'Steel Magnolias' to open at Sharon Playhouse Aug. 30

"Steel Magnolias,” “a beautiful homage to women and female relationships,” will start at the Sharon Playhouse Aug. 30.

The play, written by Robert Harling, is loosely based on his sister who died from complications of Type 1 diabetes after giving birth to a son.

“Steel Magnolias” centers around six friends in a small southern town who meet weekly at a beauty parlor owned by Truvy, played by Jen Cody. Cody previously acted at the Playhouse in Something Rotten last summer. “I have just been dying to come back,” she said, and to “brush up on her Southern dialect.”

Emma Simon who plays Truvy’s assistant, Annelle, said of the play, “I have wanted to work on this play for so long. It is such a beautiful, complex, devastating, hilarious story of female friendships and relationships.”

“Steel Magnolias” deals with “family, illness and personal loss” as the friends support each other through conflicts, relationships and tragedy.

Under the direction of Jackson Gay, Cody, Simon and actresses Susan Cella as “Clairee,” Etta Grover as “Shelby,” Marinell Crippen as “M’Lynn,” and Sharon resident Liza Vann as “Ouiser,” present a play that Sharon Playhouse’s Artistic Director Carl Andress says “perfectly balances laugh-out-loud humor and heartfelt emotions.”

The play will run from Friday, Aug. 30 to Sunday, Sept. 8. For more information or to purchase tickets visit https://www.sharonplayhouse.org/steelmagnolias.

Latest News

Participants at annual conference encouraged to ThinkDifferently by respecting evolving etiquette norms

Top row (left to right): Panelist Shadei Williams; Dana Hopkins, Dutchess County All Abilities Program Director; panelist Johnny Vacca; Dutchess County Executive Sue Serino. Bottom row: (left to right): Panelist Wayne Robinson; panelist Tracy Wallace; panelist Samantha Van Alstyne

Provided

HYDE PARK, N.Y. — On Thursday, Dec. 5, the annual ThinkDifferently conference was held at the Henry A. Wallace Visitor and Educational Center in Hyde Park, New York. The conference strived to enlighten participants on evolving protocols for addressing and collaborating with individuals with challenges.

Hosted by Dana Hopkins, program director of All Abilities at the Department of Behavioral and Community Health, ThinkDifferently is an initiative first launched in 2015 by former county executive Marc Molinaro with a goal to provide services to individuals with varying abilities and guidance for others such as businesses and communities to help create a more inclusive society.

Keep ReadingShow less
Shooting the breeze with Christopher Little

Martin Tandler

Little with his dog, Ruby.

"What I really feel lucky about is having had the chance to meet and photograph so many people who had a real impact on our lives,” said Christopher Little whose new memoir, “Shooting the Breeze: Memories of a Photojournalist” was just released. The book is as eclectic and colorful as the man himself and offers an intimate look into Little’s globe-trotting career spent behind the lens, capturing some of the most iconic figures, events, and human stories of the past half-century.

In 2021, the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at The University of Texas acquired Little’s photographic archive.

Keep ReadingShow less
Cold Spring, a not-so-hidden Hudson Valley gem

“Cold Spring, NY” depicts life in a notable Hudson River town with a rich history and much natural beauty.

Krista A. Briggs

According to Alissa Malnati, co-creator of the new coffee table tome, “Cold Spring, NY”, after twenty-five years in the urban jungle, it was time to go in search of a cure for the angst which, for some, can come with metropolitan living. “My husband and I were soul sick,” explained Malnati of the couple’s move to Cold Spring, a Hudson River town located in leafy Putnam County. “We were seeking restoration and quiet, and to be in nature, away from the hustle and bustle of the city.”

The time was right for a move in 2021. The Malnatis relocated from busy Brooklyn to a tranquil mountaintop abode which allowed them to decompress without the intrusion of cell phones and ceaseless city noise. With the shift to the Hudson Valley, Alissa, a writer and fashion executive, and her husband, Will, a podcaster and television producer, found the peace they were searching for in Cold Spring, a semi-rural town known for its boutiques, antique shops, and world-class hiking trails.

Keep ReadingShow less