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Silicon Valley Gay Men’s Chorus: The chorus presents a program of music inspired by “The Twilight Zone.” April 15-17. Santa Clara University Recital Hall, corner of Franklin and Lafayette streets, Santa Clara. $15-$20. svgmc.org, 650-796-5135. Decades of Dress: A new exhibit featuring fashions from the 1890s through the 1970s. Through May 30. Museum hours Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday, noon-4 p.m. Heritage Park Museum, 570 E. Remington Drive, Sunnyvale. 408-749-0220, heritageparkmuseum.org.
Founded and directed by Karen R, Clark, the seven-women ensemble presents three concerts around the Bay Area this weekend, performing Jan, 5 at Palo Alto’s First Presbyterian Church, Jan, 6 at St, John’s Presbyterian Church in Berkeley, and a matinee concert Jan, 7 Sunday afternoon at St, Mark’s Lutheran Church in San Francisco, The concert’s theme, “Annus Novus: One Yeare Begins — Medieval Poetry, Music & Magic to Ring in the New Year,” ballet flats toe cleavage covers a luscious program of pieces gleaned largely from a collection of manuscripts from the Abbey of St, Martial in Limoges, France, Startlingly sensual, the music features an array of forms and traditions, including the mesmerizing cadences of Gregorian chant, French motets, rondeaux, ballads and praise poems for the Virgin Mary..
The married couple’s real-life battles against the forces arrayed against them were fought one skirmish at a time over several years. “A United Kingdom” conveys that it was by no means easy, but emphasizes their determination not to allow “the world’s ugliness to take our joy away.”It doesn’t, and we are all the better for it. ‘A UNITED KINGDOM’. Rating: PG-13 (for some language, including racial epithets and a scene of sensuality). Cast: David Oyelowo, Rosamund Pike, Jack Davenport, Laura Carmichael, Terry Pheto, Jessica Oyelowo.
Ronstadt credits her family with setting her on her ballet flats toe cleavage musical path, She writes glowingly of her childhood, Her father was a baritone who sang in Tucson venues as Gil Ronstadt and his Star-Spangled Megaphone, Her brother and sister played piano, and the family spent evenings harmonizing, Singing was her focus, “I didn’t think about being famous, or people knowing me,” she says, “I just thought, ‘I’d like to have a job singing.’ It seemed like it would be more fun than working in a bank.”..
— Tony Hicks. Roe v. Wade on stage: Since Broadway’s hip-hop juggernaut “Hamilton” is now officially the most hyped play on the planet, there’s no need to pour any more fuel onto the pop culture fire that comes to San Francisco in March (www.shnsf.com). Besides, the Bay Area has long been a bastion of provocative and stimulating political theater, and 2017 is no different. That leads us to the explosive new drama “Roe.” A world premiere co-production with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival and Arena Stage, this incendiary historical drama digs into the personal fallout of the landmark 1973 case that legalized abortion. Given the current climate of the country, it’s hard to think of another play with more to say about who we are as a country and where we’re headed (except maybe “Hamilton”). Playwright Lisa Loomer has always had a gift for nailing shifts in the zeitgeist, from “The Waiting Room” and “”Living Out” to “Distracted.” Directed by Ashland’s Bill Rauch, Loomer’s latest drama, which is part of OSF’s American history project, runs March 3-April 2; $29-$100; 510 647–2949, www.berkeleyrep.org.
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