Juneteenth HBG to celebrate Black culture, freedom with week-long festivities

Juneteenth 2023 concert. Photo by John Bivins Photography.

For Dr. Kimeka Campbell, Juneteenth is a time to showcase Harrisburg and the integral part that the Black community plays in the city’s progress. 

She and the Young Professionals of Color-Greater Harrisburg (YPOC), of which she is the co-founder, will do that by highlighting Black history and culture through week-long Juneteenth celebrations.  

“We want to showcase all that the city has to celebrate,” Campbell said. “Black Harrisburg has been integral to the success of Harrisburg since the beginning.” 

YPOC’s fifth annual Juneteenth HBG celebrations kick off on June 15 and run through June 21, with a special Juneteenth Jubilee on the holiday itself, June 19. 

Special events will include a Juneteenth Summit with keynote speaker Angela Rye, a Juneteenth Summer Vibes concert featuring Ghostface Killah and Jim Jones, a Black Arts Expo and a Cultural Arts Celebration at Narcisse Theatre downtown. Additionally, local youth can participate in a Juneteenth History Bowl and the community is invited to a special SoMa block party in collaboration with Juneteenth HBG. 

The Juneteenth Jubilee is the focal point of the week, marking the holiday with Black-owned business vendors, family-friendly entertainment, kids’ activities and food trucks on City Island, from 12 to 5 p.m. 

This year’s jubilee will be the biggest one yet. 

“It’s a bigger collaboration with so many more folks so it’s really exciting,” Campbell said. “We are trying to model collaborative unity and what that looks like for real, because there are too many things that break people apart.” 

The number of collaborative events and sponsorships this year makes Campbell especially hopeful and excited about not only the festivities, but also the recognition of Juneteenth as a holiday. 

“I think people are taking us seriously this year,” Campbell said. 

Juneteenth was designated a federal national holiday in 2021, recognizing the end of slavery in the United States, but has been long celebrated by the Black community. 

Harrisburg itself has a history of being a crossroads for abolition and the Underground Railroad, Campbell explained.  

“I strive to make sure that Harrisburg is connected to the national scene in that way,” she said. “So why highlight Harrisburg? Harrisburg was pivotal in abolitionism around the country.” 

Through all of the Juneteenth events, Campbell hopes to highlight that history, celebrate Black culture and the nation’s progress and also discuss injustices that still exist and needed advocacy. 

Campbell expects thousands of people to participate in Juneteenth activities during the week and encourages people to RSVP to events so they can get an accurate count.  

For some events, such as the Juneteenth Summit and the concert, tickets must be purchased.  

Juneteenth HBG events will take place on the following days: 

  • Juneteenth Summer Vibes Concert—June 15, XL Live, tickets are $15 
  • Juneteenth Press Conference—June 17, K. Leroy Irvis Building, Harrisburg 
  • Black Arts Expo—June 17, WITF 
  • Juneteenth History Bowl, June 17, WITF 
  • Juneteenth Summit, June 18, Harrisburg University (keynote address will be at the Forum Auditorium) 
  • Juneteenth Jubilee, June 19, City Island 
  • Cultural Arts Celebration, June 20, Narcisse Theatre 
  • SoMa block party, June 21, on S. 3rd St., between Market and Chestnuts streets 

For more information about Juneteenth HBG and to get tickets, visit their website. 

 

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Harrisburg accepting co-applicants for county gaming grant funds

Harrisburg’s MLK City Government Center

The city is trying a new way to help local organizations get county grant funds. 

Harrisburg announced on Thursday that it would offer a co-application opportunity for nonprofits and other organizations looking to apply for Dauphin County’s annual gaming grant money. 

Every year, the county receives millions of dollars from the Hollywood Casino at Penn National to award locally. For 2024, the county allotted $8.9 million to around 200 projects. 

The application process for the 2025 gaming grant funds opened on June 1.  

For those interested in receiving a letter of support from Mayor Wanda Williams and co-applying with the city, the city is accepting applications through July 8. 

In the application to the city for support, groups will need to share information about their organization, as well as their purpose, mission, vision and how they plan to use requested grant funds. 

Once completed, the form will create an auto-generated letter, which will be reviewed by Williams, who will review each letter and organization on a rolling basis. Approved letters will be signed by Williams, then scanned and sent to the county. The city will let applicants know by no later than July 31 if their letter has been accepted or rejected. 

Gaming grant applications are due to the county by Aug. 15. 

To apply as a co-applicant with the city for county grant funds, click here. For more information about the Dauphin County Gaming Grants, visit their website. 

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Aphasia Impacts Communication, Not Intellect: 5 Ways Employers Can Help

 

We may not have known the condition’s name, but many of us have known – or known of – someone with aphasia.

Usually the sudden result of a stroke or brain injury (it can also progress gradually in rare cases), aphasia impairs a person’s ability to communicate and process language without impacting intelligence.

That makes it an enormously frustrating condition for the roughly 1 million Americans afflicted with it.

June is National Aphasia Awareness Month, and Dr. Jeremy Wigginton, Capital Blue Cross’ Chief Medical Officer, says it’s critical to understand that those with aphasia struggle to communicate, not to comprehend.

“Because people with aphasia may struggle with various avenues of communication – talking, reading, writing, accurately computing what they’re hearing – it’s easy to jump to the wrong conclusions about their cognitive ability,” Dr. Wigginton said. “Aphasia sufferers remain competent adults. They know what they want to say; they just can’t always find the words to say it. They’re not deaf; they just struggle sometimes to process what they hear.”

 

The Fetterman Example

Many well-known people, from actors Bruce Willis and Sharon Stone to U.S. Sen. John Fetterman, live with aphasia.

Fetterman, the junior senator from Pennsylvania, suffered a well-publicized stroke weeks before being elected in 2022, and it severely impacted his verbal- and auditory-processing abilities. When Fetterman began his tenure in Washington, he required accommodations and relied heavily on assistive technology for his Senate work: closed captioning devices, and audio-to-text transcription – primarily via a tablet – for help communicating during committee sessions.

Fetterman described his hearing issues as inconsistent; they’d worsen when stress intensified. At their worst, Fetterman said, it was like making out the garbled teacher’s voice in the Charlie Brown cartoons.

Stress does, in fact, worsen aphasia’s symptoms, making it harder to hear, speak, or understand.

Which is why Fetterman and three other senators, including fellow Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey, in late 2023 introduced a bill “to support national training, technical assistance, and resource centers, to ensure that all individuals with significant expressive communication disabilities” can access assistive technology in the workplace and elsewhere.

“I never thought about captioning before I had the stroke,” Fetterman told The Late Show With Stephen Colbert in October 2023, “and now I realize that I have to be an advocate for anyone with a disability to have the kind of technology that allows them to fully participate in society.”

 

Aphasia Accommodations in the Workplace

 Workplaces may opt to take their cue from the Senate and assist employees with aphasia. The National Aphasia Association suggests:

  • Slow down employee’s work pace: It may need to change, temporarily or permanently, and the slower cadence also may help other employees process new information.
  • Use multiple forms of communication: Use hand gestures while speaking, or repeat by email the information from a meeting. Everyone benefits.
  • Create a quiet workspace: Noisy environments can increase challenges for those with aphasia.
  • Prepare co-workers: Educating staff about aphasia can help accommodate everyone’s needs.
  • Provide healthcare plans that assist with the recovery and rehabilitation that accompanies aphasia after strokes or brain injuries. Many Capital Blue Cross plans, for instance, cover a variety of necessary rehabilitative speech therapies and other support treatments for those with aphasia.

“Those with aphasia can continue to enrich the workplace and produce at a high level,” Dr. Wigginton said. “They just may require the proper rehabilitation, support, patience, and accommodation.”

THINK (Trusted Health Information, News, and Knowledge) is a community publication of Capital Blue Cross. Our mission is to provide education, resources, and news on the latest health and insurance issues.

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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: Liberty Winefest on Saturday Worth noting: Proudly PA! on Saturday at Fort Hunter; 31st Annual Shakespeare in the Park (FREE) continues Things on my agenda this weekend: Kiddo’s last day of kindergarten (!), Proudly PA!, Open Stage Gala

For your weekend planning

Below are more options for your weekend.

A Look Ahead

  1. Clock Box Happy Hour next week! Register FREE here
  2. June 20 | SOMA POP-UP | JUNETEENTH with Mark & Val’s Wines and Mel’s Rock’n BBQ
  3. June 21 | Juneteenth SoMa Block Party with YPOC and HYP | 3rd in the Burg
  4. You can now sponsor the Weekend Roundup! Ask me how! 
  5. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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Proudly PA! Festival, Sunset Music and Movie Series to return to Dauphin County

A previous Proudly PA! Festival. Photo courtesy of Dauphin County.

Dauphin County has plenty of fun summer activities planned for locals to enjoy, featuring food, drinks, music and movies. 

The county’s annual Proudly PA! Festival, which highlights local music and brews, will return on Saturday, June 8 to Fort Hunter Park in Susquehanna Township, along with the Sunset Music and Movie Series happening every Friday this summer. 

“[Proudly Pa!] is a great way to celebrate all things Pennsylvania,” said Commissioner Mike Pries, who oversees Dauphin County’s Parks and Recreation Department. 

Proudly PA! attendees can enjoy musical performances from four bands and two singer-songwriters whose musical acts originated in Pennsylvania. The outdoor event, which runs from 1 to 8 p.m., will also feature local food trucks, craft vendors and a selection of wine, beer and distilled spirits from local suppliers.  

All attendees are encouraged to bring their own lawn chair, blanket and picnic basket, and the first 2,000 guests will receive a Proudly PA! beverage glass. 

Also this summer at Fort Hunter Park, from June 7 to August 23, Dauphin County Parks & Recreation’s 12-week Sunset Music and Movie Series will provide families with weekly free events. Each Friday night will feature either a local performing arts organization or a family-friendly movie.  

Visitors are encouraged to bring lawn chairs and blankets and are welcome to either pack their own food or purchase concessions at the event.  

“We’re ushering in summer with this and other top-notch entertainment,” said Commissioner George Hartwick. “Our events bring together people of all ages and backgrounds, and we’re deeply appreciative of the many generous sponsors and community partners for making these events possible.”

For more information about Proudly PA! and to purchase tickets online, visit Dauphin County’s website. Tickets can also be purchased in person at the Dauphin County Parks and Recreation office at Fort Hunter Park, or at the event. Tickets purchased ahead of the event are $30, and those purchased at the event are $40. 

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Harrisburg hires interim housing director, engineer, filling vacancies

Gloria Martin-Roberts. Photo courtesy of the City of Harrisburg.

Harrisburg has two new top officials, replacing recently departed city employees. 

City Communications Director Matt Maisel told TheBurg that Building and Housing Development and Economic Development Department Director Dennise Hill has left her position and that Gloria Martin-Roberts, a former city council president, has become the interim director. 

Additionally, Harrisburg recently hired Joel Seiders as the City Engineer, filling a position that was left vacant when former engineer Dan Snow departed the city in March. 

Martin-Roberts started as the interim director of the city’s housing and economic development department on Monday and will retain the seat until Harrisburg hires a new director, she said. In her role, she will help administer federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding for affordable housing projects, as well as federal Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds.

Hill, whose last day in her role was last week, served as the director since early 2022 and as the interim director before that. 

Martin-Roberts previously served as a Harrisburg City Council member for eight years and as council president for two years. She has also held positions as the director of prevention in the state’s Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs, the director of preventative health programs in the state’s Department of Health, the chief operating officer at Hamilton Health Center and as a workforce development and drug and alcohol consultant.  

“Building and housing and economic development are things I’ve been consistently involved in,” Martin-Roberts told TheBurg. “These were major priorities for me.” 

Seiders, a Perry County native, began as city engineer on May 20. According to Seider’s LinkedIn profile, he has worked as a PA bridge manager for Camp Hill-based Volkert, Inc., as a civil engineer consultant for the state’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and as a Civil Engineer Consultant for PennDOT, among other positions.  

When reached by phone, Seiders said that he took the position, hoping to be able to make a difference in the city and to bring together his various engineering experiences and skills into one role. His priority is to continue ongoing road projects, as well as promote additional safety improvements, he said.

Hill, the former housing department head for the city, became the most recent Harrisburg official to resign in recent months, following the departure of Snow and the announcement from city Business Administrator Dan Hartman that his last day would be on June 7.  

According to Maisel, the business administrator job has not yet been posted online, but Mayor Wanda WIlliams is in discussion with interested candidates.

Story was updated to include comments from Joel Seiders.

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Affordable housing development in Harrisburg nears project completion

Sycamore Homes

Local developers hope that their affordable housing project, which is nearing completion, will offer people hope in the form of a home.  

Latino Connection Foundation and Fernandez Realty Affordable Homes on Tuesday hosted a walk-through event of their four-story, affordable apartment building in South Harrisburg, set to open in September. 

Sycamore Homes, located on the 1400-block of Sycamore Street, broke ground in October 2022. The $4.7 million project is designed to provide affordable housing, based on the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) standards, to lower-income families whose annual salaries are less than $34,300. 

The building comprises 23 studio apartments, each including a bedroom area, washer and dryer, bathroom and a kitchen area with a stove, sink, refrigerator and dishwasher. Each unit has central air. Additionally, several units on the lower level are ADA-accessible. 

“This is a life changer for 23 people who aren’t housed right now,” Dr. Amber Borreli, grants and development manager at Latino Connection Foundation, said during the event, which was also attended by Mayor Wanda Williams and other local officials. 

The complex has already accepted several applicants and received over a dozen more applications to review, according to Borreli. 

Rent for the apartments will cost about $857 and housing choice vouchers will be accepted.  

“Our hope is that someone comes here, they move in, they get a job, and now they have a washer and dryer and things in the apartment that help them to really succeed, and they get a raise, and then they find a regular rent apartment,” Borreli said. “That’s our goal.” 

For more information about Fernandez Realty Affordable Homes, visit their website.  

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Bob’s Art Blog: M&M’s Out of the Bag (plus a W)  

Painting by Cathie Conrad MacArthur

A well-known candy that I grew up with comes in all sorts of colors and features animated characters in television ads espousing their reason for being. Colorful, plain or peanuts, M&M’s have only increased their PCP (pop culture popularity) over the years since originating in 1941.

An art exhibit doesn’t need to show 100 works to be a blockbuster. It can be just as powerful with merely a dozen. In a one-room, one-woman show, experimental painter and collage creator, Sue Marrazzo of Carlisle, the first M&M of this story, demonstrates less is more when every canvas counts.

The Map Room at Allenberry Resort in Boiling Springs provides the quintessential backdrop with its tonal expanse of stone wall, ideal for the neutral, heavily textured lines of demarcation running through her series of paintings. Laden with touchstones of black marks, squiggles and dots and dashes, one can almost hear the clickety-clack rhythmically tapping out Morse code. They guide one through the show building, a bridge from one painting to the next.  

“Na Pali Coast” by Sue Marrazzo

Marrazzo works primarily in mixed media experimenting with acrylic here and there which adds a different layer to the mix. Her collage collection sparks conversation on a variety of topics as varied as the elements employed emote enlightenment. Her credentials speak to an artist of achievement with the appropriate ISAP, NCS and ISEA following her name. From her body of work, the Allenberry show highlights both new paintings and a few greatest hits featured in various Carlisle Arts Learning Center (CALC) juried exhibitions and other local art galleries. Marrazzo is influenced by fashion, interior design and art history. In her words, “Art is about learning to see.” She describes her art as “bold, colorful, experimental and individualistic.” From “The Soul in Reflection” to “Panache” and the alluring and mysterious bifurcated “Na Pali Coast,” which draws the viewer across the room for closer inspection.  

Be sure to visit the Map Room at Allenberry by July 2 as this smartly styled show closes before the nation’s holiday. Sue will be showing her art at Gallo’ry on Market this fall. Upcoming classes take place on Saturdays, June 15 and July 30 in experimental mixed media at CALC. Contact Sue Marrazzo at [email protected].

The next M&M out of the bag is Cathie Conrad MacArthur who calls Midtown Harrisburg home and yet her heart belongs to the coastline beaches from Maine to Maryland and points in between. Her seaside studies demonstrate a defined palette reminiscent of sunrise and sunset shades alighting over the horizon morning and night. So serene one feels like they’re curled up on a towel watching the sun kiss the sea. Her floral works bring to mind Georgia O’Keeffe’s luminous paintings that formed her oeuvre. Their beauty lies in the true-to-life.  

From early childhood, creating greeting cards and paper dolls, to studying art at York College has led MacArthur on a never-ending art journey. Her travels often take her to familial beach haunts like the lighthouse at Nubble Light in York, Maine. Summers were spent with her parents and siblings in Chincoteague, Maryland. MacArthur has studied with local artists and a select few in Maine. She shared her passion for painting as “inspired by the energy and color palette,” from the beautiful Susquehanna River to the ocean she loves. The artist works in pastels, acrylics and oils. Known for her landscapes, still life, floral and contemporary paintings can be found at Pure Gallery in Arcona. A standout is Himalayan Blue Poppy, a soft pastel that whispers the memory of Georgia O’Keeffe. For MacArthur, the joy she receives from painting is a means to the end. The act is a gift unto itself. There can be no purer pursuit. Find MacArthur’s work on Instagram @cathiemacarthur.

Art by Reina R76 Wooden

  Meet the Artist: Reina R76 Wooden  

When an “M” gets turned upside down, it becomes a “W,” as in the artist Wooden, Reina to be exact. There is a certain group that subscribes to the notion that, as far as “art” goes, Reina has often stood art on its head. Count us among this select group. Always a proponent of inducing alarms for advocacy regarding social change, she slyly pokes at history and the societal ills that have taken place. In her role as ‘thought provocateur,’ she shines a spotlight on racism. Reina marches to her own inner voice, depicting crowns fit for the kings and queens who were unjustly robbed of their humanity and sold as slaves.

Heather Ebersole’s Gallo’ry at 2010 Market St. in Camp Hill is proud to feature Reina’s paintings for the month of June. They are a fitting tribute to the Juneteenth celebration. Come out and meet the artist this Friday, June 7 at a reception that starts at 6 p.m.  

Find work by Reina R76 Wooden, on her website.

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Pride Month Perspective: Leading with Humility and Humanity

George Fernandez

This June marks the 55th anniversary of the Stonewall riots in New York City, a series of riots for gay liberation that took place over several days beginning on June 28, 1969. What began as a bold and brave public outcry over injustice has transformed into Pride Month that is globally recognized as a time of celebration, commemoration, and activism for the LGBTQ+ community.

The purpose of this month is much more than a vibrant celebration of diversity and self-affirmation. It’s a potent reminder of the disparities that still exist, and the need to promote equity, acceptance, and respect for all, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. Most importantly, it’s a time to recognize our own blind spots that may be preventing us from acting from a place of humility and humanity.

We need to look no further than right here in Central PA to find very real and recent examples of discrimination against our LGBTQ+ community where differences are used as a cause for division rather than a reason for unity. And the common theme that is almost always the underlying cause? Fear and misunderstanding.

But what if this Pride Month we – and I mean each and every one of us – made a dedicated effort to take the posture of leading with humility and humanity? What if we used the next 30 days to have real, humanizing conversations with people who look, act, and think differently than we do? What if we made the extra effort to look one another in the eyes and see the person that lies within?

The common truth we need to focus on, and celebrate, is that the LGBTQ+ community is growing! It’s not up for debate. The percentage of U.S. adults who consider themselves something other than heterosexual has more than doubled since Gallup first asked about sexual orientation and transgender identity in 2012. According to the 2024 Gallup poll, LGBTQ+ identification in the U.S. is now at 7.6%, and more than one in five Gen Z adults identify as LGBTQ+.

Increases in LGBTQ+ identification in recent years have occurred as Generation Z and the millennial generation have entered adulthood. In fact, each younger generation is about twice as likely as the generation that preceded it to identify as LGBTQ+. As current trends continue, it is expected that LGBTQ+ identifiers will exceed 10% of U.S. adults at some point within the next three decades!

The LGBTQ+ community is an important and beautiful part of our cultural tapestry here in Central Pennsylvania. Just as we make strides to embrace the Latino and black communities, immigrants, non-English speakers, and everyone in between, we must equally create space at the table for our LGBTQ+ friends and neighbors.

As the world celebrates Pride Month this June, I urge you to step away from the sidelines and embrace this opportunity to open doors for discussion and understanding. When you take a posture of cultural humility, there is no excuse to remain isolated or uninformed.

What our community needs most right now are safe spaces where culture and diversity are celebrated and where our differences are what bring us together. One of the most iconic examples of this in downtown Harrisburg is Stallions on N. 3rd Street. There are countless stories of community members who regard this as a space where they feel safe, loved, seen, and appreciated.

When this business went up for sale, my husband, Nelson, and I stepped forward to purchase the building to ensure it always remains a place of goodwill, love, and self-expression for all. As Pride Month takes place, Stallions will be undergoing a transformation to become Karma, which will open to the public this July. Just as the name indicates, Karma is a place where each person’s unique light and energy is reflected and amplified, with a special focus on arts, entertainment, and culture.

As a longstanding member and supporter of the LGBTQ+ community, my hope is that this Pride Month will continue to build upon its 55 years of history, now with an even greater focus on humility and humanity – seeing people for the unique humans we are, embracing our differences, and being intentional about creating and protecting spaces where every member of our community feels safe to be exactly who they are.

George Fernandez is the president & CEO of Color & Culture, a multicultural, multichannel full-service marketing agency. He and his husband, Nelson Mena, are the co-owners of Karma, slated to open in downtown Harrisburg in July.

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Burg Review: Tuck into Elizabethan hijinks with Gamut’s “The Comedy of Errors”

Shakespeare may not have coined the term “soap opera,” but he brings us a ridiculously over-the-top play whose premise would rival any daytime television programming with “The Comedy of Errors.”

In Gamut Theatre’s 31st season of bringing Shakespeare to Harrisburg’s Reservoir Park, a.k.a. “Shakespeare under the Stars,” the talented cast, directed by Kelli Kauterman, springs this weird tale off its parchment – a comedy full of misunderstandings and mistaken identity, slapstick and wordplay, told in the traditional way, with circus-y twists here and there.

The high energy of the show hits you before the show even begins, with its carousel music (Brianna Dow) and cheerfully colorful scene setting (Michael Bush). Then the actors appear in costumes (Jen Kilander, Victoria Wojciechowski) reminiscent of the Mad Hatter’s tea party, or a toddler dressing herself for the first time. Although neon and clashing, the costumes serve a purpose beyond stimulating your retinae like that first morning cup of coffee: they give you clues to help you identify the characters. Every why hath a wherefore.

Even without a plot that purposefully confounds itself, you may be worried about following a Shakespearean performance. After all, the language is over 400 years old, most of us are not conversant in iambic pentameter, and British humour doesn’t always translate across the pond. You might not digest every word, but the actors use enough gestures, facial expressions, and stage movement to help you catch on. Also, in the program is a synopsis of the play you can read before the play starts. Then at the play’s beginning, Gamut’s Founding Artistic Director, Clark Nicholson (playing Egeon, the father), preambles the play with a narrative of who’s who, making that synopsis you just read come alive through the magic of puppeteering. To further help you mark your dance card, the characters appear in the program in about the same order they appear onstage, and there’s only light dual role-playing.

The heart of the mistaken identity plot in “The Comedy of Errors” centers on a different dual role-playing of sorts – twins. And the Bard twists the knife further by inserting two sets of identical twins, both with the same names, and splitting them up between two warring towns. (Ephesus hates Syracuse the way Springfield hates Shelbyville.) They were separated courtesy of a shipwreck, they don’t know where their other halves are, and they develop master/servant relationships with their mismatched sets. The audience is in on the hijinks when, scene after scene, the townspeople mistake one twin for another.

The cast of “The Comedy of Errors” (photo: Gina Napoli)

Whoever casted this play chose well, using near doppelgangers with similar faces and body types: Dromio of Syracuse (Dom Hernandez) and Dromio of Ephesus (Joel Colvin); Antipholus of Syracuse (Jason Samarin) and Antipholus of Ephesus (Diego Sandino). Hernandez succeeds onstage as a hilarious bumbler, with descriptions of his hideous wife that made me laugh out loud several times. Although also a slave, Colvin distinguishes himself from his twin by giving his character a mite more swagger. Samarin and Sandino show how similar their characters are in temperament, giving impassioned line deliveries with violent tendencies.

As Adriana, (Maggie Haynes), wife of Antipholus of Ephesus, Haynes plays an inflamed and jealous woman, wildly gesticulating about the stage. Most of her scenes were with her sister Luciana (Taylor Hargraves), a staunch advocate for women’s rights, well ahead of her time and place in history. Although my seat was far away from their combined alpha girl energy, I could feel it radiating as Haynes and Hargraves played off each other, often facing the audience, inviting us into their dynamic.

Shakespeare uses many smaller roles to craft the numerous misunderstandings that cobble the play’s plot together. Although Bill didn’t give these roles as much stage time, the actors were just as deft in interpreting the scenes, and adding their own flairs. Kudos to actors Daniel Hutchins, Chris Ondeck, Amelia Chick, Joe Regan, Liz Curtis, and Samantha McCue for adding their comedic talents to bring situational humor and complexity to this silly farce.

In case you were still worried that the flowery language may elude you, at the end of the play, all misunderstandings are sorted and explained in detail from every angle, tied with a nice bit of rope that probably doubled as a weapon somewhere during a silly fight scene.

And in this mist at all adventures go. Wear your best disguise, and join Gamut Theatre-goers for this fun satire. Because many thoroughfares within Reservoir Park are blocked, be sure to leave yourself enough time to find parking and walk to the Levitt Pavilion bandshell. With the crazy Pennsylvania weather, you may ask yourself, “Am I on earth, in heaven, or in hell?” You may be watching the sunset behind the bandshell, or you may find yourself in the midst of a tempest. Thou knowest not, so be prepared with sunscreen, a sweatshirt, insect repellant, rain gear, blankets, your own chairs, and probably some igloo bricks. Provided no twin steals from you, you can purchase from the food truck, or you may donate your gold in the designated baskets.

“The Comedy of Errors” runs through June 15, Wednesdays through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., weather pending. Because it’s a free event, accessible to all, no tickets are required. More information is available at https://www.gamuttheatre.org/fsip.

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