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Things to Do: A fashion show, trolley rides and a good laugh
The Seashore Trolley Museum in Kennebunkport is open for the season.
Photo by Mical Hutson, courtesy of Portland Stage
‘Bad Dates’
Digitally on demand through May 16 via Portland Stage, $25. portlandstage.org
“Bad Dates” is a 90-minute one-woman show written by Theresa Rebeck, directed by Jade King Carroll and starring Annie Henk. The in-person performances have ended but you can still stream it from home and enjoy a whole bunch of laughs interspersed with some poignancy. You’ll hear in vivid detail about a woman’s return to the world of dating and the self-discovery and self-acceptance that happens during the hilarious and harrowing process.
Updated 4 hours ago
What to Know
The Mid-Coast Trolley Project one of the largest infrastructure projects in San Diego s history will extend UC San Diego Blue Line Trolley service from Santa Fe Depot in downtown San Diego north to the University community, serving major stops along the way
Construction on the 11-mile project began 5+ years ago, and service is expected to begin in late 2021
The final stretch of construction starts on April 16, bringing some road closures for the next few weeks
A years-long, large-scale transportation project that extends one of the trolley lines in San Diego is gearing up for its final stretch of construction and this part will come with some road closures. Here’s what you need to know.
Maine plays a role in these holiday movies
Looking for a festive film? Choose one that stars a Mainer, is set in Maine or was filmed in the state.
By Dennis Perkins
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Jane Seymour, Devlin Stark and Charles Shaughnessy in a scene from “Buttons,” which was shot at several Maine locations, including in York, Kennebunkport and Victoria Mansion in Portland.
Photo from Tim Janis
The holidays are here, and we’re feeling kind of conflicted about it, honestly. COVID precautions (and basic common sense and decency) mean Zoom calls and mailed gifts instead of in-person fun with family and friends. A solid 10 months of isolation and binge-watching has depleted our collective tolerance for rewatching the same movies yet again. And even the bittersweet pleasures afforded by the time-honored tradition of checking out the annual crop of indifferent Christmas movie releases during frenzied shopping breaks is gone, with our movie theater refuges still dark and cold.