Peppa Pig returns to the Palace Theatre Sept. 23

Peppa Pig is back by popular demand to the Palace Theatre in Waterbury located on 100 E. Main Street on September 23 at 6 p.m. Peppa Pig’s Big Splash is an action-packed live show featuring your favorite characters as life size puppets and costume characters!

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Kids will love joining Peppa, George, Mummy Pig, Daddy Pig and more in an all singing, all-dancing adventure full of songs, games and muddy puddles! Learn more about this exciting musical theatre performance here: www.peppapigliveUS.com.

There is even a special Peppa Big Party Pass that gives kids a real VIP experience! The Pig Party Passes include: – One premium seat in the first fifteen rows of the venue
– Exclusive access to the Peppa Pig Party after the show – Light catering including lemonade, water and cookies – Meet and greet photo opportunity with Peppa Pig cast on the pink carpet – One exclusive Peppa Pig party gift and an- On-site party concierge.

For more area information on fun things to do with kids visit www.litchfieldhills.com

Weekend in Norfolk Bringing Artisans to Station Place August 5, 6 and 7

​The quiet hamlet of Norfolk is hosting a town-wide festival this weekend. As part of the festivities both sides of Station Place, just off the charming Village Green will be filled with artisans demonstrating their work during “Weekend in Norfolk”,on August 5, 6 and 7. On one of the corners with Route 44, the Norfolk Boatworks is setting up shop for all three days, prepared to take a wooden canoe through all its stages, from steaming and bending the framework to covering it with fabric to doing all the finishing touches to prepare it for launch. Other boats will be in various stages of building and restoration, too.

Schuyler Thomson (foreground) of Norfolk Boatworks will be open on Station Place, Norfolk, Conn., to show visitors how a wooden canoe is constructed. He will also be working on building and restoring other boats during Weekend in Norfolk, August 5, 6 and 7. Photo © Bruce Frisch.
Schuyler Thomson (foreground) of Norfolk Boatworks will be open on Station Place, Norfolk, Conn., to show visitors how a wooden canoe is constructed. He will also be working on building and restoring other boats during Weekend in Norfolk, August 5, 6 and 7. Photo © Bruce Frisch.

Across the street in front of the Artisans Guild, more artisans will be showing how they do things. Friday evening Carol Vinick will be demonstrating the art of fabric collage. On Saturday, Allan Czellecz is setting up his lathe to demonstrate wood turning and Sumi Nakazato is coming to explain the Art of the Bead. On top of all that, shop owners Vee Kausel and Kathy Williams will be demonstrating rug hooking and knitting throughout the entire weekend.

Stop in at Norfolk Boatworks and the Artisans Guild any time throughout Weekend in Norfolk—something will always be going on!

Weekend in Norfolk, August 5, 6 and 7, is a three-day, town-wide art, music and nature festival. Events run the gamut from art exhibits to nature walks, world-class music to a watermelon-eating contest, a quilt show and boat-building demonstrations to the opportunity to get married on the Village Green, and new events are being added all the time. Visit weekendinnorfolk.org for details.

For more area information www.litchfieldhills.com​

Lockwood-Mathews Mansion Museum explores the 1960s and its battle for preservation

The Lockwood Mathews Mansion Museum located on 295 West Ave. in Norwalk has a special exhibition, Demolish or Preserve: The 1960s at the Lockwood-Mathews Mansion through November 20, 2016. This multimedia exhibit, curated by by Kathleen Motes Bennewitz has photographs, costumes, artifacts, and music that explores the fascinating and tumultuous decade of the 1960s.

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It is impossible to remember the 1960s without thinking of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landing on the moon, the Beatles arriving in the United States, the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War and—most hauntingly—the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King. Against this backdrop of turbulent cultural change and social unrest, was the nation’s modern urban planning, which included the demolition of historic neighborhoods and irreplaceable buildings.

This exhibition will explore the fascinating and ground-breaking decade of the 1960s and the Mansion’s connections to the revolutionary preservation battles and new landmark statutes of the era. It will also honor the museum’s 50th Anniversary as it celebrates the bands of locals, led by the Junior League of Stamford-Norwalk, Inc. and the Common Interest Group, who fought to save the Mansion and secure its status as a National Historic Landmark in 1971.

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With Europe’s ongoing legacy of artistic and historic preservation and reuse as a model, in the 1960s concerned citizens brought national attention to the need for saving from demolition historically and architecturally significant structures in America. Jackie Kennedy, using her stature and influence, restored the White House’s historic interiors; and just as the grand mansions of Fifth Avenue and Newport were slated for demolition, here in Norwalk LeGrand Lockwood’s Civil War era palatial residence was faced with a similar fate. Recognizing that the demolition of this structure would be a great loss to the city, state, and nation, concerned citizens galvanized to save the mansion in one the most important and hard fought preservation battles in Connecticut’s history.

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General Admission to the Lockwood Mathews Mansion is Wed.-Sun., 12-4 p.m., $10 for adults, $8 for seniors, $6, 8-18. The Lockwood-Mathews Mansion Museum is a National Historic Landmark. For more information on schedules and programs please visit www.lockwoodmathewsmansion.com, or call 203-838-9799. For more area information www.visitfairfieldcountyct.com

More Music Than Ever During Weekend in Norfolk, Coming Up August 5, 6 and 7

Norfolk, Conn., has long been a mecca for those who love music of all kinds, but Weekend in Norfolk, its town-wide open house coming up August 5, 6 and 7, promises to be extra special. From Infinity Hall’s pop, rock, blues and jazz concerts to classical music and other performances at the Music Shed to pop-up musicians all around town, you’ll find music in the air everywhere you go.

BHI# 08-029 Yale Norfolk
BHI# 08-029 Yale Norfolk

Infinity Hall, with its Queen Anne architecture and vivid green paint, is an unmissable presence on Route 44. Built in 1883, the building housed an auditorium for concerts and lectures upstairs and a grocery and a dry goods store on the ground floor. The theater fell into disuse in the 1940s and had subsequent ups and downs, but in 2007 Infinity owner Dan Hincks bought the building and completely redid the interior, adding a state-of-the-art sound system and creating an intimate, friendly setting for live music of all genres. Singer Jane Monheit and the Glenn Miller Orchestra will both appear on Saturday, and bluegrass band Seldom Scene is slated to perform Sunday.

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The Norfolk Chamber Music Festival is believed to be the oldest summer music festival in North America. Since the 1940s, it has held its concerts in the Music Shed, hailed as “an acoustic marvel” by the New York Times. The Music Shed, modeled after Steinway Hall in New York City, was built in 1906, and over the decades its beautiful redwood interior has welcomed many world-famous musicians to its stage. During Weekend in Norfolk, the Music Shed will feature concerts by the world-renowned Emerson String Quartet, faculty and students from the Yale Summer School of Music, and the U.S. Coast Guard Band.

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And don’t forget those unexpected pop-up musicians, many of them recruited from Norfolk’s talented residents, who will be performing at the farmers market, on the village green, in the library, in the center of town and …well, come and be surprised.

For a full listing of all the Weekend in Norfolk musical events, plus the rest of the more than 60 events scheduled as well as places to eat, sleep or shop, visit weekendinnorfolk.org. If you have questions, send an email to info@weekendinnorfolk.org.

For more area information www.litchfieldhills.com

Tea for Two Hundred in Washington CT

The 19th annual Tea for Two Hundred garden party gala benefit will be held on Saturday, August 13, 2016, from 4:00 to 7:00pm in the beautiful gardens of the Washington Depot home of Mr. Gael Hammer and Mr. Gary Goodwin.

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The tea, attracting people from all over New England, is widely considered Litchfield County’s social event of the summer season. This year the Tea for Two Hundred will be honoring Washington resident George Schoellkopf and the Hollister House Garden. Guests will be able to dance in the garden to the music of the legendary “Beehive Queen” Christine Ohlman, shop the fabled and eclectic Silent Auction, and enter the dazzling Crazy Hat contest. The dress code is traditional white or creative vintage.

The proceeds of the Tea for Two Hundred will benefit two local nonprofit organizations; The Gunn Historical Museum of Washington, well known throughout the State of Connecticut for its excellent award winning exhibitions, and the Interfaith AIDS Ministry of Greater Danbury (IAM) a nonprofit agency offering unconditional critical support services to families facing the nutritional and physical challenges of living with HIV/AIDS.

Tickets to the Tea for Two Hundred are $75, and are available online at www.gunnhistoricalmuseum.org, or by calling the Museum at 860-868-7756. The address of the party is 63 River Road, Washington Depot. Parking, however, is encouraged at the Washington Primary School located at 11 School Street in Washington Depot. There will be shuttle buses available to bring guests the short distance to the party.

For more area information www.litchfieldhills.com

Flanders Offers Animal Painting Classes

Accomplished wildlife artist Melody Asbury is offering art classes at Flanders Nature Center & Land Trust with the focus on learning to paint the animal of a person’s choice including pets, wildlife or farm animals. Students will have the opportunity to try sketching live animals using Flanders own animals. There will be instruction and individual guidance on basic structure and gesture as well as how to keep an ongoing sketchbook.

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All levels of students are welcome and any medium can be used. Participants are asked to bring a sketchbook, pencils, a good reference photograph and their own art supplies.
A walk to Flanders’ barnyard and/or small live animals brought to the studio will serve as further inspiration.

The 4 class series will begin on Wednesday August 3 with classes also held on the following Wednesdays of August 10, 17, and 24. All classes will be held from 7 to 9 PM in the historic Van Vleck Studio on the corner of Flanders Road and Church Hill Road in Woodbury.

The cost for the series is $100 for members or $150 for non-members. Preregistration is required. Those interested may register online at www.flandersnaturecenter.org or call 203-263-3711, ext. 10, for more information. For more area information www.litchfieldhills.com