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SPAC Will Debut Its First-Ever Holiday Slate Of Programming This December

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You probably know Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) for its sold-out Live Nation shows, world-class New York City Ballet performances and as the summer home of the Philadelphia Orchestra. But this winter, Saratoga’s premier concert and performance venue is taking a huge step toward its vision of providing year-round programming. Enter SPAC’s first-ever holiday series, which runs from December 4-19.

“Over the past three years, we’ve been expanding SPAC’s programming beyond the traditional summer season both on our campus and in venues throughout the region,” says SPAC President and CEO Elizabeth Sobol. “This December that vision will be realized with four diverse, holiday programs by world-class companies that will delight families, classical lovers and curious newcomers alike. We anticipate that this new holiday series will mark the start of many new traditions, bringing together our community to revel in the magic of the season.”

First on the list is the Vienna Boys Choir, a centuries-old institution making its Saratoga debut at Bethesda Episcopal Church on Wednesday, December 4 at 7pm. The children’s choral group is known worldwide, and will present a special holiday program of Austrian folk songs, classical masterpieces, Christmas hymns and holiday carols. (Tickets to the performance are already sold out.)

Salzburg Marionette Theatre
The Salzburg Marionette Theatre will perform ‘The Nutcracker’ at Saratoga Springs High School on December 6 and 7.

The following weekend, the Salzburg Marionette Theatre will take the Saratoga Springs High School stage to present two performances of The Nutcracker. (For more on the Tchaikovsky classic, check out SPAC’s always-popular Nutcracker Tea on November 17.) The original production by the legendary Austrian theater company will feature live actors and their marionette “friends” bringing the story of Clara to life. Performances are Friday, December 6 at 7pm and Saturday, December 7 at 2pm and are $25 for adults and $15 for children ad teens 15 and under.

A week later, on Saturday, December 14, the Orchestra of St. Luke’s will return for the third time to Bethesda Episcopal Church to perform Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos. The New York City-based group regularly performs at venues such as Carnegie Hall and the New York City Center, and has won four Grammy Awards for its dedication to the craft. The orchestra will take the stage at 7pm on Saturday, and tickets cost $25.

Rounding out the holiday series will be a performance by VOCES8, a British choral group that has stunned crowds throughout Europe and Asia with a cappella performances in addition to collaborations with leading orchestras. The ensemble will perform at Bethesda Episcopal Church on Thursday, December 19 at 7pm. Tickets are $25.

‘saratoga living’ Sports Editor Brien Bouyea To Give Talk At Keeneland Auction House And Racecourse In Kentucky

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Talk about a winning bet. When Saratoga Springs-based author Brien Bouyea, who’s also saratoga living‘s sports editor and the director of communications at the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, decided to write about the 150th running of the Travers Stakes, which took place this past summer at the Saratoga Race Course, he chose a topic horse racing fans could all get behind. Bouyea, who co-authored The Travers: 150 Years Of Saratoga’s Greatest Race with longtime turf writer and current racing museum historian Michael Veitch, will be giving a talk about it this evening, October 22, at the internationally renowned Keeneland auction house and racecourse just outside of Lexington, KY.

The book, which features artwork by revered Travers poster designer Greg Montgomery, published back in July, has been a big hit (the first edition’s nearly sold out). “The Keeneland Library invited me because of the research I did for the book and a lot of the imagery as well, [which] was acquired by the library,” says Bouyea. Though he’s visited the famous Kentucky auction house before, tonight’s event marks Bouyea’s first official speaking engagement at Keeneland, as well as the farthest he’s traveled so far to give a reading of The Travers: 150 Years Of Saratoga’s Greatest Race. “Keeneland’s a big resource in the sport,” says Bouyea. “They do three or four lectures in the spring and fall meets, and it’s definitely a big honor to be here.”

For his evening reading, Bouyea plans to highlight the shared racing and historical connections between the Spa City and Lexington. “A horse named Kentucky won the first Travers in 1864,” says Bouyea. “The owner was John Clay, son of the famous Kentucky statesman Henry Clay.” That winner of the inaugural Travers Stakes was even bred on a farm called Ashland Stud just a few miles away from where Bouyea will be giving his talk.

As for future speaking engagements in the Capital Region or farther afield, Bouyea says he’s hoping to schedule a few for this upcoming holiday season. He’s also already planning a second edition of The Travers, which will include a new page on the historic 150th running of the Travers. For now, however, Bouyea’s just looking forward to spending a day in Kentucky horse racing country. “The racing scene here is a lot like [in] Saratoga,” says Bouyea. “There are a lot of fun traditions, the people love the sport and Kentucky has such a great atmosphere about it.”

Local Photographer Tracey Buyce Pairs Her Horse Photographs With The Real McCoy At Recent Exhibition

Saratoga Springs-based equine photographer Tracey Buyce, whose work has been exhibited in esteemed local venues such as Uncommon Grounds, Prime at Saratoga National and Putnam Place—and even in the pages of saratoga living‘s 2018 “The Races!” issue—recently held an “interactive” photography exhibit at Trilogy Equestrian Center in Ballston Spa. And, as you might expect, it was all about the horses.

On Thursday, October 10, Buyce invited the public to attend a barn exhibit, featuring photos of retired Thoroughbreds, Appaloosas and American Quarter horses paired with the subjects themselves. (In other words, guests could get to know the actual horses featured in the photos.) “Horses have such presence in mind, body and spirit, and I wanted horse lovers to experience that magic,” Buyce says. “Having horses at the show made the atmosphere come alive and engaged the guests. Guests who purchased art can say, ‘I met this horse.’ For some guests, it was their first experience with a horse, and their smiles said it all.”

A portion of the proceeds from the show went to New Vocations racehorse adoption program, a Ballston Spa nonprofit where Buyce, a lifelong horse lover, volunteers. (She photographs the horses awaiting adoption.) Be on the lookout for similar shows in the future: Buyce says she already has a big surprise in mind for her next exhibit.

Spa City’s Joy US Foundation Hosting Recharged ‘Stronger Than Cancer Day’ In Saratoga Springs

It wouldn’t be a stretch to say that my wife is “stronger than cancer.” Ever since her diagnosis, she’s become this badder-assed version of the badass she was before, and I’m daily in awe of her mental and physical fortitude. Case in point: She’s now a pro-surfer-in-the-making, catching waves everywhere from Outer Banks, NC to Cape Cod and Far Rockaway, Queens. She’s been reading my dogeared copy of Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life and getting some pretty crazy ideas for her next lineup. (She has her sights set on Mexico.)

It’s that type of warrior spirit that Saratoga Springs-based nonprofit, the Joy US Foundation, is looking to tap into for its second annual Stronger Than Cancer Day in Saratoga, taking place on Saturday, November 2. The nonprofit, which arranges and hosts free outdoor experiences for cancer survivors and their families in the region, is partnering with more than 20 local businesses and restaurants, who will be offering the day’s participants a hybrid workout/shopping spree, as well as discounts around town, with all related proceeds going toward funding the foundation’s mission. “We’re also trying to drive traffic to [businesses],” says Joy US Founder and Executive Director Janet Abrahamson, who’s hoping that the businesses involved will be able to make a little bread on the side, too.

The concept for Saratoga’s Stronger Than Cancer Day sprang from a chance conversation Abrahamson had at her gym, Evolution Strength & Performance. In talking with local business owners throughout the years, Abrahamson said many wished that there was a memorable day in town like Chowderfest—but only for giving and giving back. So she took on the mantle of making that sort of day a reality. “Last year, we started [Stronger Than Cancer Day] at Evolution and did 12,000 kettlebell swings in an hour,” says Abrahamson, who took part in the fundraising workout with just 19 others. Local crêperie Ravenous was also involved, offering up proceeds from meals to the nonprofit. (Ravenous Owner Dave Zuka sits on Joy US’ board.) But because it was conceived on the fly, it was a much smaller event, and Abrahamson had her sights set on something a little bigger.

Enter this year’s event, which falls on the weekend after Halloween and has a superhero tie-in. (Yes, cosplayers, Superman and Spider-Man costumers are acceptable day-wear.) Aligning with Joy US’ mission, this year’s Stronger Than Cancer Day will be all about staying active while being charitable. So to kick things off, from 10am to noon, the day’s participants will be able to take part in three separate fundraising workouts hosted by Evolution Strength & Performance, Max Level Fitness & Athletics and Yoga Mandali. That will be followed by a “run-walk-roll”—for runners, walkers and rollers (the stroller and wheelchair set)—which takes place from 1pm to 3pm, all over town at participating stores and restaurants. (Interested parties can register for this leg at iRun Local.) For example, you could map your day’s course by choosing to jog or sprint from Yoga Mandali to Union Hall, a menswear boutique on Broadway, where you could pick up discounted items; then head over to the Palette Cafe for a quick shot of Joe, before hoofing it over to Bennington Mattress, where you could recharge and pick up raffle tickets for a number of prizes, including the grand prize of a weeklong getaway in Mexico (Abrahamson says there’ll be a limited number of tickets available for that raffle). Finally, from 3pm to 5pm, Harvey’s Restaurant and Bar will be hosting a Stronger Than Cancer Day reception, which will feature passed appetizers, live music, an appearance by local TV weather personality Jason Gough and a cash bar. Not to mention the big reveal of who won all the raffles.

Besides the businesses mentioned above, participants in the daylong fundraiser will include Ravenous (in for a second year), Whole Harvest, Caroline & Main, Bailey’s Cafe and Restaurant, Ben & Jerry’s, Phila Fusion, Henry Street Barbershop, Olé Hustle, Miss Scarlett Boutique, Classical Concepts Salon, Mountain Man, Saratoga Olive Oil, Impressions of Saratoga, Crafters Gallery Saratoga, By the Bottle Shop and Saratoga Day Spa.

This might sound like a tremendous undertaking, but Abrahamson and Joy US have had a lot of experience making events like this one possible in and around the Capital Region. The organization regularly hosts experiences in the Adirondacks (it’s on the lookout for a permanent home there for overnight trips), and has hosted events on Crystal Lake in Averill Park (I attended one of them) and at the Fish Creek Marina. “Our goal is to make Stronger Than Cancer Day an [annual] event like Chowderfest or the International Flavorfeast in Saratoga,” says Abrahamson. “We want it to be something that everybody in Saratoga is proud of.” I don’t know about you, but I’m going to strap on my running gear, despite being completely out of running shape and get my shopping/eating on. And maybe we won’t have to plan much for that Mexican surf adventure.

To register for any or all of the events on Stronger Than Cancer Day in Saratoga, click here.

 

 

Halloween 2019: Everything To Do In Saratoga And The Capital Region

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Get your matching Batman and Batwoman costumes ready, Saratoga, because Halloween is coming to the Spa City in full force this year. Though Halloween actually falls on the following Thursday, there are a number of fun, related events taking place this weekend in the Capital Region. Here’s a roundup of the best-of-the-best:

Friday, October 25

For those looking to indulge in some cabaret-style entertainment, the annual BOO-jolais Cabaret Wine Celebration at Troy’s Hilton Garden has just what the (witch) doctor ordered. In addition to complimentary wine tastings, with samplings from some of the area’s best restaurants, the BOO-jolais will also feature live music from local favorites Grand Central Station and a silent auction. Also on Friday is the Ballston Spa Witch Walk 2019, an annual costume-themed pub crawl through Downtown Ballston Spa that raises funds for several local animal organizations.

Saturday, October 26

First up, let loose in your best Halloween costume creation during the 11th Annual Monster Ball at Saratoga Casino Hotel. There’s no cover at this combination jamboree and costume contest, and individual category winners have a chance of winning a grand prize of $500. Just ten minutes outside of Downtown Saratoga is Saratoga Winery’s popular annual Hallo-WINE Party!, featuring the winery’s own costume contest; wine, of course, and creative, spooky cocktail options; and live music provided by Funk Evolution. For a more family-friendly vibe, try Boo 2 You, Downtown Glens Falls’ big Halloween block party, featuring pumpkin carvings, dance performances and a “Candy Row” on Ridge Street.

Sunday, October 27 

For all you (grown-up) headbangers out there, metal band In This Moment will bring its Mother’s House of Horror tour, a traveling masquerade ball and rock-and-roll burlesque show, to the Palace Theatre in Albany. And for the kids, there’ll be plenty to do during the Halloween Spooktacular—four hours of treats, games and spooky science at Albany’s New York State Museum—as well as at Kids Day: Trunk or Treat, a trick-or-treating experience at the Saratoga Automobile Museum in Saratoga Spa State Park.

Below, feast your eyes on more Halloween happenings and other great goings-on this week/weekend in the Capital Region.

Tuesday

Bring some Halloween tales to Caffè Lena in Saratoga for its monthly Storytelling Open Mic (October 22)

Wednesday

Don’t miss the soulful Southern rockers St. Paul & The Broken Bones performing at The Egg in Albany (October 23)

Enter your cat for a chance to be crowned the Feline Festmeister during Oktopurrfest at Brown’s Brewing Company’s Revolution Hall in Troy (October 23)

Thursday

Radio station 100.9 The Cat presents the 4th Annual Chicks with Picks, an all-female acoustic lineup at Putnam Place in Saratoga (October 24)

The classic musical by Leonard Bernstein, West Side Story (School Edition) will kick off a weekend of performances at the Charles R. Wood Theater in Glens Falls (October 24)

To perform its multilingual repertoire, Pink Martini will bring more than a dozen musicians and singers to the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall (October 24)

Get a fascinating history lesson during this Lunch & Learn: The Great Covered Bridges of the United States and China at the Clinton Community Library in Rhinebeck (October 24)

Friday

Take a Halloween BOOze CRUISE down the Hudson with Albany’s Dutch Apple Cruises (October 25)

The Saratoga Performing Arts Center and Caffè Lena present fun, fusion classical group PROJECT Trio at the latter in Saratoga (October 25)

Writer, comedian and actor Nick Offerman (a.k.a. Ron Swanson on NBC’s hit comedy series Parks & Recreation) is bringing his All Rise: American Humorist tour to the Palace Theatre in Albany (October 25)

Have a good time and raise money for breast cancer awareness at the Pink Ball 2019 at the Hall of Springs in Saratoga (October 25)

Albany’s resident cidery, Nine Pin Cider, is hosting a Cider Maze (cider tasting plus corn maze) at Samascott’s Garden Market in Kinderhook (October 25)

The Sweet Spot: Red Light Special, a high-energy burlesque show, is making a stop at The Linda in Albany (October 25)

The legendary piano man Billy Joel will be playing at Madison Square Garden in Manhattan (October 25)

The Enchanted City, a local Steampunk festival, will host its first-ever “Fall in Steampunk: The Haunted Hedley” at Troy’s River Street Market (October 25)

Saratoga Children’s Theater presents Monthy Python’s Spamalot at the Saratoga Springs High School (October 25-26)

Saturday

Enjoy trick or treating, magic shows, arts and crafts, pumpkin rolling races and more at the Saratoga Springs Downtown Business Association’s 18th Annual Fall Festival (October 26)

The Parting Glass in Saratoga Springs is throwing its own Halloween Party with prizes, giveaways and live music (October 26)

The Colonie Creepy Craze will offer crafts, a dance party and a Costume Catwalk Contest all at the Colonie Center (October 26)

Outlaw country stars Elizabeth Cook and Will Hoge will join forces for a special matinee performance at Caffè Lena in Saratoga (October 26)

Get your fill of fine fare and wine at the 12th Annual Toast of Brooklyn at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York City (October 26)

Late Show-tested comedian Andy Sandford will host Pretty Much the Best Comedy Show at Proctors in Schenectady (October 26)

King Neptune’s Pub in Lake George presents a Game of Thrones Halloween Party with live music and $1000 to give away for costume contests (October 26)

Dance with the New York skyline as your background at this Halloween Rooftop Party at La Terraza in Manhattan (October 26)

Dress up as your favorite comic book character for Saratoga Comic Con at the Saratoga Springs City Center (October 26-27)

Sunday

Enjoy delicious hors d’oeuvres, cocktails and an international art/fashion show all during Arts Alive: Food, Fun, Fashion at the Surfside On The Lake Hotel & Suites in Lake George (October 27)

Get your dance on during the World Dance Festival: Dancing Across Cultural Borders at the Manhattan Movement and Arts Center (October 27)

Take part in a parade and trick-or-treat at the 10th Annual Hudson Halloween, starting at Warren Street in Downtown Hudson (October 27)

Tickets For SPAC’s Nutcracker Tea Go On Sale October 23

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Love the holidays? Love The Nutcracker? Love tea? Then you’ll adore the Saratoga Performing Arts Center’s (SPAC’s) annual nutcracker tea, an all-ages event coming to the Saratoga Hall of Springs November 17.

While Northeast Ballet Company performs excerpts from Tchaikovsky’s famed ballet, inspiring guests with dreams of fairies, toy soldiers, princes and an army of mice, attendees will be treated to a traditional English tea service complete with mini sandwiches, cookies and other finger foods. “Our Nutcracker Tea is a truly magical event, celebrating the arts, community and the holiday season,” says SPAC President and CEO Elizabeth Sobol. The event will feature vendors (perfect for getting a little holiday shopping done), an American Girl Doll raffle and, of course, Santa Claus himself!

“This event sells out quickly every year,” says event co-chair and SPAC Action Council member Marsha Dolinsky. “We recommend purchasing tickets as soon as possible to secure your place at this magical event.” Tickets for the two November 17 performances (one at 11am and one at 3pm) go on sale on October 23 at 10am, and are $75 for adults and $35 for children and teens 15 and under.

Shelters Of Saratoga Finds New Temporary Code Blue Shelter Site On Adelphi Street

Fall might be the time of year for leaf-peeping and pumpkin-carving for most of us Saratogians, but for the homeless people here, it’s a reminder of hard, cold days to come. This winter, at least in Saratoga Springs, those without a permanent roof over their heads will have a place to go and stay warm, thanks to Shelters of Saratoga (SOS), a local nonprofit that provides winter housing through its Code Blue Saratoga program. Last week, SOS announced that after a months-long scramble, the organization, along with the City of Saratoga, had signed a two-year lease at a new winter facility at 4 Adelphi Street just outside of Downtown Saratoga.

“Mayor Meg Kelly was really instrumental,” says Karen A. Gregory, Executive Director of SOS. “We worked hand-in-hand in the search for a new location, and we had a lot of conversations with the community, which has led us to the most current site.” Code Blue’s previous location had been out of the bottom floor of the Soul Saving Station Church on Henry Street, which is currently repurposing its downstairs and kitchen areas. The new building at the corners of Adelphi and Union Streets will provide almost 4000 square feet of space, enough to accommodate, much like the previous site, around 50-60 individuals. “The Soul Saving Station Church was great, and they gave us plenty of notice, but we’ve been looking for another location since January of this year, and it’s a relief to have found one,” says Gregory.

However, the new shelter isn’t ready to open its doors just yet. The facility, which was previously a recycling depot for bottles and cans, requires some winterization—the installation of heating, electrical outlets and insulation—as well as other upgrades. Gregory says that SOS is currently raising money for the estimated $50,000-70,000 required to get the building winter-ready and running for this upcoming cold-weather season. In addition to the City of Saratoga kicking in some of its funds to renovate the new shelter, two Saratoga-based companies, Bonacio Construction and B&B Plumbing and Heating, have both offered to help out. “They’ve been instrumental in the building upgrades,” says Gregory. “We met with them right out of the gate, and they’ve been a massive part of this.” (Those interested in making donations can also do so at the nonprofit’s website.)

In spite of the challenges, Gregory says that the shelter’s currently on schedule to open by mid-November. Even though the new Code Blue space on Adelphi Street isn’t a permanent facility—a longterm goal of SOS—Gregory says that they’re getting even closer to zeroing in on a lasting, future location. “We’re hoping that the two-year lease will give us enough time to locate and have a permanent solution,” says Gregory. “We’re working on some definite possibilities right now, which we feel really good about.”

360-Degree VR Film Set In Saratoga To Get North American Premiere At The Adirondack Film Festival This Weekend

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This weekend, Glens Falls is rolling out the red carpet for its Fourth Annual Adirondack Film Festival, and with it, comes the North American premiere on Saturday, October 19, of a uniquely produced film set in Saratoga Springs. The 13-minute virtual reality (VR) short, entitled How to Tell a True Immigrant Story, incorporates cutting-edge, 360-degree technology and was filmed right here in the Spa City.

While the film short might have a running time of just 13 minutes, the documentary was a years-long collaboration that tapped a number of local resources. “We couldn’t have done this film without the Saratoga community,” says the film short’s director Aggie Ebrahimi Bazaz, an award-winning Iranian-American documentary filmmaker. “It really was such a deeply collaborative, multi-vocal piece.” That collaboration involved professors and students at Skidmore College, members from Saratoga’s Latinx community and the Saratoga County Economic Opportunity Council (EOC).

The end result is one giant leap forward in the cinematic canon. For the premiere of How to Tell a True Immigrant Story, viewers will don VR headsets and be immersed in the film’s plot, as they get a glimpse into the lives of seasonal migrants working on Saratoga Race Course’s backstretch, as well as at local farms and businesses throughout Saratoga County. The documentary had its world premiere in August at the prestigious 2019 Locarno Film Festival in Switzerland, where it was the first-ever 360-degree VR film entry in the Emerging Filmmakers Competition category. It also received special recognition in September’s Encounters film festival in Bristol, UK.

Adirondack Film Festival
Audiences at this year’s Adirondack Film Festival will get to watch ‘How to Tell a True Immigrant Story’ in a VR lounge.

Why produce the film in such an unorthodox way? Bazaz provides one of the reasons: “In addition to maybe reaching people more deeply because it’s VR, we thought that 360-degree as a spherical space, as a circle, really matched well with the horse track in Saratoga.” To actually shoot the short, Bazaz used a Nikon Keymission 360-degree camera, lent to her through a partnership with the Pubic VR Lab, a media arts center in Brookline, MA that focuses on expanding access to VR and VR training, as well as investing in a greater network of VR creators. (The camera contains two 180-degree lenses that create a composite 360-degree image.) “It’s a bit tedious and it’s an entirely different way of thinking about editing [a film],” says Bazaz. “In a way, the audience becomes the editor just by moving their heads to different parts of the frame.” Bazaz also recorded the film’s audio with a 360-degree (or “ambisonic”) recorder, creating audio shifts and sound perspectives that would translate to viewers wearing a VR headset.

By no means was Saratoga picked at random as the setting of the film. In 2016, Bazaz received a fellowship to the John B. Moore Documentary Studies Collaborative (MDOCS) Storytellers’ Institute at Skidmore, and soon after, befriended Krystle Nowhitney-Hernandez, Deputy Director of the EOC. The two women, who connected over their interest in immigration, began planning a project focusing on Saratoga’s backstretch workers and migrant community. “Saratoga’s a magical place for a lot of people for a lot of different reasons,” says Bazaz. “And talking to people who travel with the horses, they love Saratoga, and they will say that they feel most at home in Saratoga. That’s really good, but I also see some other dynamics that could be better.”

With Nowhitney-Hernandez as her collaborator and executive producer, Bazaz was able to finish the film, in large part, also thanks to support from the EOC and the MDOCS program at Skidmore, which made space for Bazaz and her film crew to stay a whole month on the college’s campus in 2018 while they worked on the project. According to Bazaz, Nowhitney-Hernandez “[served] as a brilliant thought-partner, who was and remains fiercely passionate about the ways that art can foster new perspectives.” She goes on to say that Nowhitney-Hernandez “was willing at every turn, to leverage whatever resources she had in her various positions to facilitate the successful execution of our collectively-imagined projects while also ensuring their adherence to our core values.” A handful of Skidmore MDOCS students—including Emily Rizzo, Eleanor Green and Eleuterio Martinez Ramirez, all class of 2018—and MDOCS Directors Jordana Dym and Adam Tinkle also helped to fund, produce and bring the film to fruition.

Overall, Bazaz says that the reaction to How to Tell a True Immigrant Story has been positive. “VR researchers, in particular, have really connected with it for its poeticism and its experimental approach, because we’re really breaking apart the 360-degree space,” says Bazaz. Besides getting to watch her film’s big North American premiere this Saturday in Glens Falls, Bazaz will also lead a panel discussion on documentary and community collaborations at Skidmore on Monday, October 21, along with collaborators Nowhitney-Hernandez, Rizzo and community collaborator Ana Cruz.

Tickets are still available for the premiere here, though VIP tickets are required to access the festival’s VR lounge. The film short will also be screened at Caffè Lena on Tuesday, October 29, in partnership with the Saratoga Immigration Coalition’s quarterly In Their Own Words storytelling series.

Anthony DePaula, Owner And President Of DePaula Auto Group, Dies At 75

The Capital Region business community has lost one of its captains of industry. Anthony J. DePaula, the owner and president of DePaula Auto Group, died after suffering a heart attack on October 16 while visiting New York City. He was 75.

DePaula, a longtime resident of Saratoga Springs, first started selling cars in Schenectady in 1980, eventually moving the business to Central Avenue in Albany. In the decades that followed, DePaula’s dealerships became a regional powerhouse, selling area customers brands such as Chevrolet, Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Ford and Mazda at dealerships in Albany, as well as at a recently opened Maserati/Alfa Romeo showroom in Colonie.

DePaula was a longtime friend and client of saratoga living Chair Anthony Ianniello’s law firm, Ianniello Anderson, P.C.

He is survived by his wife, Susan, and daughter Kara DePaula Lynch.

This story is developing.

Skidmore’s Popular All-Beatles Concert Series Returns To The Zankel Music Center This November

Next month, Beatlemania will be grabbing ahold of Skidmore College once again—and this time, with an eye to The Beatles’ swan song albums. Skidmore’s annual, student-run Beatles tribute concert, Beatlemore Skidmania, is returning to the college’s Arthur Zankel Music Center for three Beatles-packed performances, spanning from Friday, November 22 through Saturday, November 23, where albums Abbey Road and Let It Be will get the covers treatment.

Now in its 19th year, Beatlemore has annually paid tribute to the Fab Four—i.e. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr—by playing songs from the iconic English band’s popular catalog. And this year’s series of covers will be focusing in on The Beatles’ final years as a band. “What we’re really doing is representing the Beatles in 1969,” says Joel Brown, distinguished artist-in-residence at Skidmore. (Brown also teaches guitar there and serves as Beatlemore’s director.) “It’s kind of a 50th-anniversary show, because both of those albums were recorded in 1969, even though Let It Be came out in 1970,” he says. The setlist for this year’s Beatlemore was finalized only a few days ago, and will include a bevy of hits from Abbey Road, including “Come Together,” “Something” and “Oh Darling”; as well as a handful of tunes from Let It Be, such as “The Long and Winding Road” and an as-yet-unnamed grand finale, which Brown isn’t giving away just yet.

All songs at Beatlemore are interpreted and performed by Skidmore student ensembles, and this year’s concert will include 14 campus acts, with musical styles ranging from rock to a cappella. For example, one group will perform George Harrison’s “Here Comes the Sun” as a vocal duet and another have created a string band arrangement, complete with fiddle and upright bass, for one of The Beatles’ shortest tunes, “Maggie Mae.”

In addition to being a Beatles tribute concert, Beatlemore’s also a fundraiser for Skidmore Cares, a campus-wide initiative that encourages students to find creative ways of contributing to local charities. “We have a lot of fun, but we’re also able to raise a fair amount of money and do some good,” says Brown.

The first Beatlemore show (then called “All Together Now”) was staged in November 2001, as the spontaneous result of a Beatles seminar taught by Dr. Gordon Thompson, then-chair of Skidmore’s music department. “I think that the coincidence of 9/11 and the death of George Harrison at the end of November lent poignancy to that first show,” says Thompson. “It functioned as a kind of emotional release, but that’s not how it originated. It was a way for students to play music that the Music Department otherwise didn’t support.” Brown officially took over as director of Beatlemore just last year (he previously served as co-director), and it’s definitely a dream job for him. “My musical life literally changed forever when I saw The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show when I was eight years old,” says Brown. Not only did Brown grow up with the Fab Four’s music, but years later, with his own burgeoning music career behind him, he had the opportunity to record with the London Symphony Orchestra at Abbey Road Studios—and meet Paul McCartney while there. “I was playing with Chris Brubeck’s Triple Play, and Paul McCartney just happened to be there recording,” recalls Brown. “It was pure coincidence—the staff said that he never came there anymore. And when he asked me what I played, I said, ‘I play guitar because of you.'”

Even with Beatlemore’s 2019 show a little over a month away, Brown says he’s already planning next year’s show, which will be Beatlemore’s big 20th anniversary. For the 2020 program, Brown’s planning on taking the concert back to its roots. “It’s going to be the sky’s the limit—any Beatles song, any album, any style,” he says. “That’s the way it was at the very first show—you could do whatever you wanted.”

Interested in attending this year’s Beatlemore Skidmania? Tickets cost $10 and are currently available here.