Atlanta Jewish Film Festival returns to Merchants Walk Cinema

Israel Swings for Gold, Atlanta Jewish Film Festival Merchants Walk

The Atlanta Jewish Film Festival began Wednesday and continues through Feb. 21, and for the first time in several years the Merchants Walk Cinema in East Cobb is among the venues for screenings and other events.

Ten screenings will take place at Merchants Walk (1301 Johnson Ferry Road), including three on Thursday and another on Friday, as part of the 60-film AJFF, which began in 2000.

The others will take place on Saturday and Sunday, including “Israel Swings for Gold,” the story of the Israeli baseball team’s participation in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.

It will be the world premiere for the 75-minute film, which will be shown at 11 a.m. at Merchants Walk, and whose showing there and two other venues at the festival is being sponsored by the Atlanta Braves.

Since there was no media due to COVID-19 restrictions, the Israeli players shot their own videos that formed the core of the film, a sequel to a 2017 film chronicling Israel’s run in the World Baseball Classic.

Other films to be shown at Merchants Walk include “Hummus Full Trailer,” with a storyline described as a “zany gangster comedy caper” that features “a mix-up in Haifa links a cesspit of nutty Middle East sorts.”

In “Remember This,” actor David Straitharn plays a World War II hero Jan Karski, a Polish Catholic diplomat who warned about Nazi atrocities that fell on deaf ears.

The full schedule of screenings at Merchants Walk and other venues, as well as ticket purchases, can be found by clicking here.

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East Cobb resident hired to lead Georgia Symphony Orchestra

East Cobb resident Suzanne Tucker has been named the new executive director of the Georgia Symphony Orchestra. new GSO executive director, Suzanne Tucker

A former public school music teacher, Tucker also has 18 years of leadership experience in church music, including as director of music at Mt. Bethel UMC.

She will assume her new role on Jan. 9, 2023, according to a GSO release.

“I am thrilled to become a part of the Georgia Symphony Orchestra family,” she said in the release. “I strongly believe in the creative vision of this organization. I am convinced that music is a powerful tool for fostering connection, and this connection is sorely missing in our world today.”

The GSO, based in Marietta, is a 71-year-old community music organization that conducts year-round musical events, including educational opportunities for youths, and more than 500 professional musicians and students currently performing in its ranks.

GSO includes a full orchestra, as well as choral and jazz ensembles. Its young musician training program, founded in 2006, includes five orchestras, a jazz ensemble, a percussion ensemble, instrumental chamber ensembles, and a youth chorus for school-age children who are chosen through competitive auditions.

Tucker holds a bachelor’s degree in music education from Shorter College and master’s degree in music education from the University of Georgia. She and her husband Jeffrey have two sons, Jackson and Will.

Michael Knowles, a senior relationship manager with Fifth Third Bank, has been named the chairman of the GSO board.

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East Cobb author publishes book on Civil War-era newspaper

East Cobb author Bill Hendrick

(Editor’s Note: Bill Hendrick and I worked at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution but did not know each other during the years we were there together—Wendy Parker)

An idea that was more 25 years in the making came to fruition this fall for East Cobb resident Bill Hendrick when he became a first-time book author.

A longtime journalist for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Hendrick reported in 1994 about some artifacts that were discovered at a construction site in downtown Atlanta, including an unexploded shell fired by Union General William Sherman’s troops during the battle of Atlanta.

Hendrick’s curiosity also was piqued by something else: The discovery of Atlanta’s leading newspaper during the Civil War years.

A visit to that construction area with legendary Atlanta historian Franklin Garrett introduced Hendrick to the story of the Atlanta Daily Intelligencer.

The book he co-wrote with local historian Stephen Davis, “The Atlanta Daily Intelligencer Covers the Civil War” was published this fall by the University of Tennessee Press.

Hendrick and his wife Laura raised two sons in East Cobb, and they graduated from Walton High School and the University of Georgia. Jordan is an attorney in Decatur and Stuart is a writer and teacher in Atlanta.

While Hendrick researched the newspaper issues, Davis, a former East Cobb resident and author of other Civil War-related books, supplied the larger historical backdrop.

They began their collaboration in 2017, and met nearly daily to discuss their work, often at Goldbergs Bagel on Johnson Ferry Road (where this interview was conducted).

The result is nearly 500 pages of text with extensive footnotes and bibliographical information.

“I wasn’t thinking about making any money when we started,” said Hendrick, who left the AJC in 2008 and also was a reporter for the Associated Press in Atlanta.

“I just thought it would be interesting to see how a newspaper covered a war.”

What’s left of the Atlanta Daily Intelligencer offices after the Battle of Atlanta.

By contemporary standards, the look, feel and reportage of the paper is dramatically different. The Daily Intelligencer published four broadsheet pages each day of pure text. There were no photos but plenty of front page ads and obituaries, and many of the bylines were pseudonyms.

A typical front page during the war (see below) included battle reports, dispatches first published in other newspapers and ads for land, “desired goods” and slaves.

Atlanta’s population during the Civil War was around 10,000 (a fifth of them enslaved), and the newspaper’s circulation was around 3,000, Hendrick said.

The publisher of the paper, Jared Whitaker, was prominent citizen and city council member when the war broke out, and a devout supporter of the Confederate cause.

Those views were frequently reflected in the newspages, which Hendrick said bluntly was a pro-Confederacy, anti-Lincoln propaganda organ (here’s an excerpt).

The Daily Intelligencer struggled to purchase newsprint after its supplier, the Marietta Paper Mill, was burned by Union troops as they approached Sope Creek in July 1864. The mill was targeted because it also printed Confederate currency.

Much of the war-related content in the Daily Intelligencer came from other newspapers that received battlefield reports from correspondents.

The newspaper exchange program that was a forerunner of the modern newspaper content syndicates included the Atlanta paper sending copies even to their Northern counterparts for a time.

But in the Daily Intelligencer, Hendrick noted, “there was hardly any coverage of the the Battle of Atlanta.”

That was due in part to the newspaper evacuating its operations to Macon as Sherman’s troops laid siege to Atlanta.

After the Daily Intelligencer staff returned to town, the building where its office was located—above a liquor wholesaler on Whitehall Street in what’s now Underground Atlanta—had been destroyed by the Union bombardments.

A correspondent filed a dispatch of that incident, writing of a shell fragment that “should I go to Macon soon, I will have it with me, as a moment of the love that is borne for us by our Northern brethren.”

John Steele, the newspaper’s editor, thundered from Macon about Sherman and his troops that “their success in battering to pieces the impenetrable fortress Atlanta, must have given them great satisfaction. The murder of women and children, by fragments of their barbarous shells, will be a gory blot on the savage and unsoldierlike campaign of Sherman the flanker.”

The front page of an 1863 edition of the Atlanta Daily Intelligencer. For a larger version click here. Digital Library of Georgia

“The news was always late,” Hendrick said of the Daily Intelligencer, including news of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln shortly after the war ended.

During the Battle of Gettysburg, he said, the paper “didn’t admit for days that the South had lost. Initially, they said it was a great victory. But you can only deny it for so long.”

What also foiled the Daily Intelligencer’s narrative were the letters written home by soldiers, as well as messages sent via telegram, from troops and others who witnessed the combat first-hand.

The book includes a telegram the newspaper printed from a Southern soldier writing home to his father that he lost an arm in Gettysburg. That soldier, Lt. William Nesbit, recovered from his wounds and lived to be an old man in Alpharetta and Cherokee County.

When civilians on the home front started getting a different story from what was in the press, Hendrick said, “they started asking questions.”

As to why correspondents didn’t want to use their own names, Hendrick said “I think they didn’t want to take crap from the people they interviewed.

“I’m sure the generals knew who they were talking to but they never saw their names in the paper.”

Hendrick maintains ownership rights to the trade name Atlanta Daily Intelligencer, which was the only newspaper in Atlanta to survive the war.

But it didn’t last long, ceasing publication in 1871, as Reconstruction continued and as Atlanta was becoming, in the words a decade later of Henry Grady, the publisher of The Atlanta Constitution, “the capital of The New South.”

Hendrick updates his registration for the Daily Intelligencer every year with the Georgia Secretary of State’s office.

“I own a newspaper that doesn’t exist,” Hendrick cracked.

The research for the book was grueling—he spent nearly six months combing through the microfilm copies of the Daily Intelligencer at the Atlanta History Center.

“I almost went blind,” he said with deadpan humor. “But it was fun. I was fascinated with how newspapers operated.”

At the age of 75, Hendrick is taking on a new book subject that he’s doing by himself, a history of American newspapers in the 19th century.

“If I live to finish it,” he joked.

Hendrick says the research is a lot easier due to the wealth of information available online. He said he was ecstatic, for example, to find a story about the Alamo on newspapers.com.

“If it takes another four years,” Hendrick said of his current project, “I may be dead.”

 

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East Cobb author discusses novel at Jewish book festival

East Cobb resident Roni Robbins will be interviewed Thursday at the Book Festival of the Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta about her historical novel.Roni Robbins, East Cobb author

Published buy Amsterdam Publishers, “Hands of Gold” is based on the true-life experiences of her late grandfather, who fled anti-Semitism in pre-Nazi Europe. The novel tells the story of an elderly man, Sam Fox, who has survived many ordeals but who is coming to grips with his past.

As this is happening, “a gold watch from his grandmother, lost and buried during the Holocaust, will find its way back to him. Through this and other blessings, Sam learns to find the silver lining in his everyday struggles by holding onto his loved ones, along with a little self-reliance and even a few miracles.”

Robbins will be in conversation with author and media personality Robyn Spizman at 11 a.m. Thursday at the Marcus Center (5342 Tilly Mill Road Atlanta) in an event that will include an audience Q and A and a book signing. Copies of her book also will be on sale.

To reserve a free ticket for the event, click here.

Robbins developed the novel idea after listening to cassette tapes of her grandfather, who died in 1995, speaking about his life experiences.

The former associate editor of the Atlanta Jewish Times, Robbins turned that into a column for the newspaper, “Giving Memories a Voice: My Grandfather Left a Piece of Himself Behind as a Legacy to his Progeny.”

She has been a published writer for 35 years, with bylines at Medscape/WebMD, daily and weekly newspapers and as a freelancer for national, regional and online publications.

“Hands of Gold” was a quarterfinalist for historical fiction in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award contest.

 

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Ford Smith opens pop-up art gallery at The Avenue East Cobb

Ford Smith opens The Avenue East Cobb

Ford Smith Fine Art, a fine art studio and gallery started by the Roswell-based husband-wife artist duo of Ford and Christi Smith, will operate a pop-up gallery at The Avenue East Cobb through the end of 2022.

North American Properties, the retail center’s management company, announced that a grand opening will take  place Friday from 6-9 p.m. at the Ford Smith pop-up space located between the Sephora and Xfinity stores in the former Simply Mac space.

The event is free and open to the public.

Ford Smith will operate the 3,000-square-foot gallery at The Avenue through the end of December, selling original paintings and fine art limited editions. The hours are Wednesday-Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

NAP said the grand opening will feature the following:

  • A meet-and-greet with Ford Smith and artist/glass sculptor Eddie Freeland
  • The unveiling of new and limited-edition works, including a brand-new collection of Small Wonders originals, and smaller-size, collaborative “In Concert” mixed media paintings created from an archival giclée of a Ford Smith painting sculpted in glass, dipped in resin, and embellished by Eddie Freeland
  • Complimentary wine/champagne and bites from local restaurants
  • Fine art prizes such as a Ford Smith limited-edition, full-size/hand-embellished canvas painting
  • Special pricing on select artwork (offer only valid during GO)

More about Ford Smith Fine Art can be found by clicking here.

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Cobb Public Library fall book sale returns to Cobb Civic Center

Weekend events, Cobb Library Book Sale

Submitted information:

The Fall Book Sale will be held at Cobb Civic Center October 14-16, 2022.

Materials for sale include books for all ages in both hardcover and paperback, DVDs, Books on CD and audiocassette, and magazines. Prices range from 10 cents to $4.00. Find a price list here.

Cobb Civic Center is at 548 South Marietta Pkwy SE, Marietta, GA 30060. Hours for the sale are Friday and Saturday from 9 am to 5 pm, and Sunday from 1 pm to 5 pm. There is plenty of free parking.

Acceptable forms of payment are debit, credit, cash, and checks. On Friday until 1 pm electronic devices are not permitted. While we hope you will buy lots of materials, we are only able to sell up to 2 boxes of items at a time on Friday until 1 pm. Please plan to pay and take items to your vehicle before coming in to shop some more. On Sunday we will be working to sell out the Civic Center so please come to buy, buy, buy!

All profits from this book sale go directly to buying more items for Cobb County Public Library’s 15 branches and bookmobile. For more information, please visit cobbcounty.org/library.

 

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Cobb County marching band exhibition returns in October

Lassiter Band, Cobb County Marching Band Exhibition 2022

All six high schools in East Cobb will be represented at the 2022 Cobb County Marching Band Exhibition this month.

The 49th annual extravaganza will play out over the next two Mondays, Oct. 10 and Oct. 17.

It’s presented by the Cobb County School District and Marietta City Schools, and features the marching bands of 17 high schools.

Kell and Walton will be performing on Oct. 10 and the bands from Sprayberry, Wheeler, Lassiter and Pope are in action on Oct. 17.

Bands from the University of South Carolina and the University of Georgia also will be performing.

Each session begins at 7 p.m. at Cantrell Stadium at McEachern High School (2400 New Macland Road, Powder Springs).

Tickets are $7 for adults, $5 for ages 5-18 and free for children under 5 per session.

You can purchase tickets online by clicking here.

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Georgia Symphony launches ‘Give Back’ community initiative

GSO Give Back Program
Photo Credit: Chris Savas for Georgia Symphony Orchestra

The Marietta-based Georgia Symphony Orchestra has announced what it’s calling a “Give Back” initiative to award funding to music programs in metro Atlanta, specifically in local schools.

According to a GSO release, participating programs will receive 15 percent of all ticket sales associated with their organization through the 2022-23 season.

That season begins Saturday with a “Brass Splash” event. “Give Back” participants will receive their donations at the end of the season, when ticket sales are finalized. 

“We want to partner with the community to invest in local schools,” Susan Stensland, the GSO’s interim co-executive director, said in the release. “This initiative perfectly aligns with our mission to enrich our community and to instill and fulfill a lifelong appreciation for the arts.”

The GSO’s 72nd season includes nine concerts and 14 performances, including matinees, and concerts also will include the GSO Chorus and the GSO Jazz ensembles. 

For more information and for music program partnership eligibility details, e-mail info@georgiasymphony.org or call 770-615-2908.

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Cobb ‘Booked for Lunch’ features football murder mystery author

Carolyn Curry, the wife of former college and professional football star and coach Bill Curry, will be the featured speaker at the Cobb Library Foundation’s Sept. 20 “Booked for Lunch” fundraiser at the Atlanta Country Club in East Cobb.Carolyn Curry, Cobb Booked for Lunch author

The event takes place from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. at the ACC (500 Atlanta Country Club Drive) and tickets cost $40 (you can book your spot here).

Curry will discuss her latest book, “Sudden Death,” published on Aug. 2 by Mercer University Press. It’s set between 1966 and 1997 and features a woman lawyer who marries a college football coach, and how the couple handles the challenges of balancing their marriage and dealing with death threats that turn out to be realized.

The book is her debut novel. Curry is the author of a biography of Ella Clanton Thomas, the daughter and wife of Georgia planters who kept a diary during the Civil War years.

Curry received the Georgia Author of the Year Award from the Georgia Writers Association and that book was named as “One of the Books all Georgians” should read by the Georgia Center for the Book.

She also is the founder of a non-profit, Women Alone Together, that provides support, education and friendship to women who are single by death, divorce or choice.

Bill Curry starred at Georgia Tech and the for the Green Bay Packers and coached at Tech, Alabama, Kentucky and Georgia State.

The Cobb Library Foundation is an all-volunteer organization that raises money to assist activities and programs of the Cobb County Public Library System.

They include the system’s summer reading program, Girls Who Code, the podcast studio at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center and the Bookmobile.

 

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Kell HS students create art for Atlanta Sports Hall of Fame inductees

Kell art students Atlanta Sports Hall of Fame
Retired Atlanta Falcons kicker Morten Andersen with Laura LaQuaglia, the former art director at Kell High School, and artwork created by former Kell student Kennedy Leggett. Photo: CCSD

It’s taken a couple of years, but some artwork created by former Kell High School students in conjunction with the Atlanta Sports Hall of Fame finally got a public viewing this week.

A belated 2020 induction ceremony took place on Monday, Aug. 1, the first day of the new school year in the Cobb County School District, and artwork prepared for each inductee was presented in person.

The Kell art department began a partnership with the Hall of Fame in 2014 when Corky Kell, the late Wheeler High School football coach and Kell school namesake, was inducted posthumously.

Laura LaQuaglia, the former Kell art director who’s now the Supervisor of Learning Design and Visual Arts for the Cobb school district, was on hand for the presentations.

The inductees included former Atlanta Falcons placekicker Morten Andersen, former Atlanta Hawks center Dikembe Mutombo, and ex-Georgia Tech football All-American Calvin Johnson.

Mutombo’s artwork was created by a basketball player—Kya Williams, a star point guard on Kell’s 2020 Georgia High School Association Class 5A state runner-up team.

“The induction ceremony events are always an exciting time where student artwork is celebrated,” LaQuaglia said in a release issued by the Cobb school district.

“Normally, the students would get to meet the esteemed athletes they have researched, but because of the quick notice of the rescheduled event, we were not able to have the former students present at the event.”

Since 2017, the partnership has continued under her successor, Julie Denison.

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Georgia Symphony Orchestra Chorus holding open rehearsals

GSO Chorus open rehearsals

Submitted information and photo:

The Georgia Symphony Orchestra Chorus enthusiastically invites singers to participate in two open rehearsals and to preview the coming season.

Musical highlights for 2022-2023 include selections by Hogan, Whitacre and Coleridge-Taylor. Carl Orff’s masterpiece Carmina Burana will conclude the season. The GSO Chorus is under the direction of Bryan Black, and rehearses on Tuesday evenings beginning August 16.

All voice parts are welcome; no registration required, visit gsochorus.org or contact info@georgiasymphony.org for more information.

Open rehearsals will be held on  Aug. 16 and 23 at 7: 30 p.m. at the Marietta Performing Arts Center, 1171 Whitlock Ave., Marietta. 

The Georgia Symphony Orchestra also announced this week that it has been approved for a $10,000 Grants for Arts Projects award from the National Endowment for the Arts to support its annual Sensory Friendly concerts.

Those will take place on April 15, 2023 and will feature these 50-minute programs, as the orchestra relaxes house rules and encourages the audience to respond to the music however they choose; such as around the concert hall, dancing, or vocalizing along with the music.

A pre-program instrument “Petting Zoo”and a Quiet Zone also are provided.

“It is a tribute to the GSO’s board, staff and musicians to have received this grant from the NEA,” GSO Executive Director Susan Stensland said. “We are excited to contribute to the arts and culture of our region in such a unique and positive way for members of an often-underserved community.”

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2nd Annual Harmonies for Homes concert to benefit Habitat

Harmonies for Homes concert

Live music, food and drinks will be served up at Atlanta Country Club Monday at the 2nd Annual Harmonies for Homes concert.

The proceeds benefit the Habitat for Humanity of NW Metro Atlanta. Tickets start at $200 a person (food and drinks are sold separately).

The event takes place starting at 7:30 p.m. on the 18th hole of the golf course. Featured artists are Edwin McCain, Marc Broussard and Emerson Hart, and accompaniment by Faye Petree on fiddle.

For more information and to purchase tickets, click here.

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East Cobb Quilters’ Guild marks 40th year with special tour

East Cobb Quilters' Guild, Georgia Celebrates Quilts Show
A quilt on display at the Sewell Mill Library gallery in 2019.

The East Cobb Quilters’ Guild is partnering with the Cobb County Public Library System and the Arts Division of Cobb PARKS for a quilt tour that continues through early June.

The tour began April 14 at the Mable House Arts Center, and expands starting Thursday through May 28 at the gallery of the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center (2051 Lower Roswell Road).

The exhibit is called “Cabin Fever” and includes 25 challenge quilts from a competition among guild members.

The tour also will be at The Art Place (3332 Sandy Plains Road) from Friday through May 28. “Quilted Jewels,” a series of jewel-toned quilts made by members, will be featured.

An opening reception will take place Friday from 10 a.m. to 12 noon, and tickets will be available to win a “Rhapsody” raffle quilt.

There will be 15 jewel tone quilts to celebrate the 30th anniversary of The Art Place and the 40th (ruby) anniversary of the East Cobb Quilters’ Guild.

Several Cobb library branches will be displaying quilts starting Saturday through June 12, including East Cobb (4480 Lower Roswell Road) and Mountain View (3320 Sandy Plains Road).

Finally, a quilting extravaganza will take place June 9-11 at the Cobb Civic Center (548 S. Marietta Parkway) from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. While the other showings are free to the public, this one includes a $10 admission charge per person.

It’s part of the culminating Georgia Celebrates Quilts event, which is in its 18th year, and will feature more than 300 quilts.

Tickets to Georgia Celebrates Quilts be purchased at the door or online at www.georgiacelebratesquilts.com/tickets.

Raffle tickets for the quilt can be purchased at the show and online at https://georgiacelebratesquilts.ecqg.com/raffle-quilt-tickets/.

For more information about the East Cobb Quilters’ Guild tour, click here.

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‘Music in the Park’ concert series begins at East Cobb Park

Sunday Funday East Cobb Park

What has been dubbed “Sunday Funday” at East Cobb Park for several years—a series of spring free concerts—has a new name.

“Music in the Park” debuts Sunday, but otherwise the event will feel similar to concert-goers.

The Friends for the East Cobb Park volunteer organization has scheduled four concerts through the middle of June at the concert shell in the back of the park.

And Wellstar remains as the presenting sponsor.

Sunday’s concert lasts from 4-6 p.m. and features the indie folk duo of Rusted Melody.

Other concerts are slated for May 8 (LooSe ShoEs band); May 29 (Bach to Rock—performed by and for kids) and June 12 (The Woodys—a Fleetwood Mac and 70s rock cover band).

You’re welcome to bring your own food and drink, chairs and blankets to enjoy the music on the back quad.

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The Art Place to hold 30th anniversary celebration event

The Art Place

Next Sunday, The Art-Place Mountain View (3330 Sandy Plains Road) will mark its 30th anniversary with a free celebration for the community.

The event takes place from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. and will include a gallery exhibition, music, a pottery demonstration, food and a theatre performance.

No reservations are required and all members of the public are invited.

The Art Place is a service of the Cobb Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs that offers a wide variety of arts classes and leases art and theatre space for community organizations.

Activities include summer camps for children and performances of the Center Stage North Theatre, a community theater group.

Cobb County converted restaurant space in East Cobb into an arts center in 1986, opening the Steeple House Arts Center the following year at Johnson Ferry Road and Paper Mill Road.

But demand for arts programming grew quickly, and the county embarked on building a larger facility that became The Art Place.

The volunteer support group Mountain View Arts Alliance was formed in 1993 to partner with The Art Place for programming, events and outreach.

The facility currently serves 20,000 members of the public on an annual basis, and holds a number of other community events.

 

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Georgia Symphony Orchestra to hold sensory-friendly concert

GSO sensory-friendly concert

The Marietta-based Georgia Symphony Orchestra will have a sensory-friendly concert on Saturday with soft lighting and moderated volumes.

The concert takes place at 2 p.m. at the Performing Arts Center at Marietta High School (1171 Whitlock Ave.), with an instrument petting zoo preceding that at 1 p.m.

The works to be played include the “Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G Major” by Johann Sebastian Bach; “Capriol Suite” by Peter Warlock; “Gabriel’s Oboe” by Ennio Morricone and selections by Frederick Delius, Karl Jenkins and John-Baptiste Lully.

The GSO Chorus also will perform Johannes Brahms’ “How Lovely is My Dwelling Place” and Eric Whitacre’s “Sing Gently.”

The event also features a quiet zone, and the selections will be explained by GSO Music Director and Conductor Timothy Verville.

Masks are required (except for for sensory-sensitive patrons) and attendees 18 and over must show proof of full vaccination for COVID-19.

Tickets are $10 per person and can be purchased by clicking here.

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Rep. McBath announces 2022 Congressional Art Competition

East Cobb students Congressional art contest
A photograph submitted by a Pope High School student in the 2020 Congressional Art Competition.

Submitted information:

Congresswoman Lucy McBath announced the start of the 2022 Congressional Art Competition, her fourth art competition since taking office in 2019. The competition is open to high school students in Georgia’s Sixth Congressional District and the deadline for submissions will be Friday, April 22, 2022. 

“Supporting and encouraging participation in the arts is so vital for our young people, which is why I am thrilled to launch this year’s Congressional Art Competition,” McBath said. “Each year, I am blown away by the talent and creativity of students from right here in our community. I look forward to seeing the incredible artwork from our local high schoolers, and I encourage all who may be interested to submit and be a part of this exciting competition.”   

Each spring, a nationwide high school arts competition is hosted by the U.S. House of Representatives. The Congressional Art Competition is an opportunity to recognize and encourage the artistic talent of students in the Sixth Congressional District and across the nation. Winning artwork from the Sixth District Congressional Art Competition (1st, 2nd, and 3rd place) will be eligible for display in the U.S. Capitol or in one of Rep. McBath’s offices.

Submissions will be accepted by McBath’s office over the next two months and will only be accepted digitally at arts.mcbath@mail.house.gov. More information and the required release form for the competition can be accessed at https://mcbath.house.gov/art-competition. For any additional questions, please contact McBath’s Sandy Springs District Office by calling (470) 773-6330.

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Cobb Library Foundation gala slated for Atlanta Country Club

Submitted by the Cobb County Public Library System:Cobb Library Foundation gala

Cobb Library Foundation presents its 11th Annual Booked for the Evening Gala featuring acclaimed children’s book author/illustrator Brian Lies and honorary chair Cynthia Rozzo, founder/publisher of East Cobber, on Thursday, March 17, 6:30 pm to 9:30 p.m., at Atlanta Country Club, Marietta.

Brian Lies has illustrated several bestselling children’s books. His books include Caldecott Honor-winning The Rough Patch, Got to Get to Bear’s! and his New York Times bestselling bat series (Bats at the Beach, Bats at the Library, Bats at the Ballgame and Bats in the Band). Lies was born in Princeton, NJ, and graduated from Brown University with a degree in British and American Literature. He attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

Lies is an advocate for early literacy, and lifelong reading and learning. The Massachusetts resident has traveled across the United States to work with students and encourage them in their goals as he talks about writing and illustration – including his engaging presentations at schools and libraries in Cobb County.

For information on Booked for the Evening Gala tickets and sponsorship opportunities, contact Sandra Morris at 770-528-2196 or cobblibraryfoundation@cobbcat.org, and visit cobblibraryfoundation.org.

 

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Marietta History Museum to hold free MLK Jr. holiday events

The Marietta History Center is offering free admission Saturday, Jan. 15, in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.Marietta History Museum MLK Jr. holiday events

The center is conducting Diverse Cobb programming that includes the “Lemon Street Chroncles,” a new oral history DVD about the Lemon Street High School.

It was Cobb County’s only all-black high school until 1967, when segregation in public schools in Cobb and Marietta ended.

The DVD, created by alumnus Tim Penn, includes interviews with other graduates and will be screened several times on Saturday.

Also featured at the museum is “Marietta 1899: Color Captured in Black & White.” It’s a special exhibit of the work of New York photographer James Shaw, who visited Marietta in 1899. The exhibit includes images of the Marietta Square, the Marietta National Cemetery, Kennesaw Avenue, Kennesaw Mountain and rural Cobb County. 

Shaw’s visit included the Federal Memorial Day celebration, with many of those in attendance being African-American.

“A truer version of life as it was, undiluted by the whitewashing of history,” the exhibit states. “While bias of a white perspective remains, Shaw chose to include the activities of both races, thus presenting multiple shades of color in black and white photography.”

That exhibit also will be featured at the museum. from May 19-28.

The Marietta Museum of History will have free admission from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. next Saturday. Screenings of the “Lemon Street Chronicles,” which lasts an hour and a half, are at 10 a.m., 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. 

The museum is located at 1 Depot Street, Marietta. For more information click here.

 

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Atlanta Jewish Film Festival returns in hybrid form for 2022

Atlanta Jewish Film Festival 2022
The 2022 Atlanta Jewish Film Festival will feature in-person and virtual screenings and events.

Formal screenings of the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival start in February, and will include in-person and virtual events.

But the festival is getting an early start by showing a series of free short films each Wednesday.

The Shorts Program began on Wednesday, Jan. 5, and a new short will be available for streaming every Wednesday through Jan. 26. More information can be found by clicking here.

Tickets go on sale for the festival on Feb. 9, and the screenings will take place Feb. 16-27 at select theaters in metro Atlanta. Georgia residents also will be able to watch via remote streaming during the festival dates.

This year’s festival includes 40 feature films and 15 shorts in narrative, documentary, human rights and other categories.

The venues include the Sandy Springs Performing Arts Center, the Midtown Art Cinema and the Plaza Theater in Atlanta. A preview show takes place on Feb. 2.

For more information visit the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival website.

 

 

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