Get ready to join the fun at the many festivals taking place in the Oklahoma City and Tulsa metro areas. The Bixby BBQ ‘n Blues Festival gets underway Friday, May 2, and Saturday, May 3, at Washington Irving Memorial Park in Bixby with plenty of room for camping out, live entertainment and competing grill masters (www.bixbyrotarybbq.com). Looking for a good schnitzel sandwich? Germanfest runs from Friday, May 2, to Sunday, May 4, at the German American Society Building in Tulsa with great food, German dance, polka music and activities (www.gastulsa.org). El Reno Fried Onion Burger Day Festival celebrates the best of fry-cook culture and a local specialty in downtown El Reno on Saturday, May 3 (www.elrenoburgerday.wordpress.com). Get a look at Turkish culture in Green Country at the Raindrop Turkish House in Broken Arrow on Saturday, May 3 (www.raindropturkishhouse.org/oklahoma/tulsa). Learn more about the town of Prague’s Czech traditions and history during the Kolache Festival, Saturday, May 3, filled with a parade, carnival, Czech foods, crafts and more (www.praguekolachefestival.com). You’ll find more culture at the Cinco de Mayo Festival, Saturday, May 3-Sunday, May 4, near Tulsa’s Eastland Plaza with Ballet Folklorico Sol Azteka, singing, traditional dance groups, authentic Mexican foods and more (www.tulsahispanicchamber.com).
Photo by Rodolfo Sosa Cordero Camacho. Image courtesy Living Arts of Tulsa.
Opening Friday, May 2
Explore Tulsa’s diversity at Living Arts of Tulsa Friday, May 2, when it opens two shows featuring works by Latino artists. Occupied: Narciso Argüelles brings Oklahoma City artist Arguelles to Tulsa. His mixed media work (which has been shown in New York City, Australia and South Africa) examines “the American Dream” and issues of identity and access past and present. Latino in Tulsa: A Bi-cultural Experience is a curated show presenting the diversity of perspective and artistic voices in the city’s Latino community. Look for work by M. Teresa Valero, Winston Peraza, Christina Prado, José Antonio Pantoja Hernández and others during this opening event that includes poetry, artist discussions, theatrical presentations, dance and more beginning at 5:45 p.m. For more, visit www.livingarts.org.
The Philbrook Wine Experience brings some of the world’s finest wines to Tulsa in a special two-day event. The Philbrook Museum of Art, 2727 S. Rockford Road, welcomes all for the Grand Wine Tasting, 6-9 p.m. Friday, May 2. The tasting features a variety of wines produced by acclaimed vintners along with culinary masterpieces from some of the region’s best restaurants – such as the Alley Gastro Pub, Tavolo, Bodean Seafood Restaurant, The Canebrake, Juniper Restaurant & Martini Bar and many more. The next evening sets the table for the Philbrook Vintner Dinner & Auction, 5-10 p.m. Saturday, May 3. Considered the centerpiece event of the Philbrook Wine Experience, the dinner and auction event begins with a cocktail hour and silent auction followed by dinner with 40 top winemakers sharing their process as well as knowledge of wine and dinner pairings. The energetic live auction follows. Tickets and sponsorships are available. Proceeds from the Philbrook Wine Experience benefit the museum’s education programming and operations. For a full schedule of the weekend’s events – including trade events – visit the “support” link at www.philbrook.org.
You can run, as they say, but you can’t hide from the walking (and darting) dead at the Zombie Bolt Mud Run, beginning at 2 p.m. Saturday, May 3. The annual run introduces mud obstacles this year – as if dodging staggering zombies wasn’t enough – in the appropriately named Deadwoods forest near Luther, in the extreme northeast corner of the Oklahoma City metro area. Winners are those runners who avoid flag-snatching zombies and make it to the finish line with all or most of their flags, but when you’re having this much fun, are there any losers, really? To be a runner or a zombie, visit www.zombiebolt.com, where you’ll find more information and links to registration.
Photo courtesy Indian Health Care Resource Center.
Photo courtesy Indian Health Care Resource Center.
Saturday, May 3, 10 a.m.-11 p.m.
Powwow season doesn’t really get underway until summer, but that isn’t stopping the dancers signed up for the Restoring Harmony Powwow, an event supporting Indian Health Care Resource Center of Tulsa and focused on wellness. Set for Saturday, May 3, the day begins at the Westside YMCA, 5400 S. Olympia Ave., Tulsa, with stickball games at 10 a.m. followed by hiking and late afternoon gourd dancing. Grand entry for the outdoor powwow will start at 7 p.m. led by head dancers and drum groups. Competitions in a variety of men’s and women’s dance styles as well as all age brackets will follow. There will also be a host of arts, crafts and food vendors. Admission is free. For more, visit www.ihcrc.org.
Opera’s original bad girl is back at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center, 101 E. Third St. Tulsa Opera presents Carmen at 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 2, and 2:30 p.m. Sunday, May 4. Mezzo-soprano Leann Sandel-Pantaleo this time takes the lead in Bizet’s four-act classic about the lusty factory girl, Carmen, and the man she seduces to his ruin. Jonathan Burton performs the role of Don Jose. Carmen features such famous musical pieces as the Toreador Song and boasts lavish sets and costumes; and it concludes Tulsa Opera’s 66th season. Tickets are $25-$98 at www.tulsaopera.com.
Arrive early at the TAC Gallery and the Tulsa Artists’ Coalition’s annual 5×5 Show and Sale, opening with a reception at 5:55 p.m. Friday, May 2. The show begins ahead of its traditional May 5 opening to catch the First Friday Brady Arts District Art Crawl weekend, and this year’s show looks to be as popular as ever. Look for a few hundred works by artists from the region on display and for sale for $55 each. Works measure 5-inches-by-5-inches, but the similarities end there as artists bring their unique expressions in a variety methods and styles to each canvas. The show continues through most of May, but don’t be surprised if most works are snapped up after the opening. For more, visit www.tacgallery.org.
Six gloriously abstract bronze sculptures by the late artist Allan Houser go on exhibit at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art in an unexpected place. If you want to view them, you’ll have to go up. Allan Houser: On the Roof opens Thursday, May 1, at the museum, 415 Couch Drive, Oklahoma City. The bronze pieces, created between 1980 and 1993, show an artist exploring line and design as he created pieces inspired by not only by his Apache ancestry but the lives of people from other Native American tribes. The works go on exhibit on the OKCMOA Roof Terrace through July 27. For admission, museum hours and a schedule of related events, visit www.okcmoa.com.
Shawnee native Krista Tippett is the host of “On Being,” a weekly radio show that airs across the nation on National Public Radio stations. Photo by Peter Beck.
Her radio show On Being commands an international audience, yet Krista Tippett, who grew up in Shawnee, left Oklahoma with no such ambitions. The popular weekly NPR show is unique for its discussions about science, religion, spirituality and ideology, bringing listeners of all beliefs together.
Although she didn’t plan on a career emphasizing issues of faith, “so much goes all the way back to the First Baptist Church in Shawnee,” she says. “Church wasn’t a place you went to each week – it was in the air you breathed.”
From Shawnee she went to Brown University in Providence, R.I., before heading to Bonn, Germany, to study on a Fulbright Scholarship. Eventually, she returned to the U.S., and by then, Tippett became increasingly interested in the role of religion in individual and public life.
“In this culture, we get raised to be advocates for our religion or politics or for any idea of what we presumably know,” she says. “We don’t get so skilled in the delightful experience of just being curious.”
That curiosity sparked the creation of Speaking of Faith in 2003. The program’s name was changed to On Being in 2010.
“It’s just amazing and surprising how interesting almost everybody’s religious life is, how everyone has a story – even the most non-religious person – and also how we pay so much attention in public life to religious values and certainties,” she says.
Tippett has a degree in divinity from Yale University, has received numerous awards – including a Peabody Award – and is the author of Speaking of Faith and Einstein’s God, a collection of essays based on her interviews. If she could interview anyone past or present, that person would be Albert Einstein.
“He was not religious in any kind of traditional way, but he had a really interesting spiritual sensibility,” she says. “He had ideas that were profound and speak to modern people about curiosity, about our capacity to wonder and our reverence for mystery.
“The truth is, he might [have been] completely ornery and a terrible interviewee,” she says, “but I love the thought of it.”
If she could interview Einstein, Tippett says she would start by asking the same question she asks all her guests: “Was there a religious background to your childhood?”
This question, Tippett says, “plants people in their searching place, their soft place. I want the first question to sink people down into the depths of who they are. You have to start there. If you start from a combative place, it’s very hard to get out of that, and the mode they’re in will shape the conversation.”
Tippett’s skill as a host is in proportion to her willingness to listen and ponder the defining questions all people face.
“Everybody I knew was part of this Southern Baptist tradition with so many givens that people seemed to agree on,” Tippett says of her childhood. “As a teenager, I had a lot of questions, not doubts or critique. But I was fascinated in what was going on in the text and what it didn’t say, what it left open.”
Tippett lingers willingly in these metaphorical open spaces with her On Being guests, but as a grandchild of a Baptist preacher, she wasn’t always encouraged to ask her questions.
“My grandfather was not all that big on those open spaces,” Tippett says. “They weren’t what he wanted to talk about, and I was always aware of that.”
Questions, curiosity and help from a drama and debate coach in Shawnee have aided Tippett in becoming one of the most recognized radio personalities today. With a program broadcast on more than 330 public radio stations in the U.S. and globally via podcast, Tippett is perched to continue that ever-reaching discussion of humanity and tell the stories of people, mind and spirit.
“My father was adopted, so there weren’t any stories on his side of the family,” she recalls. “Some of my passion for storytelling comes from the absence of stories, the fact that delving into the stories was not such a part of my life.”