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Drive-thru Smoke on the Square is Saturday

HOPE — The 10th Annual Smoke On the Square fundraiser will be a drive-thru event with a limited number of meals from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday on the Hope Town Square.

The fact that it is returning in some format is significant since last year’s event was postponed and then canceled, leaving beneficiary Community Center of Hope without the $7,000 or more in support the event normally raises.

The gathering features teams vying for prestige, cash and other prizes in a barbecue competition featuring pork, ribs, brisket and chicken. About 15 to 20 teams normally participate each year. In the past, the event also has included live music, food, and activities such as a cornhole tournament.

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has limited crowds at many events forced this year’s changes, according to founder Jeff Yarnell. Yarnell serves as president of the board of the Community Center of Hope. The center serves Flat Rock and Haw Creek townships providing child care, a food bank and other programs. Proceeds are generated via team entree fees and food sales.

In good weather, the family friendly event regularly has attracted more than 1,000 people.

Yarnell recently encouraged people to reserve meals online at smokeonthesquare.rsvpify.com to guarantee food before tickets sell out.

The food lineup is as follows: $10 brisket meal, $9 pulled pork meal, $8 grilled chicken meal, all including a sandwich, potato salad, chips and drink. A $5 hot dog meal will be served with chips and drink only. Individual items are: $8 brisket sandwich, $7 pulled pork sandwich, $6 grilled chicken sandwich, $2 hot dog, $2 potato salad, $1 chips, $1 drink and $5 funnel cake, served from Rho Chapter of the Kappa Kappa Sigma Sorority.

Information: Facebook page for 10th Smoke On the Square.

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Go to smokeonthesquare.rsvpify.com

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Drive-thru Smoke on the Square is Saturday

HOPE — The 10th Annual Smoke On the Square fundraiser will be a drive-thru event with a limited number of meals from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday on the Hope Town Square.

The fact that it is returning in some format is significant since last year’s event was postponed and then canceled, leaving beneficiary Community Center of Hope without the $7,000 or more in support the event normally raises.

The gathering features teams vying for prestige, cash and other prizes in a barbecue competition featuring pork, ribs, brisket and chicken. About 15 to 20 teams normally participate each year. In the past, the event also has included live music, food, and activities such as a cornhole tournament.

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has limited crowds at many events forced this year’s changes, according to founder Jeff Yarnell. Yarnell serves as president of the board of the Community Center of Hope. The center serves Flat Rock and Haw Creek townships providing child care, a food bank and other programs. Proceeds are generated via team entree fees and food sales.

In good weather, the family friendly event regularly has attracted more than 1,000 people.

Yarnell recently encouraged people to reserve meals online at smokeonthesquare.rsvpify.com to guarantee food before tickets sell out.

The food lineup is as follows: $10 brisket meal, $9 pulled pork meal, $8 grilled chicken meal, all including a sandwich, potato salad, chips and drink. A $5 hot dog meal will be served with chips and drink only. Individual items are: $8 brisket sandwich, $7 pulled pork sandwich, $6 grilled chicken sandwich, $2 hot dog, $2 potato salad, $1 chips, $1 drink and $5 funnel cake, served from Rho Chapter of the Kappa Kappa Sigma Sorority.

Information: Facebook page for 10th Smoke On the Square.

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Go to smokeonthesquare.rsvpify.com

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Drive-thru Smoke on the Square is Saturday

Above: John Edwards Jr. and his wife, Christy Edwards, from Bankin Baby BBQ competed in a past Smoke on the Square in Hope. Submitted photo Submitted photo

HOPE — The 10th Annual Smoke On the Square fundraiser will be a drive-thru event with a limited number of meals from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday on the Hope Town Square.

The fact that it is returning in some format is significant since last year’s event was postponed and then canceled, leaving beneficiary Community Center of Hope without the $7,000 or more in support the event normally raises.

The gathering features teams vying for prestige, cash and other prizes in a barbecue competition featuring pork, ribs, brisket and chicken. About 15 to 20 teams normally participate each year. In the past, the event also has included live music, food, and activities such as a cornhole tournament.

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has limited crowds at many events forced this year’s changes, according to founder Jeff Yarnell. Yarnell serves as president of the board of the Community Center of Hope. The center serves Flat Rock and Haw Creek townships providing child care, a food bank and other programs. Proceeds are generated via team entree fees and food sales.

In good weather, the family friendly event regularly has attracted more than 1,000 people.

Yarnell recently encouraged people to reserve meals online at smokeonthesquare.rsvpify.com to guarantee food before tickets sell out.

The food lineup is as follows: $10 brisket meal, $9 pulled pork meal, $8 grilled chicken meal, all including a sandwich, potato salad, chips and drink. A $5 hot dog meal will be served with chips and drink only. Individual items are: $8 brisket sandwich, $7 pulled pork sandwich, $6 grilled chicken sandwich, $2 hot dog, $2 potato salad, $1 chips, $1 drink and $5 funnel cake, served from Rho Chapter of the Kappa Kappa Sigma Sorority.

Information: Facebook page for 10th Smoke On the Square.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”Ordering in advance” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

Go to smokeonthesquare.rsvpify.com

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African storyteller, narrator streaming a First Fridays show

To say that the world is Charlotte Blake Alston’s stage is a literal truth.

From the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. to the Women of the World Festival in Cape Town, South Africa to refugee camps in northern Senegal, the narrator, storyteller and librettist — one who writes the text of an opera or long work — is a great globetrotter for African culture.

The performer has brought her international savvy to a free, streaming First Fridays For Families performance “Stories and Songs From the Old Tradition” available through May 21 on the Columbus Area Arts Council website at artsincolumbus.org.

“My travels and interactions with storytellers and story-loving audiences both at home and abroad have been wonderfully fulfilling both personally and artistically,” Alston said on her website at charlotteblakealston.com. “My work with orchestras, ensembles and choirs around the country has been especially rewarding.”

For instance, she is the host of Sound All Around, the Philadelphia Orchestra’s Preschool concert series and has appeared as host or narrator on the orchestra’s school and family concerts since 1991.

But Alston also is a veteran storyteller.

For hundreds of years throughout the African continent, people gathered and told stories. The tradition may be the strongest in the West African countries of Senegal, Gambia, Guinea and Mali. Stories were the way the beliefs, mythology, cultural identity, history, and shared community values of a people were taught and preserved. The tradition continued when Africans were brought to America.

She aims to breathe life into traditional and contemporary stories from African and African American oral and cultural traditions.

For six seasons, Alston hosted “Carnegie Kids,” Carnegie Hall’s preschool concert series, and has been a featured artist on the Carnegie Hall Family Concert Series in New York since 1996.

She has been a featured teller at The National Storytelling Festival, The National Festival of Black Storytelling, and at regional festivals throughout North America and abroad. She has been a featured artist at both the Presidential Inaugural Festivities in Washington, D.C. and the Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Children’s Inaugural Celebrations in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”About the performance” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

Who: Narrator and storyteller Charlotte Blake Alston in a virtual performance as part of the Columbus Area Arts Council’s First Friday For Families series.

When: Through May 21.

Where: By video at artsincolumbus.org.

Information: charlotteblakealston.org

[sc:pullout-text-end]

African storyteller, narrator streaming a First Fridays show

To say that the world is Charlotte Blake Alston’s stage is a literal truth.

From the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. to the Women of the World Festival in Cape Town, South Africa to refugee camps in northern Senegal, the narrator, storyteller and librettist — one who writes the text of an opera or long work — is a great globetrotter for African culture.

The performer has brought her international savvy to a free, streaming First Fridays For Families performance “Stories and Songs From the Old Tradition” available through May 21 on the Columbus Area Arts Council website at artsincolumbus.org.

“My travels and interactions with storytellers and story-loving audiences both at home and abroad have been wonderfully fulfilling both personally and artistically,” Alston said on her website at charlotteblakealston.com. “My work with orchestras, ensembles and choirs around the country has been especially rewarding.”

For instance, she is the host of Sound All Around, the Philadelphia Orchestra’s Preschool concert series and has appeared as host or narrator on the orchestra’s school and family concerts since 1991.

But Alston also is a veteran storyteller.

For hundreds of years throughout the African continent, people gathered and told stories. The tradition may be the strongest in the West African countries of Senegal, Gambia, Guinea and Mali. Stories were the way the beliefs, mythology, cultural identity, history, and shared community values of a people were taught and preserved. The tradition continued when Africans were brought to America.

She aims to breathe life into traditional and contemporary stories from African and African American oral and cultural traditions.

For six seasons, Alston hosted “Carnegie Kids,” Carnegie Hall’s preschool concert series, and has been a featured artist on the Carnegie Hall Family Concert Series in New York since 1996.

She has been a featured teller at The National Storytelling Festival, The National Festival of Black Storytelling, and at regional festivals throughout North America and abroad. She has been a featured artist at both the Presidential Inaugural Festivities in Washington, D.C. and the Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Children’s Inaugural Celebrations in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”About the performance” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

Who: Narrator and storyteller Charlotte Blake Alston in a virtual performance as part of the Columbus Area Arts Council’s First Friday For Families series.

When: Through May 21.

Where: By video at artsincolumbus.org.

Information: charlotteblakealston.org

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Shakespeare in the park set for July 25

By Brian Blair | The Republic

bblair@therepublic.com

Shakespeare in the park — locally, that means Mill Race Park — hasn’t happened since stage veteran John Johnson directed a well-attended Mill Race Players’ production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” complete with a melodic pop music soundtrack, in July 2000. The bard returns to the great outdoors downtown July 25 when Boston’s touring Brown Box Theatre Project will present a free presentation of “Much Ado About Nothing.” Information: brownboxtheatre.org

Shakespeare in the park set for July 25

By Brian Blair | The Republic

bblair@therepublic.com

Shakespeare in the park — locally, that means Mill Race Park — hasn’t happened since stage veteran John Johnson directed a well-attended Mill Race Players’ production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” complete with a melodic pop music soundtrack, in July 2000. The bard returns to the great outdoors downtown July 25 when Boston’s touring Brown Box Theatre Project will present a free presentation of “Much Ado About Nothing.” Information: brownboxtheatre.org

Shakespeare in the park set for July 25

By Brian Blair | The Republic

bblair@therepublic.com

Shakespeare in the park — locally, that means Mill Race Park — hasn’t happened since stage veteran John Johnson directed a well-attended Mill Race Players’ production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” complete with a melodic pop music soundtrack, in July 2000. The bard returns to the great outdoors downtown July 25 when Boston’s touring Brown Box Theatre Project will present a free presentation of “Much Ado About Nothing.” Information: brownboxtheatre.org

African storyteller, narrator streaming a First Fridays show

To say that the world is Charlotte Blake Alston’s stage is a literal truth.

From the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. to the Women of the World Festival in Cape Town, South Africa to refugee camps in northern Senegal, the narrator, storyteller and librettist — one who writes the text of an opera or long work — is a great globetrotter for African culture.

The performer has brought her international savvy to a free, streaming First Fridays For Families performance “Stories and Songs From the Old Tradition” available through May 21 on the Columbus Area Arts Council website at artsincolumbus.org.

“My travels and interactions with storytellers and story-loving audiences both at home and abroad have been wonderfully fulfilling both personally and artistically,” Alston said on her website at charlotteblakealston.com. “My work with orchestras, ensembles and choirs around the country has been especially rewarding.”

For instance, she is the host of Sound All Around, the Philadelphia Orchestra’s Preschool concert series and has appeared as host or narrator on the orchestra’s school and family concerts since 1991.

But Alston also is a veteran storyteller.

For hundreds of years throughout the African continent, people gathered and told stories. The tradition may be the strongest in the West African countries of Senegal, Gambia, Guinea and Mali. Stories were the way the beliefs, mythology, cultural identity, history, and shared community values of a people were taught and preserved. The tradition continued when Africans were brought to America.

She aims to breathe life into traditional and contemporary stories from African and African American oral and cultural traditions.

For six seasons, Alston hosted “Carnegie Kids,” Carnegie Hall’s preschool concert series, and has been a featured artist on the Carnegie Hall Family Concert Series in New York since 1996.

She has been a featured teller at The National Storytelling Festival, The National Festival of Black Storytelling, and at regional festivals throughout North America and abroad. She has been a featured artist at both the Presidential Inaugural Festivities in Washington, D.C. and the Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Children’s Inaugural Celebrations in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”About the performance” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

Who: Narrator and storyteller Charlotte Blake Alston in a virtual performance as part of the Columbus Area Arts Council’s First Friday For Families series.

When: Through May 21.

Where: By video at artsincolumbus.org.

Information: charlotteblakealston.org

[sc:pullout-text-end]

African storyteller, narrator streaming a First Fridays show

To say that the world is Charlotte Blake Alston’s stage is a literal truth.

From the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. to the Women of the World Festival in Cape Town, South Africa to refugee camps in northern Senegal, the narrator, storyteller and librettist — one who writes the text of an opera or long work — is a great globetrotter for African culture.

The performer has brought her international savvy to a free, streaming First Fridays For Families performance "Stories and Songs From the Old Tradition" available through May 21 on the Columbus Area Arts Council website at artsincolumbus.org.

"My travels and interactions with storytellers and story-loving audiences both at home and abroad have been wonderfully fulfilling both personally and artistically," Alston said on her website at charlotteblakealston.com. "My work with orchestras, ensembles and choirs around the country has been especially rewarding."

For instance, she is the host of Sound All Around, the Philadelphia Orchestra’s Preschool concert series and has appeared as host or narrator on the orchestra’s school and family concerts since 1991.

But Alston also is a veteran storyteller.

For hundreds of years throughout the African continent, people gathered and told stories. The tradition may be the strongest in the West African countries of Senegal, Gambia, Guinea and Mali. Stories were the way the beliefs, mythology, cultural identity, history, and shared community values of a people were taught and preserved. The tradition continued when Africans were brought to America.

She aims to breathe life into traditional and contemporary stories from African and African American oral and cultural traditions.

For six seasons, Alston hosted “Carnegie Kids,” Carnegie Hall’s preschool concert series, and has been a featured artist on the Carnegie Hall Family Concert Series in New York since 1996.

She has been a featured teller at The National Storytelling Festival, The National Festival of Black Storytelling, and at regional festivals throughout North America and abroad. She has been a featured artist at both the Presidential Inaugural Festivities in Washington, D.C. and the Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Children’s Inaugural Celebrations in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

[sc:pullout-title pullout-title=”About the performance” ][sc:pullout-text-begin]

Who: Narrator and storyteller Charlotte Blake Alston in a virtual performance as part of the Columbus Area Arts Council’s First Friday For Families series.

When: Through May 21.

Where: By video at artsincolumbus.org.

Information: charlotteblakealston.org

[sc:pullout-text-end]