Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

 

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA!


What you’ll find ⤵️

For something new: Midtown Cinema Grand Reopening! The inaugural Seymour’s AFTER DARK at Seymour’s Plant Boutique & Apothecary Worth noting: 3rd in the Burg (we have an extra good one in SoMa!!); Harvest Hop is Saturday in Camp Hill! Things on my agenda this weekend: Jimi’s getting married!!!

For your weekend planning

Below are more options for your weekend.

A Look Ahead

  1. You can now sponsor the Weekend Roundup! Ask me how! 
  2. Are you on my email list?
  3. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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Bob’s Art Blog: Bye the Light of the Silvery Moon @ AAH & Spooky Stuff @ HIVE

It’s October and that means my favorite time of year.

By now you know I have an abiding love affair with all things spooky and supernatural. This marks my sixth tribute to the most beautiful month of the year. Just two days from now, on the 17th, heralds the full moon which is also the year’s biggest supermoon. It will occur around the same time as the moon’s closest approach to earth, called perigee. It will be visible for most of the night starting around dusk and setting at dawn.

 

Bye the Light of the Silvery Moon

It’s not mere coincidence that 3rd in the Burg falls on the night of what may be the most spectacular evening of the year, so be sure to look up. Carrie Wissler-Thomas, CEO of the AAH and director of exhibitions, Nate Foster, are all too well versed in the legend of a hirsute creature that walks on two legs and desperately is in need of a trim.

“Nomad” by Jeff Bye

Brooklyn artist Jeff Bye holds a deep fascination and reverence for the beauty of what once was, with remaining remnants tattered, torn and telling tales of the past. When landmarks stood tall, new and dazzling, they represented modernity for its time. Through oil paintings surreal, the exhibit, “The Ugly Beautiful,” takes the viewer back to a day when places of commerce and custom meaningfully memorialized manner and method true to its original conception. When a candy store was much more than a candy store, it became an emporium. Bye traffics in a currency for nostalgia and longing for a life that is now extinct as technology rapidly replaces and erases a memory bank of identity, innocence and idealism. A major part of the attraction in his exhibit lies in seeing beauty in the detritus and decay that time takes on, weathering buildings that are testimonials and tributes to an era that will never be realized again. A timeworn appearance ravaged by blight and disregard becomes a shrine of sensual surrender under Bye’s watchful eye and brush, producing patina and permanence through tint and tone, growing richer through his painting process. The “Ugly Beautiful” is certainly a dichotomy in terms as it highlights his richly hued paintings. Behind the scenes, Nate Foster of the AAH divulged, “I intend to showcase Jeff Bye’s most recent pieces and a large body of work spanning several years focusing on urban decay and what the artist affectionately calls his ‘The Ugly Beautiful.’ I expect this show to be one of this year’s best exhibits.”

“Corner Bodega” by Jeff Bye

As the art writer for TheBurg, I invite you to spend at least part of this 3rd in the Burg evening taking in potent paintings of archaic buildings to anachronistic archetypes of architectural ambience, Bye “the light of the silvery moon.” The artist’s reception is Oct. 18, this Friday, at the Art Association, from 5 to 8 p.m., and the exhibit closes Nov. 14.

 

Kristin Reynolds: “Ghost in Stairwell”

Spooky Stuff at HIVE in York

Susan Scofield, mistress of “All Things Spooky” at HIVE artspace, found at 126 E. King St. in the White Rose City, strongly subscribes to the adage “Spooky is as spooky does.” Somehow, she casts a spell each October on an ever-changing skeleton crew of living artists who submit their takes on “spooky” from all parts of the country and beyond. Many are from surrounding locales, and some enter their art from as far away as Italy. The list of juried-in-artists seems to grow with every yearly edition of this show. All I can say is, “Art is kinda crazy with a spooky little girl like you,” Susan.

 

 

Alexis Manduke: “A Raven in the Rain”

Alexis Manduke from Camp Hill brings Poe’s a “Raven in the Rain” indoors to join HIVE’s harbingers of hyperbole. Kristin Reynolds of Lancaster shows a “Ghost in Stairwell” found the perfect place to hide. Hint…it’s near the stairs. Susan’s other top gallery picks include works from Rachel Hoffman, Kyle Newkirk and Nicole Smeltzer. Consistently topnotch artists Alana Beall and Tina Berrier always send chills up my spine. The usual suspects are here too and find the “likes” of Sam Georgieff, Jamie Gerkin, Heather Greenough, Annie Nann, as well as Daniele Serra and Eve Bluefoot from Italy. And the hometown crowd of the York area is well represented from Blackbird Designs, Hannah Carroll, Karen Lillie, Koh Mauler, Juli Langeheine, Jeramiah Lee, Thomas McAdams, Whitney Ortman, Chista Raught, Phillip Redman, Kate Rush, Wendy Lane Smith and Delany Wasson, all comprise lucky #13 in total. But who’s superstitious? “Get your ghost on” as Spooky closes on Oct. 26. “I ain’t afraid of no ghost.”

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Midtown Cinema to hold grand reopening following closure, storm damage

Midtown Cinema

Midtown Cinema is rolling out the red carpet and cueing up the films.

Harrisburg’s indie movie theater will fully reopen this week, following a temporary closure due to damage sustained during Hurricane Debby in August.

At the time, cinema officials shared that the Reily Street theater had suffered water damage and renovations would be necessary.

On Tuesday, Midtown Cinema announced its reopening for Friday, Oct. 18, with “reimagined” features. According to Rachel Landon, general manager, the theater now has a new stage in the lobby for performances, more social space, a permanent red carpet and improved soundproofing between theaters.

“This reopening is not just a return to the way things were—it’s a reimagining of what Midtown Cinema can offer,” Landon said.

To mark the reopening, Midtown Cinema will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 4 p.m. on Friday, along with a happy hour at the Zeroday Outpost, located inside the theater. There will also be tours of the facility, live music by Trace Jordan and a full schedule of movie screenings starting at 7:30 p.m. Midtown Cinema will show “The Apprentice,” “Saturday Night” and “Exhibiting Forgiveness.”

3rd in the Burg’s movie night will also take place that night at the cinema, showing “Night of the Living Dead.”

Midtown Cinema is offering members complimentary admission to a film of their choice that evening, while supplies last.

Midtown Cinema is located at 250 Reily St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website.

 

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Harrisburg’s Holiday Parade returns next month, along with new tree lighting ceremony

2022 Holiday Parade

Santa Claus soon will be coming down 2nd Street.

Harrisburg’s annual Holiday Parade will return to downtown on Nov. 23 with floats, parade balloons, dance teams and more.

The city’s parade draws spectators each year to Front and N. 2nd streets  to watch as groups march, dance and drive down the corridor between Market to North streets. The event will kick off at 10 a.m., starting at Front and Market streets.

During the parade, a panel of judges will score participants, awarding the best marching bands, dance teams and best-in-theme winners. Awardees will receive cash prizes.

Following the parade, the city will announce the contest winners in Strawberry Square, where there will also be free hot chocolate and cookies and a chance to meet Santa.

On the night before the holiday parade, Harrisburg will host a tree lighting ceremony, from 6 to 8 p.m., on Nov. 22, in front of Harrisburg’s MLK City Government Center. At the event, there will also be an ugly sweater contest, holiday music, performances, and art market and cookies and hot cocoa.

For parking, visitors can use the code LUVHBG on the ParkMobile app to receive four hours of free street parking downtown. The Market Square Garage will offer $10 parking from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., courtesy of Park Harrisburg.

The Market Street Bridge, as well as N. 2nd Street and Front Street from Market to Forster streets will close to traffic starting at 7 a.m.

For more information, visit Harrisburg’s website.

 

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Burg Review: Laughs rise from the dead at Open Stage’s darkly comic musical, “Ride the Cyclone”

You know when you’re scrolling on your social media feeds, late at night, and your algorithm stumbles into dark web territory, delivering you the most bizarre content, leaving you wondering, “WTF did I just watch?” (Asking for a friend.)

That’s Open Stage’s “Ride the Cyclone,” a dark humor musical set in a long-decayed carnival sometime in the afterlife, with music, lyrics and book by Jacob Richmond and Brooke Maxwell. Director Stuart Landon and Assistant Director TJ Creedon invite you to step right up and try your luck with a mechanical fortune teller named The Amazing Karnak (Josh Dorsheimer) emceeing a contest more compelling than skee-ball or a dunk tank: storytelling.

Six teens are tragic casualties of The Cyclone roller coaster, and they return from the dead to tell the stories of their lives. The prize for the best life story isn’t a giant panda or a squirt gun. It’s the chance to regain their lives and continue their stories. But only one teen can win the prize.

Open Stage sets the mood even before the play begins. While waiting in the lobby, tune your ears to the ambient Halloween-themed music. It’s the grown-up version of trick-or-treating and visiting the house that blasts “Thriller” and “Ghostbusters,” and then hands you a full-sized candy bar. There are other Easter eggs in the lobby, like a wooden photo prop. (As long as no carnies try to guess my weight, we can all stay friends.)

With its optical illusions, burned-out neon signs and peeling paint, the show’s setting becomes a character in its own right–an abandoned carnival weathered by time. The smell of the smoke machine transported me right back to looking in a fun house mirror at an amusement park, or getting lost in the maze of blacklights and velvet posters at Spencer Gifts.

The cast of “Ride the Cyclone”

Then the show begins. Enter The Amazing Karnak, wheeling himself across the stage inside a box reminiscent of a 1980s arcade game. In his robotic delivery, Dorsheimer brings forth an unsettling character who can predict the date of someone’s death, including his own. His presence feels forbidden, like playing with a Ouija board in your friend’s treehouse after twilight.

All six teens are (were?) members of their school’s choir. So, we know the music will be good. And it was. I didn’t catch all the jokes sung in the lyrics, but I will admit, I’m getting to the age in which I need a little closed captioning to help a fogey out when young people talk too fast. But the humor that didn’t whizz by my eardrums landed long enough to make me laugh.

As Ocean O’Connell Rosenberg, Maggie Haynes delivers a neurotic politician in the making. In her breakout song, “What the World Needs,” her dancing reminds me of a more wholesome Britney, bragging about her virtues while undercutting her competition. Her main threat is her best friend, Constance Blackwood (Jasmine Graham). Just as easily as Graham intones the wistful doo-wopping “Jawbreaker/Sugarcloud,” she brings the audience along on a sacrosanct part of her life journey: her soliloquy on how she enjoyed the rollercoaster ride as it killed her.

Ethan Hommel, as Noel Gruber, not only rocks his French accent during his Cabaret number “Noel’s Lament,” but he also looks lithe and sassy in his negligee. Never mind the body hair. Or the bromance brewing with the passionate Ukrainian, Mischa Bachinski (Drew Patti). Patti shows his range with the hip-hopping, “This Song is Awesome,” that turned into disco somewhere near the end, and a longing ballad about “Talia,” the girl he left behind.

Then there is Ricky Potts (Em Kase), the tambourine-shaking, sci-fi loving alien with a big voice, who belted out one of the strangest performances I’ve ever been in the same room with, “Space Age Bachelor Man.” Kudos to them for this half-deaf writer being able to hear their voice over the fire alarm that went off during this already peculiar anthem.

The last student, the headless Jane Doe (Emily Reusswig), showed off her operatic stylings with “The Ballad of Jane Doe.” Her voice gave me one kind of chills. Her movements–contorting her broken doll joints and walking across the stage like a corpse with rigor mortis–gave me another kind. Reusswig’s performance makes me walk a little faster in the dark now.

The live band, led by band director Brad Barkdoll (tripling as guitar player and Virgil the Rat), provides quite a range of music genres for the show’s soundtrack, plus a little comedy sideshow.

The finale, my favorite song of the evening, was full of haunting harmonies, sung by the entire company. The song’s title and message hold a poignant allegory for life: “It’s Just a Ride.”

P.S. If you pay your admission for the amusement that is Open Stage to “Ride the Cyclone,” you must be this old (14) to ride. And be sure to visit the all-gender bathroom prior to curtain, because there is no intermission. Once the ride starts, it doesn’t stop until the end.

“Ride the Cyclone” runs Oct. 12 through Nov. 2 at Open Stage, 25 Court St., Harrisburg. For more information, check their website at www.openstagehbg.com/shows/ridethecyclone.  

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

People cleaned up damage after a car crashed into the Treasure Trove Toy Store.

This week’s news included important election information, development projects and community events. Catch all of our coverage, below.

A car crashed into The Treasure Trove Toy Store downtown over the weekend, killing one pedestrian and significantly damaging the store, our online story reported. The shop’s owners have already reopened and are working to rebuild.

The Dauphin County Library System’s newsletter provides valuable information on its many fall programs, our online story reported. The library offers a diverse list of educational activities for youth and adults.

Dauphin County is preparing for the upcoming general election, our online story reported. Officials shared voting information at a press conference this week.

The Harrisburg Planning Commission voted to approve a project by Tunnel to Towers Foundation to build housing for homeless veterans and first responders, our online story reported. The commission included a condition requiring the organization to work with the Capital Area Greenbelt Association to relocate the trail.

Home sales and prices rose in the Harrisburg area in September. In our story, find out specific stats for Dauphin, Cumberland and Perry counties.

Horn Farm Center in York County gives the community a place to grow, learn and connect with other agricultural enthusiasts. In our magazine story, find out more about the farm and its history.

National Women’s Small Business Month is recognized in October, and our magazine story highlights several local businesswomen. These entrepreneurs use their expertise to grow their businesses, while helping the community.

The Oyster Mill Playhouse in Camp Hill has faced challenges, but has always bounced back, our magazine story reported. The theater, which puts on six shows each year, runs with the support of dedicated volunteers and the community.

Pittsburgh makes the perfect fall destination for a weekend trip from Harrisburg. In our magazine story, find out the best places to visit for art, culture and food.

Sara Bozich encourages you to check out events happening in Harrisburg this weekend, here.

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Dauphin County prepares for election, sends out mail-in ballots

Dauphin County Bureau of Registration and Elections Director Chris Spackman demonstrated the mail-in ballot sorting machine at a press conference on Thursday.

As election day approaches, Dauphin County is getting ready for the big count.

Just weeks away from the general election, county officials on Thursday shared voting information, as well as how they plan to ensure a fair and accurate process.

“We have an incredible staff that have been working long before today to get prepared […] to make sure that this election is going to come off in a way that provides integrity, access and ensuring that the voters who cast their vote have the belief in their ability to vote and count in the way that they intended,” said county Commissioner George Hartwick.

Dauphin County currently has 201,069 registered voters, according to county Bureau of Registration and Elections Director Chris Spackman. The number of voters has increased since the 2020 election, at which time about 197,000 residents were registered to vote. Currently, there are 87,825 registered Democrats, 77,572 registered Republicans and 35,672 other affiliations. Oct. 21 is the last day to register.

While the use of mail-in ballots hit a peak in 2020, so far, 33,574 mail-in ballots have been requested and 13,328 have been returned. The last day to apply for mail-in and absentee ballots is Oct. 29.

Spackman assured residents that the county completes thorough testing to make sure precinct scanners are working correctly. Post-election audits are also done to make sure results were properly tabulated, in which the county re-runs a small percentage of the ballots. When it comes to ensuring the accuracy of mail-in ballots, the bureau sends ballots back to voters to be corrected if there are issues with signatures, dates, etc.

And while officials acknowledged that there could be skepticism around election integrity, they explained that the county has staff working overtime to make sure the election is fair and runs smoothly.

“We are going to ensure that those individuals who are naysayers related to the election are clearly misinformed and misguided, that does not exist here in Dauphin County,” Hartwick said.

Election Day is on Nov. 5, when polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mail-in and absentee ballots can be requested online, by mail or in person at the Dauphin County elections office. Ballots can be returned by mail or in person at one of seven drop box locations.

The Dauphin County Bureau of Registration and Elections is located at 1251 S. 28 St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit the county’s website.

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Harrisburg-area home sales, prices rise in latest sales report

A house for sale in Harrisburg

Home sales and prices both rose in the Harrisburg area in September, according to the latest report on previously owned houses.

For the three-county region, 573 homes sold compared to 542 homes in September 2023, as the median sales price rose to $275,000 from $260,275, said the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR).

In Dauphin County, 293 houses sold versus 258 in the year-ago period, as the median sales price increased to $261,950 from $229,900, GHAR stated.

Cumberland County had 243 home sales, a drop from 257 sales a year ago, while the median price was unchanged at $310,000, said GHAR.

In Perry County, 28 homes sold in September versus 22 in the year-ago period, with the median sales price nearly unchanged at $257,500.

For September, the pace of sales slowed somewhat as “average days on market” rose to 25 days versus 21 days in September 2023.

 

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA!

 

What you’ll find ⤵️

For something new: Check out some great live jazz on Sunday at the Rose Lehrman Center Worth noting: Harrisburg Book Festival is underway at Midtown Scholar Bookstore Things on my agenda this weekend: Solo date Friday, plant care, youth baseball, jazz!

For your weekend planning

Below are more options for your weekend.

A Look Ahead

  1. Join me on Tuesday for Walk to End Alzheimer’s 2024 Harrisburg Walk Kickoff Celebrity Bartending Night! at Grateful Goat
  2. October’s 3rd in the Burg features a Spooky SoMa Pop-Up!
  3. Harvest Hop in downtown Camp Hill | Oct. 18
  4. You can now sponsor the Weekend Roundup! Ask me how! 
  5. Are you on my email list?
  6. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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Following fatal car crash, downtown store cleans up, reopens

People cleaned up damage after a car crashed into the Treasure Trove Toy Store.

Just one day after a car smashed into the front of a downtown Harrisburg business, the shop was already back open for business.

“This isn’t going to keep us down,” said Treasure Trove Toy Store owner Jason Crocenzi, who sat in the storefront on Monday.

On Sunday, Oct. 6, at about 3:15 p.m. the Harrisburg Police Bureau responded to reports of a car accident on the 300-block of N. 2nd St. According to police, a car driving down the street veered off the road and struck multiple buildings, including a pedestrian, who has died. Pennlive reported that the Dauphin County coroner has identified the deceased man as Eusebio Forestier, 68. The driver, the only occupant of the car, is in a local hospital in critical condition, police stated.

The Treasure Trove was significantly damaged as a result of the incident. However, according to Crocenzi, none of their staff was injured. While Crocenzi wasn’t in the store at the time of the crash, his wife and co-owner Jennifer Draisey-Crocenzi was and ran into the back of the building just as the car careened into the store.

Crocenzi said that the deceased man, who was in a wheelchair, was a customer and had just left the shop.

Crocenzi said there was glass covering the shop floor from the smashed windows and significant damage to the front of the building. He estimated that Treasure Trove lost thousands of dollars in products and that repairs to the building may take months.

“When the car hit, we thought a bomb went off,” said Daniel Hudgens, an employee who was at the shop during the incident. “It was just devastation.”

The Treasure Trove, left, on Sunday following the accident

The toy store has become known in the community as a hub for the unhoused to receive help. The Crocenzis said that they regularly give out food, clothing and personal care items to those who visit the shop and have helped several unhoused people find apartments.

Even following Sunday’s tragic events, Crocenzi said they are determined to remain in the city. He decided to open the day after the crash so that there wouldn’t be a lapse in service to the community.

“I didn’t want to not have a resource for people,” he said. “It doesn’t deter me from being here. Sometimes, you have to be where the people are to help them and this is where the people are who need help.”

Police are still investigating the incident and have not yet released a cause for the car crash.

Crocenzi said that, soon after the accident, the gas company came to shut off the gas, due to a pipe being struck. By Monday afternoon much of the debris had been cleaned up, windows were boarded up and people worked to continue clean up and repairs.

“We had a lot of customers and friends come and help us clean up,” Crocenzi said.

Treasure Trove Toy Store closed early today, but will return to its regular hours later this week.

For more information, visit the Treasure Trove Toy Store on Facebook.

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