Replay: Commentary on Home Ice Exhibit Tuesday, January 17, 2012 Wyatt Heritage Properties Seeking Hockey Memorabilia for “Replay, A Commentary on Home Ice” Exhibit
Group Reading in Summerside Saturday, January 21, 2012 Five Island writers come together at the Lefurgey Centre, 205 Prince Street
January 21, 2012
1:30 pm
UPCOMING EVENTS
Video Games- The Art and History 1958-2011 July 4, 2011 Video Games- The Art and History 1958-2011
Gallery 33, 33 Summer Street, Summerside
Open to the public Monday- Saturday 10:00am- 5:00 pm
Try your hand at some of the classic gaming systems on exhibit: Magnavox Odyssey 100, Tandy TV Score-board, Coleco Telstar, Intellivision ...[more]
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The Dressing Room being staged at Harbourfront Theatre
Wyatt Heritage Properties will stage the drama/comedy The Dressing Room as part of Scotiabank’s Hockey Day in Canada celebrations.
The two act play set in the dressing room of the Cahill Stadium just prior to its demolition, is the story of a boy, a dream, and a lesson in life. While the boys of the old timers hockey team do what hockey players do best in the dressing room, veteran hockey player Paul MacWilliams takes the audience along on his journey of a young man destined to be a star in the NHL, who frightened by his own potential, is sidetracked by addiction.
Veteran professional actor Mark Haines is playing the role of Paul MacWilliams. The old timers in the dressing room are portrayed by community theatre actors Vernon Campbell, Thane Clarke, John Allen, Albert Gaudet, and Wayne Murphy. The Dressing Room, written by Marlene Campbell, is directed by Marlane O’Brien.
The Dressing Room will play at the Harbourfront Theatre in Summerside on Wednesday, February 8th with two shows scheduled for 4 pm and 8 pm. Tickets are twenty dollars plus applicable taxes. Tickets can be purchased by calling the box office of the Harbourfront Theatre at 888-2500
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A FORK IN THE ROAD - Wayne Wright
...the work of a storyteller, not a professional historian. History, my learned friend Dr. Edward MacDonald assures us, concerns itself
with the story, not just the facts. All of us live by our myths and illusions: our story is the way we get by. “It’s my story,”
the accused man said, “and I’m sticking to it.” And, being a project linked to the new millennium, this book would be near-sighted if
I didn’t tell the story of Wilmot from the very beginning -- not just the last few centuries since the coming of the white man.