Lyric Theatre Announces 2021 Season
The season features Denise Lee: Pressure Makes Diamonds, Nunsense, Master Class, and Grease.by BWW News Desk
Lyric Theatre of Oklahoma s 2021 season kicks off next month under the stars in downtown Oklahoma City with the first of five, fully-staged, outdoor productions planned over the coming months.
The season features three productions at the Myriad Botanical Gardens Water Stage - Denise Lee: Pressure Makes Diamonds, Nunsense and Master Class - and Grease at Bishop McGuinness Catholic High School s Pribil Football Stadium. In its 11th year, Lyric s A Christmas Carol will close the season, with a return to the historic Harn Homestead just in time for the holiday season.
Gay Agenda • Feb. 12, 2021
Feb 12, 2021 |
The Gay Agenda
Have an event coming up? Email your information to Managing Editor Tammye Nash at nash@dallasvoice.com or Senior Staff Writer David Taffet at taffet@dallasvoice.com by Wednesday at 5 p.m. for that week’s issue.
The Gay Agenda is now color-coded: Red for community events; blue for arts and entertainment; purple for sports; green for nightlife and orange for civic events and holidays.
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Every Monday: THRIVE
Resource Center’s THRIVE Support Group for people 50 and older meets virtually from 11:45 a.m.-1 p.m. led by a SMU Intern from their counseling program. A secure Zoom Room opens at 11:30 a.m. for people to join and chat. Email THRIVE@myresourcecenter.org to request the link.
Gay Agenda • Feb. 5, 2021
Feb 5, 2021 |
The Gay Agenda
Have an event coming up? Email your information to Managing Editor Tammye Nash at nash@dallasvoice.com or Senior Staff Writer David Taffet at taffet@dallasvoice.com by Wednesday at 5 p.m. for that week’s issue.
The Gay Agenda is now color-coded: Red for community events; blue for arts and entertainment; purple for sports; green for nightlife and orange for civic events and holidays.
•
Every Monday: THRIVE
Resource Center’s THRIVE Support Group for people 50 and older meets virtually from 11:45 a.m.-1 p.m. led by a SMU Intern from their counseling program. A secure Zoom Room opens at 11:30 a.m. for people to join and chat. Email THRIVE@myresourcecenter.org to request the link.
Unmarked cemetery on Jacksonville University campus highlights lost Black history
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The old cemetery no longer has any headstones. They have all been gone for decades.
The cemetery was only discovered by chance in the late 1980s when an employee at JU happened to discover the lone remaining headstone. That headstone was for William Johnson, a former black soldier in the Civil War.
“He was a slave here in Jacksonville. And on his enlistment papers, he lists Yellow Bluff as his birthplace. Which is as you probably know the place right under the Dames Point Bridge on the north end,” said retired JU History Professor Craig Buettinger.
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