am Fall Out Bazaar 2016, Columbia Sun RV Resort Event Center (509-551-9468), Kennewick 10 am Taste of Scandinavia, 1st Lutheran Church, Hwy 395 & Yelm (509-619-1510), Kennewick 10 am Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 am Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 am CLASSES & ACTIVITIES TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep Sep 1 7 7 8 8 13 13 14 15 17 24 27 Cancer 101 , Northwest Cancer Clinic (509-987-1800), Kennewick .................................... 4:30 pm Farmers Market, Barnard Griffin Winery (509-627-0266), Richland ..................................... 12 Noon Beginning Yoga 8-week series, 4415 W. Clearwater Ave (theyogacommunity.com) ............. 6 pm Master Gardener Class, “Extending the season”, Demo Garden (509-735-3551), Kenn ... 6:30 pm Yoga for Scoliosis and Back Care 6 week series, Yoga Community (509 521-4287), ............ 6 pm Paint Night with Painted Syrah, Kitchen at Barnard Griffin (509-627-0266), Richland ......... 6:30 pm Beginning Yoga 8-week series, Yoga Community (509-521-4287), Kennewick ....................... 9 am Farmers Market, Barnard Griffin Winery (509-627-0266), Richland ..................................... 12 Noon Wine & Watercolors, Chris Blevins - Beholder, Market Vineyards (509-430-8633), ................ 6 pm National Drive Electric Week - EV Show, Public Library (509-375-5644), Richland .......... 12 Noon Wine & Watercolors, Chris Blevins , Milbrandt Vineyards (509-430-8633), Prosser ............. 10 am Paint Night with Painted Syrah, Kitchen at Barnard Griffin (509-627-0266), Richland ......... 6:30 pm Nov 17 Wine & Watercolors, Chris Blevins - Easter Egg Hunt , Market Vineyards (509-430-8633) .... 6 Dec 8 Wine & Watercolors, Chris Blevins - Christmas Who , Market Vineyards (509-430-8633 ...... 6 Dec 15- J 29 Over-40 Tri-City Tappers intro, Fridays, T-C Ac. of Ballet (509-375-1898), Richland ......... 1 Dec 17 Wire wrap/weave Workshop, Columbia Sun RV Event Center (509-551-9468), Kenn ...... 8:30 pm pm pm am SPORTS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Sep 24 Oct 2 Oct 8 Oct 14 Oct 15 Oct 28 Tri-City Tri-City Tri-City Tri-City Tri-City Tri-City Americass Americass Americass Americass Americass Americass vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. Spokane, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .............. 7:05 Everett, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ................. 5:05 Lethbridge, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ........... 7:05 Kamloops, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ............ 7:05 Prince George, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .... 7:05 Victoria, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ................ 7:05 pm pm pm pm pm pm PAGE 40 • September 2016 • The Entertainer