Home Blog Page 717

Vintage Tulsa: Oil Barons Ball

Friday, June 7, 7 p.m.

It’s a brand new event, but it already has a substantial history behind it. Vintage Tulsa: The Oil Barons Ball makes its debut Friday, June 7, and it promises to become the signature summer event of the Tulsa Historical Society. The fundraiser for THS and its programs will be at the society’s home, the Travis Mansion, constructed in 1919 by oilmen the Travis Brothers at the height of Tulsa’s oil boom and “golden age” at 2445 S. Peoria Ave. The event will have music, entertainment, dinner, dancing and remembrances of Tulsa’s past and emergence as a modern, sophisticated city. Tickets are $100 each, and sponsorships are available. Cocktails, hors d’oeuvres and live jazz open the evening at 7 p.m. followed by dinner and festivities. For more on this elegant soiree, call 918.712.9484 or go to www.tulsahistory.org. Vintage Tulsa: The Oil Barons Ball is sponsored by Oklahoma Magazine.

Ray Wylie Hubbard in Tulsa

Friday, June 7, 7:30 p.m.

Texas music man Ray Wylie Hubbard returns to the state where he was born and raised with a concert at Tulsa Little Theatre, 1511 S. Delaware Ave. Presented by Tulsa Roots Music, the show features Hubbard playing the music that has made him a respected elder statesman among Texas musicians. Outlaw country with blues and folk thrown in, Hubbard’s popular pieces include Down Home Country Blues and South of the River on the theme of hard, unbridled living. As a singer, Hubbard is a first-rate entertainer. As a songwriter, he’s an artist and poet. Concert is at 7:30 p.m. Friday, June 7. Tickets are $25-$45 available at www.tulsarootsmusic.org.

St. John Street Party 2013

Saturday, June 8, 7 p.m.

For more than 80 years old, St. John Medical Center has provided complete and comprehensive health services to the Tulsa community, and it couldn’t do it with the community’s help in turn. St. John Street Party 2013: Light Up the Night is the 20th summer affair that brings center supporters together for a fun but meaningful night. More than 70 of Tulsa’s best-loved restaurants, wine-tasting bistros and establishments will be at the center’s midtown Tulsa campus on 19th Street between Utica and Wheeling avenues from 7-11:30 p.m. Saturday, June 8, along with live music from the Fabulous Mid Life Crisis Band and other evening festivities for this unique event benefiting St. John’s In His Image Family Medicine Residency training program. Tickets are $100 each with corporate sponsorships available. For more, visit www.sjmc.org online or call 918.744.2820.

Summer of Shakespeare

This week

Summer is for Shakespeare and all who profess an abiding affection for the greatest playwright of the English language (yes, it is English).

Oklahoma Shakespeare in the Park stays faithful with a a 29th season of dramas, histories and comedies at the outdoor Myriad Botanical Gardens Water Stage, 301 W. Reno Ave., Oklahoma City. The “complicated” comedy Measure for Measure opens the season at 8 p.m. Thursday, June 6, with a moral leader who compromises a devout young woman caught between her virtue and saving her brother’s life. Set in the late 1960s, Oklahoma Shakespeare presents the dark comedy through June 22. The season includes the light French comedy Ring Round the Moon (June 27-July 13) and two Shakespearian heavies – King John (July 25-28) and King Lear (Sept. 12-28). Tickets are $10-$15 each per show, available at www.oklahomashakespeare.com.

Shakespeare in the Park makes its debut with the delightful Much Ado About Nothing, the comedy of love at first sight, extreme sibling rivalry and the joy of a clever insult all set in post-World War II Tulsa. Show is 8:30-11:30 p.m each night Tuesday, June 11-Sunday, June 16. The 7:30 p.m. pre-show features live 40s music and swing dance from Portico Dans Theatre at the Guthrie Green, 111 E. Brady St. This event is free. Learn more at www.guthriegreen.com.

American Theatre Company mounts the favorite tale of strangers caught in an enchanted woods, the comedy A Midsummer Night's Dream, at the lawn at Philbrook Museum of Art, 2727 S. Rockford Road. The one-night-only show will be 8-10 p.m. Friday, June 7. Tickets are $15-$20. Gates open early at 6:30 p.m., so bring a picnic to enjoy. For more, go to www.philbrook.org.

Yellowstone and the West: The Chromolithographs of Thomas Moran

Opens Saturday, June 8

Gilcrease Museum opens the book on an exquisite collection of works by the incomparable Thomas Moran. Yellowstone and the West: The Chromolithographs of Thomas Moran opens Saturday, June 8. This exhibit of 15 chromolithographs are prints made of watercolor paintings by the esteemed Moran that were published in 1876 by Prang & Co. of Boston in the first color publication about the glorified American West, a practical portfolio called The Yellowstone National Park, and the Mountain Regions of Portions of Idaho, Nevada, Colorado and Utah. As prints, they are art in themselves, recognized as the finest chromolithographs ever produced. The exhibit runs through Sept. 8. Museum hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday. Gilcrease is located at 1400 N. Gilcrease Museum Road. Admission is $5-$8. Learn more at www.gilcrease.utulsa.edu.

deadCENTER Film Festival

Wednesday, June 5-Sunday, June 9

What’s five-days long, 13 years in the making and on MovieMaker magazine’s list of the 20 coolest film festivals in the entire world? The deadCENTER Film Festival took its name from being located at the dead center of the U.S., and when it introduced its first collection of independent films for screening, the festival immediately assumed a vibe of originality and prairie chic. The annual event returns with another full slate of documentaries, narratives, shorts, features, horror, comedies, dramas and more. A few of the highlighted features include a drama directed by John Cassavetes called Yellow, the 2013 Sundance Film Festival pleaser Kings of Summer and a documentary, The Rolling Stones: Charlie is My Darling. Screenings and other events take place at various venues around downtown Oklahoma City. For a complete schedule, pass pricing and other information, go to www.deadcenterfilm.org.

The Comeback Kids

Editor’s Note: In March 2013, Oklahoma Magazine published “Guts And Glory,” a feature story on Oklahoma’s long and illustrious relationship with wrestling and the sport’s place in our culture. Just as the March issue hit newsstands, the International Olympic Committee announced its intention to eliminate wrestling as an Olympic sport. The outcry of public support for wrestling prompted this follow-up piece. You may read the original article here.

The “soul mate” of the Olympic movement is still on the chopping block for the 2020 Olympics with 177 nations strong. 

On Wednesday, the International Olympic Committee held its first round of votes in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Wrestling passed the first of several rounds with eight of the 14 votes, meaning it will move on to the final vote on Sept. 8 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

In February, the IOC’s original decision to cut wrestling was short-lived, as local and international support rallied for change and even helped to transform the sport, from the highest leadership role to the rules of the game. Complaints about the sport ranged from Greco-Roman style and both genders not being equally represented.

Thus, the decision caused the International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles to replace its president and reform the rules of wrestling to be more exciting and entertaining.

“The IOC’s decision certainly got our attention,” says Leroy Smith, head of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in Stillwater.

With the Olympic heritage in the state of Oklahoma being the way it is, totaling 65 Olympians, 21 medalists and 13 gold medalists, its wrestling record rivals any sport and any state. On May 15, the Oklahoma House signed a resolution that the IOC reinstate wrestling, in which it traces wrestling back to 3000 BC, making it the world’s oldest sport. On the same day, the U.S., Russia and Iran made headlines for its world tour to wrestle in public spaces, starting in Manhattan’s Grand Central Terminal and eventually making their way to Tulsa.

Shawn Jones, head wrestling coach at Broken Arrow High School, says international movements like this one have made a sweeping difference, but the decision has yet to have much of an affect on wrestlers at home.

“As far as the community, the decision has been a great awakening for the sport, and rule changes will make it more appealing,” he says. Jones believes that wrestling has a strong contingency, and the IOC will overturn its decision simply because of the strong support across the world.

Cass Cagle, little league wrestling coach, says locally he bought UFC tickets that went toward saving wrestling.

“I don’t see how they can take out the first sport ever in the Olympics,” Cagle says. "Because there is professional wrestling, the Olympics are something for athletes to strive for.”

“Right now our intent is to be restored. It won’t be the end of wrestling, but it would be a blow to youth’s dreams,” Smith says.

Yet, he feels favorable about the upcoming decision.

“We didn’t criticize them [the IOC], but we responded well.”

The Pride Of Theater

When Disney’s The Lion King debuted on Broadway 16 years ago, it astounded everyone. A bare stage transformed into a graceful, contemporary rendering of the African savannah with surprising prop pieces, puppetry, costumes and makeup painstakingly engineered by and under award-winning director Julie Taymor. The youthful cast became a real pride for both Disney and a Broadway scene in desperate need of a fresh reboot.

The Lion King may have began as an animated film brimming with ‘toon schtick and songs popular with the playground set, but its story gave it weight to carry over to the live stage.

A displaced prince on a quest to avenge his father’s murder and to save his kingdom from the menacing uncle – it’s the kind of epic that has been told in many versions through the centuries (Danish prince à la Shakespeare, anyone?). Yet, as a musical set in the world of Africa’s majestic predator and prey animals, the story assumes mythical if not ancient proportions. For all its stage innovation, The Lion King is old-school theater and storytelling at its best complete with heroes (Simba), villains (Scar) and comic relief – an unlikely set of pals named Timon and Pumbaa, a meerkat and warthog, respectively. Plus, you can’t go wrong with music by Elton John, can you?

Families and the theater devout love it for these reasons and because you can’t beat it for fun, song and spectacle. Thanks to Celebrity Attractions, Tulsa will love it all over again.

The Lion King returns for an extended engagement at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center’s Chapman Music Hall, 101 E. Third St. The play runs June 4-July 7 and tickets are $25-$145 depending on day of the week. VIP ticket packages (which include a reserved ticket in the orchestra section, a souvenir program and a merchandise item) are available. To purchase, visit www.myticketoffice.com. Find more about Celebrity Attractions and its upcoming 2013-14 season at www.celebrityattractions.

The 2014 Oklahoma Wedding Show 

Are wedding bells in your future? If so, or even if you’re only dreaming of a fairytale wedding, the Oklahoma Wedding Show is your chance to see all things wedding all under one roof. This fun event brings together brides-to-be from all over the Tulsa area to visit with the area’s top wedding experts, get one-on-one advice and choose favorites from an elite selection of bakers, florists, photographers, caterers and much more. Guests will be treated to a bridal fashion show spotlighting the latest designs from local boutiques. “Champagne with the Experts” is back this year by popular demand – enjoy a glass of bubbly and learn some tricks of the trade during fun discussions with some of the biggest names in the wedding business. You’ll also have the opportunity to win one of many prizes totaling more than $14,000 throughout the day. If you’re planning a wedding, this event is a must. The Oklahoma Wedding Show is presented by Oklahoma Magazine.

January 18, 2014
10 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Expo Square Central Park Hall.

For more information, call 918.744.6205.

The Weekly Hit List