By Kevin Zimmermann
May 25, 2021 | 6:52 AM
Those who are starved for live entertainment should be looking forward to a feast, as Sheboyganâs Stefanie Weill Center has big plans for its 20th Anniversary Season.  Weill Center Executive Director Katy Glodosky said on Monday that they hope to welcome some 45,000 patrons with a lineup of events like never before.
After over a year since holding a full-capacity show, the Weill Center season kicks off on Wednesday, September 1st with county artist Josh Turner, and continues with the Broadway performance of An Officer and a Gentleman, The Oak Ridge Boys, the hilarious musical comedy spoof âSpamilton: an American Parodyâ, Scott Bradleeâs Postmodern Jukebox, B-The Underwater Bubble Show, and a salute to three Rock-n-Roll Hall of Fame groups The Drifters, The Platters and Cornell Gunterâs Coasters.
By Kevin Zimmermann
May 25, 2021 | 6:52 AM
Those who are starved for live entertainment should be looking forward to a feast, as Sheboyganâs Stefanie Weill Center has big plans for its 20th Anniversary Season.  Weill Center Executive Director Katy Glodosky said on Monday that they hope to welcome some 45,000 patrons with a lineup of events like never before.
After over a year since holding a full-capacity show, the Weill Center season kicks off on Wednesday, September 1st with county artist Josh Turner, and continues with the Broadway performance of An Officer and a Gentleman, The Oak Ridge Boys, the hilarious musical comedy spoof âSpamilton: an American Parodyâ, Scott Bradleeâs Postmodern Jukebox, B-The Underwater Bubble Show, and a salute to three Rock-n-Roll Hall of Fame groups The Drifters, The Platters and Cornell Gunterâs Coasters.
By Kevin Zimmermann
Bea Travis
(WHBL) â Sheboygan County may not strike you as âred carpetâ material, but one filmmaker is convinced that her hometown area might be just right for feature film production and the arts opportunities that it would bring for local students.
Bea Travis grew up in Plymouth, studied filmmaking at UW-Madison and Prague, Czechoslovakia, and became a successful New York-based TV producer on the Emmy-winning true crime series âA Crime to Rememberâ.  But Travis never forgot about  Sheboygan County, and returned here in 2017 to start making movies with her venture called âThe Belladonna Film Projectâ.
Travis, along with collaborator and Plymouth native Hannah Kaiser, will kick that project into high gear with a free virtual event called âRising Tidesâ on Thursday, May 20th with help from the Sheboygan County Economic Development Corporation, and the Small Business Development Center at UW-Green
By Kevin Zimmermann
Bea Travis
(WHBL) â Sheboygan County may not strike you as âred carpetâ material, but one filmmaker is convinced that her hometown area might be just right for feature film production and the arts opportunities that it would bring for local students.
Bea Travis grew up in Plymouth, studied filmmaking at UW-Madison and Prague, Czechoslovakia, and became a successful New York-based TV producer on the Emmy-winning true crime series âA Crime to Rememberâ.  But Travis never forgot about  Sheboygan County, and returned here in 2017 to start making movies with her venture called âThe Belladonna Film Projectâ.
Travis, along with collaborator and Plymouth native Hannah Kaiser, will kick that project into high gear with a free virtual event called âRising Tidesâ on Thursday, May 20th with help from the Sheboygan County Economic Development Corporation, and the Small Business Development Center at UW-Green