"This is a terrific lineup of women artists who have a connection to the Parrish," said Corinne Erni, Senior Curator of ArtsReach and Special Projects.
"I saw it at the Puppeteers of America's National festival and loved it. When I heard she would be back touring the show, I jumped at the chance to share her with our Sag Harbor audience," Joyce noted.
"I found that this year's topic 'Decadence of Distortion' hit a sensitive spot with people. We have all been out with friends, colleagues, or relatives that are on the phone and missing the personal connection that is happening at the present moment. I hope during this show that everyone is interacting with one another," Mannix said.
"Community Day is an opportunity for members of the public—adults, children, and families—to experience all that the Parrish Art Museum has to offer year round: engaging art exhibitions; creative and fun art workshops for children and adults. What is most important is the opportunity for all to engage with art, artists, and one another," said Parrish Director Terrie...
"Mamma Mia! is pure entertainment," director Michael Disher said. "With a solid selection of 20 plus well-known pop tunes, it avoids pretense and purpose and delivers a joyful evening."
"The first time I saw Les Misérables was back in 1989 and I was profoundly moved by the depth of emotion that I experienced from the musical adaptation of Victor Hugo's epic novel," director Debbie Mansir said.
"The 3rd concert of the 5th annual Songwriters Concert Series is sure to be a hit with Caroline Doctorow and her band the Ballad Makers - warming the room with her velveteen voice and thought-provoking song lyrics," Nancy Remkus, Songwriters Share Founder, shared.
"We created this weekend to bring people out to the Hamptons' during the winter season and create something different for locals to do," Heather McCormack explained.
"Little Murders is a JFK post-assassination satiric play, then film, that predicted the breakdown of traditional American institutional safeguards and the random violence and societal insanity that follows. Why anyone thinks this has any relevance to present-day events, go figure," remarked Feiffer.
"I think now I've hit that point where I know I'm comfortable within my own personality. For a long time I was just trying to reinvent the wheel and the wheel was perfectly fine rolling on its own," East told us about the evolution of his musical style.
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