Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 31, 1980, edition 1 / Page 58
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lB The Tar Hefl Thursday. July 31, 1980 entertainment non, deparrrnenis plan enierrainmeni No one can say there's nothing to do at Carolina. From the Carolina Union to the music and dramatic art departments, entertainment opjxrtunities abound on campus. The Carolina Union is the heart of campus entertainment. Most Union-sponsored events are made available to students free of charge or at reduced rates. Additional programs will be announced throughout the year. Broadway on Tour Four Broadway shows aie coming to Memorial Hall during the academic year. Discount student tickets now are available for students at the Union information desk Individual tickets for the Friday and Saturday evening performances and the Saturday matinees will go on sale Sept. 15 at the Union desk. Da, showing Oct. 3-4, worJfour Totiy awards including Best Play in 1978. Da tells with great affection and humor the story of a middle-aged writer who comes to Dublin to bury his father and finds himself haunted by the charming, roguish spirit of the old man. The son relives memories of his bright and bittersweet childhood. A Ch orus Line runs Oct. 24-26 and is the story of young dancers auditioning for parts in the chorus line of a Broadway show. A Chorus Line won nine Tony awards, a Pulitzer Prize for drama and the N. Y. Drama Critics Award. The Elephant Man, Nov. 7-8, centers on a deformed man, John Merrick, who is rescued from the isolation and loneliness of the sideshows by a surgeon and placed in a hospital where the Elephant Man becomes the darling of Victorian society. '" I - 4 Dancin', a variety of dance-numbers staged by Bob Fosse, the director-choreographer of the films Cabaret and All That Jazz, will be in Chapel Hill Jan. 16-17. Dance The Triangle Dance Guild and the Carolina Union will present four major dance companies during the season. Season tickets are $15 for UNC students. All performances are at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Murray Louis Dance Comapny, Oct. 28. Phyllis Lamhut Dance Company, Feb. 21. Arthur Hall Afro-American Dance Ensemble, March 18. Ohio Ballet, March 28. Chapel Hill Concert Series Student tickets will be available at the Union desk for $2.50. All shows are at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Lennox Quartet, Oct. 5. Eastern Brass Quintet, Jan. 18. Ballet Folklorica of Mexico, March 1. Janacek Chamber Orchestra, March 29. N. C. Symphony Concert Series Tickets for the N. C. Symphony concerts in Chapel Hill will be available to students for $2.50 per performance, with the exception of a free pops pre-season concert to be held at 5:30 p.m. Sept. 28 in the Forest Amphitheatre. The following regular season performances will be at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall, and will feature the guest artists listed: , John Browning, pianist Sept. 24. Leo Driehuys, conductor. Dec. 5. Maureen Forrester, contralto. Jan. 30. The symphony also will perform March 20 The guest artist will be announced at a later date. Variety The Carolina Union forum committee will present author Rita Mae Brown. Oct 8. More forum speakers will be announced later. The Long Wharf Theatre will present Prhmte Lives and Lion in Winter Dec 2-5. The Carolina Union also sponsors series of films including Free Flicks. Super Fridays and Saturday matinees. A11 films are shown in the Carroll Hall auditorium unless otherwise noted. Films are open to UNC students with IDs and to persons with Union privilege cards; one guest will be admitted with each valid ID. Check the . Union desk for times. Super Fridays Admission $1 Animal House, Aug. 22 Breaking Away, Aug. 29. Get Out Your Handkerchiefs, Sept. 5. Monty Python's Life of Brian, Sept 12. The Seduction of Joe Tynan, Sept. 19. The Deer Hunter, Sept 26. Allegro Non Troppo, Oct 3. The Marriage of Maria Braun, Oct 10. Love on the Run, Oct 24. Night of the Living Dead, Oct. 31. Being There, Nov. 7. . .. - La Cage Aux Folles, Nov. 14. 10, Nov. 21. Richard Pryor Live in Concert, Dec. 5. Saturday Matiness Admission 50 cents The Wizard of Oz, Sept. 20. Sleeping Beauty, Oct. 11. The Jungle Book, Nov. 8. Sidney Poitier festival three Wednesdays Lillies of the Field, Sept. 10. In the Heat of The Night, Sept. 24. Let's Do It Again, Oct. 1. Brian De Palma festival four Sundays Sisters, Sept. 7. Phantom of the Paradise, Sept. 14. Carrie, Sept. 21. The Fury, Sept 28. Frederico Fellini festival La Strada, Sept. 16. La Dolce Vita, Sept. 17 Amarcord, Sept. 18. Shakespeare Festival three W ednesdays Hamlet, Oct. 29. Julius Caesar, Nov. 5. Macbeth', Nov 19. Free Flicks Notorious, Aug. 21. Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Aug. 23. Yojimbo, Aug 24. Which Way is Up? Aug. 27. The Wages of Fear, Aug 28. Shane, Aug. 30. Ziegfeld Follies, Aug. 31. The Passenger, Aug. 31, The Prisoner of Zenda, Sept. 3. Viva La Muerte, Sept. 4. Woman of the Year, Sept. 6. Persona, Sept. 8. Two Women, Sept. 11. Speedy, Sept. 13, in Great Hall with live piano accompaniment. Pygmalion, Sept 14. NosferatuThe Vampyre, Sept 20. Experimental classics, Sept 25. The Black Pirate, Sept. 27. White Heat, Sept. 26. The Overcoat, Oct 2. Wuthering Heights, Oct 4 The Last Command, Oct, 5. The Lavender Hill Mob, Oct 8. Union Maids and With Babies and Banners, Oct. 9, The Best Years of Our Lives, Oct 11. The Thief of Bagdad, Oct. 12. Experimental Sampler A recent sample of recent works of some of the newest independent film artists. Oct 12. Grey Gardens, Oct 15. Pierrot Le Fou, Oct 16. Attack, Oct 22. ... The Last Supper, Oct. 23. The Harder They Come, Oct 25 Stalag, Oct 26. La Guerre Est Finie, Oct. 26. Alice in the Cities, Oct. 30. Love and Death, Nov 1 . Exit Smiling and The Circus in Great Hall, Nov. 2. The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, Nov. 6. The iMst Wave, Nov. 8 Way Out West, Nov. 9. The Assassination, Nov. 9. The Magnificent Ambersons, Nov. 11. The Night of the Hunter, Nov. 12. Shock Corridor, Nov. 13. Hands Up and Sherlock Jr., in Great Hall with live piano accompaniment, Nov. 15. Strangers on a Train, Nov. 16. North Carolina Filmmakers Program, Nov. 20. Fiddler on the Roof, Nov. 22. Red River, Nov. 23. Soft Fiction, Cosas de mi vida and My Life in Art, Nov. 23. The Bride Wore Black, Dec. 3. The Lady With the Dog, Dec. 4. The Late Show, Dec. 6. From Here to Eternity, Dec. 7. The Bugs Bunny I Road Runner Movie, Dec. 11. Blazing Saddles, Dec. 13 The music department sponsors a Tuesday Evening Series beginning Sept. 9, Sunday Omcei t series and Thursday evening concerts. The evening concerts begin at 8:15, and the afternoon performances will begin at 4 p.m. All these concent are open to the public free of c harge. Tuesday Evening Series Recital: Edward Sandor, trumpet, and Margaret Strahl, piano. Sept 9. Recital: Edgar Alden, violin, and Francis Whang, piano. Sept. 16. Recital: Anna Briscoe and James Clyhurn, duo pianists, Sept. 23. Baroque cantatas: Marajean Marvin, soprano; James Ketch, trumpet; and Richard Luby, violin. Sept. 30. UNC Symphony Orchestra: David Serrins, conductor. Oct. 7. Recital:. Rita Noel, mezzo-soprano, and Michael Zenge, pbno. Oct. 14. University Chamber Singers: Elaine Scott Banks, conductor. Oct. 28. Recital: Brooks de Wetter-Smith, flute, and Barbara Rowan, piano. Nov. 4. UNC Jazz Band: James Ketch, conductor. Nov. 11. University Wind Ensemble: David Reed, conductor. Nov. 18. Men's and Women's Glee clubs: Carl Slam and Dean Johnson, conductors. Nov. 25. UNC Symphony Orchestra: David Serrins, conductor. Dec. 2. Sunday Concert Series Chamber music at the Paul Green Theatre. Sept. 7. Continuum and the Preformer's Committee (a 20th century chamber music group). Sept. 28. Chamber music at the Paul Green Theatre. Oct. 5. Recital: Elaine Scott Banks, cello, and Francis Whang, piano. Oct. 12. Faculty Brass Quintet: James Ketch, trumpet; David McChesney, trumpet; Edward Boxtlex, horn; Carl Stam, trombone; David Reed, tuba. Oc t. 26. Faculty Woodwind Quintet: Brooks de Wetter-Smith, flute; David Serrins, oboe; Donald Oehler, clarinet; Edward Bostley, hotn; Victor Benedict, bassoon. Nov. 2 UNC Brass Ensemble: Edward Bostley, conductor. Recital: Thomas Watburton and Michael Zenge, duo-pianists. Nov. 9. Carolina Choir: Carl Slam, conductor. Recital: Ann Woodard, viola, and Barbara Rowan, piano. Nov. 16 UNC Percussion Ensemble: Lynn Glassock, conductor. Nov. 23. Thursday Concerts New Music Ensemble: Roger Hannay. conductor. Oct. 16. New Music Ensemble: Student Composers' Concert Roger Hannay, conductor. Dec. 4. The UNC Opera Theatre The UNC Opera Theatrewill perform three times during the fall semester. Conceits are at 8:15 p.m. German Opera. Oktoberfest. Community Church. Admission charged. Oct. 11 Help, Help, the Globolinks! (Mcnotti). Marajean Marvin, dim lor. Phillips Junior High School auditorium. Admission charged. Nov. 7-8. Additional events The Univetsity Wind Ensemble: a Lawn Concert. David Reed, conductor. Sept. 27. Collegium Music um: Jon Finson, conductor. At 8:15 p.m. Nov. 11. The department of dramatic art will spontor laboratory Theatre productions throughout the year in 06 Graham Memorial Hall. AH pioduc lions are free. The department also will sponsor three main stage student prcxluctions during the year: Moliere's They Would Be Gentlemen, Sept. 24-27 in Paul Green Theatre. Auditionsare Aug. 28-29 and Sept. 2. For more information call Tom Riwuto, 933-1142. A Christmas Carol Dec. 4-7 in Paul Green Theatre. Hippolytus by Euripides Feb. 4-7 in Paul Green Theatre. Amy Sharp An outdoor family : camping contcr cprsirJizinn in equipment for .. i f oJ I ( - GcrolinaV I Cv Outdoor I I 1 Sport 'itnrt i t 4 ti V- - !-. S f XT"- w - f V " ' 1 1 1 CAMOUNA OUTDOOR NCW faAMKlW ST i C'0III I II.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 31, 1980, edition 1
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