Wednesday, December 31, 2003 |
Looking back much to do and see in 2003 By MICHAEL BOYLAN The Southern Crescent was a very busy place in 2003, offering up thousands of hours of entertainment. Whether you enjoy music, theater, art, dance, movies or just spending time outside, there was something for you to do almost every weekend. It would be impossible to list every event that was covered in the Weekend section in 2003, but heres the old college try. Theater lovers got to see a wide variety of plays presented by local high schools, community theater groups and national touring companies that came to the Fox. Thornton Wilders Our Town was done by Newnan Community Theatre and Fayette Christian, while McIntosh High and Newnan Community Theater each staged a production of To Kill a Mockingbird. Starrs Mill staged Little Shop of Horrors last spring, while Sandy Creek staged The Wiz. Sandy Creek kicked off the 2003-2004 school year with a madrigal dinner, as did Landmark Christian and Our Lady of Mercy High. Fayette County High performed Cotton Patch Gospel, Starrs Mill did All in the Timing, and McIntosh won the region competition with its production of Spaz. Whitewater High staged The Butler Did It, as its first production in school history. Fayette Players presented The Music Man, as did Landmark Christian, while Southside Theater Guild presented Piece of My Heart, The Foreigner, Heaven Can Wait, and Its a Wonderful Life. Newnan Community Theatre had a busy year, too, with productions of Harvey, The Lion in Winter, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and Arsenic and Old Lace, among others. Offshoot Productions presented a number of Stars on the Southern Crescent Coffeehouses, a St. Patricks Day festival and a production of Stuart Little, while Fayette Coweta Family Theatre presented plays like Pocahantas, Pinnochio, and The Secret Garden. A new group, Sharpsburg On Stage, also came on the scene and presented some one-act comedies. There were also a number of dance productions throughout the year. Fayette Ballet presented Celebration of Spring, Dance Contempra brought Evolution to audiences, and Georgia Academy of Dance presented The Big Top Circus, Georgia on my Mind, and La Fille Mal Gardee. Not to mention all of The Nutcrackers, that were recently performed and From Broadway to Fayette Square, which Carlas Dance Factory presented recently at Sams Auditorium. On the music front, the Villages Amphitheater in Fayettevile opened in 2003 and its inaugural season featured acts like The Charlie Daniels Band, Air Supply and Glen Campbell. The Frederick Brown Jr. Amphitheater had a great season as well with artists like Eddie Money, Wayne Newton, Peter Frampton and Hall and Oates among the artists that took the stage. The venue also offered a jazz series that welcomed Lou Rawls, Carol Welsman and Spyro Gyra to Peachtree City and hosted four nights of Christian concerts for U-Night 17. Local bands got a chance to perform at McIntosh Highs Rock for a Cure and top country artists John Berry, David Lee Murphy and Lee Roy Parnell played the Kiwanis Fairgrounds in Fayetteville for the Paint the Town tour. There were also dozens of high school choral and band concerts, Music with Friends at City Cafe, the annual country and bluegrass show at Sams Auditorium, the Lafayette Jazz Festival and performances at the Stars on the Southern Crescent coffee houses. In addition to all of these attractions were special festivals and events. Among these were the annual Miss Pride pageant, the Blended Heritage Celebration at the Fayette County Public Library, Fiesta on the Plaza during Hispanic Heritage Month at the Peachtree City Library, the Georgia Renaissance Festival, the Women of Substance art exhibit from the Southern Crescent Alliance of Visual Artists, the annual Kiwanis Pancake Breakfast in Peachtree City, Tyrone Founders Day, Old Town Sharpsburg Festival, Powers Crossroads, the annual Shakerag Festival, the Great Georgia Air Show, Tatse of Fayette, July Jam, the Last Fling, the Pumpkin Walk and the Old Courthouse Art Show among others. There will be an equally full lineup in 2004, with possibly even more on tap. Keep reading this section of The Citizen to keep your finger on the pulse.
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