Free holiday performance set for December 9 at Landmark Theater


Editors’ Note: Attached photo is from the 2011 production.

From City press release:

Richmond, VA –The City’s Department of Parks, Recreation and Community Facilities will present its annual holiday gift to the city, its free production of “Amahl and the Night Visitors,” at 4 p.m. on Sunday, December 9, at the Landmark Theater.

The one-act family musical composed by Gian Carlo Minotti was commissioned by NBC and broadcast live for the premiere of Hallmark Hall of Fame on Dec. 24, 1951. A heart-warming holiday classic that will charm both children and adults, it tells the story of the mischievous shepherd boy Amahl and his mother and how their lives are changed forever after meeting three kings.

The work is thought by some to be the most frequently produced opera in the world, and this will be the 51st year that the department has offered this holiday production to the public for free.

No reservations are required, and seating is based on a first-come, first-served basis.

Chicken History

From letter to editor by Russell B. Rowe in the Charlottesville Daily Progress:

I read with great interest about the chicken problem in Albemarle County.
Let me give you some firsthand witness of living with chickens, as opposed to some “scientific study” or “snooty opinion” on living in a chicken environment, close quarters.

During the Great Depression, my four brothers, mama and daddy lived on Oregon Hill, a working class neighborhood in the heart of Richmond. Most of the houses were tied together, with a walk-through alley sometimes mixed in. My dad, I suppose to keep down trouble with neighbors, built a fence wherever we moved.

Click the link above for more, but the letter concludes:

What I’m trying to get to is we had at least seven people in that frame house with a fenced-in dirt backyard and 48 chickens, and I am 89 years old and in good health. All my brothers got in their three score and 10 years, plus.
The neighbors, in those days, never complained, and apparently the health department didn’t care, so scientific studies were not necessary.
My conclusion is: You have to have one rooster, and he is going to crow at dawn every day, but other than that, chickens never hurt anybody.

Expect some new ordinances to be considered at Richmond City Council in 2013.

CancerDancer Holiday Party at EAT(formerly Pescados)

On Monday, December 10, EAT Oregon Hill (formerly Pescados China Street) is hosting a fundraiser for a group that focuses on ovarian cancer.

From the FaceBook event page:

We are doing it again this year, because it was so much damn fun last year. Special drinks, great food, friends, free gifts. We want to say thank you to all our supporters. And, of course, Eat is donating 20 percent of all sales.

This event helps CancerDancer spread the word about ovarian cancer to women who need to know about its symptoms. Through our website, www.ocancerdancer.org we support the ovarian cancer community as well.

Eat well — fight cancer.