Arts calendar published April 7, 2021
Community and high school art events will be printed each Wednesday in this calendar up to two weeks in advance. The deadline is noon Friday. Items may be emailed to news@wctrib.com with “arts calendar item” in the subject line. Written By: Donna Middleton | ×
Open Mic
New London, April 9, 7 p.m., Little Theatre; live streaming monthly open mic with artists of all sorts, musicians, storytellers, poets, etc.; more information on the website at thelittletheatre.com.
Grand Ole Opry show
Litchfield, April 24, 7 p.m., Litchfield Opera House; the Swinging Country Band presents the Grand Ole Opry Show; $12 at the door.
Arts calendar published March 31, 2021
Community and high school art events will be printed each Wednesday in this calendar up to two weeks in advance. The deadline is noon Friday. Items may be emailed to news@wctrib.com with “arts calendar item” in the subject line. Written By: Donna Middleton | ×
Open Mic
New London, April 9, 7 p.m., Little Theatre; livestreaming monthly open mic with artists of all sorts, musicians, storytellers, poets, etc.; more information on the website at thelittletheatre.com.
Grand Ole Opry show
Litchfield, April 24, 7 p.m., Litchfield Opera House; the Swinging Country Band presents the Grand Ole Opry Show; $12 at the door.
Feeding America: KPRC 2 to air special program Saturday, February 27
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KPRC 2 is proud to join tv stations across the country in airing this primetime special benefitting Feeding America.
KPRC 2 will air a one hour special Saturday evening at 8pm to raise funds for Feeding America, an organization supporting food banks and food pantries in Texas and across the country.
The program produced by The Grand Ole Opry, Circle Television, and Gray Television will raise awareness about increasing food insecurity due to the pandemic and recent extreme weather events.
KPRC 2 is one of the TV stations across the country dedicating air time to this important program and cause.
12:24 pm UTC Feb. 24, 2021
As the National Museum of African American Music opens its doors, journalists from the USA TODAY Network explore the stories, places and people who helped make music what it is today in our expansive series, Hallowed Sound.
After more than two decades, the National Museum of African American Music is bringing One Nation Under a Groove. The long-awaited museum officially opened its doors Jan. 18 in downtown Nashville.
Sitting across the street from the Ryman Auditorium and a string of famed honky-tonks, its 56,000-square-foot space offers something new to Lower Broadway: seven galleries dedicated to genres including gospel, blues, jazz, R&B and hip-hop, plus a 200-seat theater and rotating exhibits.