July 30, 2014

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sp otlight Comedian Myq Kaplan has opened shows by saying, “I’m glad that you guys seem like you’re my demographic, which is people who know the word ‘demographic.’” The one-liner acknowledged the often nerdily cerebral style of a guy who jokes, “My girlfriend said she wanted me to dominate her. So I said, ‘Let’s play Scrabble.’” But in truth, this vegan who studied graduate-level linguistics at Boston University — and whose new album is titled Small, Dork and Handsome — has proved plenty accessible. In 2010, Kaplan was a finalist on NBC’s Last Comic Standing, and he’s toured nationally and guested on The Late Show With David Letterman and The Tonight Show. He’s confident he’s finding his audience, or vice versa. “My aim is certainly to do what I want to do, to say the things I want to say that are interesting and funny to me,” Kaplan, 35, told CP by phone from Denver. Three days into an Eastern U.S. tour with comic/rapper Zach Sherwin (from YouTube’s Epic Rap Battles of History), Kaplan plays Arcade Comedy Theater. It’s his first Pittsburgh date in several years. “I’ve had people come up to my shows and say, ‘I didn’t understand all of the things you said, but I loved it,’” he says. “Nobody has ever heard that joke about the word ‘demographic’ and walked out.” Bill O’Driscoll 8 p.m. Wed., Aug. 6. 811 Liberty Ave., Downtown. $5-10. www.arcadecomedytheater.com

{PHO TO OF RIC COURTE SY H JAR VIS}

Michael Burch and Justin George turn out “prints and sculptures that are both art objects and fictitious historical artifacts.” Their work, which draws on “the natural world and the people who study it for inspiration,” is the focus of Investigations in Terraforming, which opens with tonight’s reception at the Irma Freeman Center for Imagination. The exhibit is part of the monthly gallery crawl Unblurred, incorporating more than a dozen venues along Penn Avenue. Also check out Visions, new paintings by Lauren Toohey and Linzy Miggantz, at Most Wanted Fine Art. BO Unblurred: 6-11 p.m 41005400 Penn Ave., Bloomfield/Garfield/ Friendship. Free. www.pennavenue.org

at Mystery Lovers Book Shop today about the latest installment in her Blackbird Sisters series, A Little Night Murder. The series follows {STAGE} three Philadelphia sisters, Jean-Paul Sartre’s claustroamateur sleuths who solve phobic landmark play No Exit aristocratic murders, after one depicts an afterlife in which of them becomes the assistant three characters are locked to a newspaper’s society into a single room for eternity columnist. Martin has written more than 40 novels, won a Lifetime Achievement Award from Romantic Times magazine, and co-founded a statewide organization AUG. 03 called PennWriters. Boston Reservations are Babydolls requested for today’s book launch, which includes cheesecake and a string quartet. DW 3 p.m. 514 Allegheny River Blvd. Free. 412828-4877 or www. mysterylovers.com Point Breeze. $5 donation suggested. 412-371-0600 or www.TheFrickPittsburgh.org

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{MUSIC} Pittsburgh has fewer ties to the Old Country than it once did. But Jerry Grcevich is a living link. Growing up in Turtle Creek, he studied tamburitza, or Croatian string music, with his father and uncle; for three decades now, he’s been internationally known as a master player and composer. But tonight, it’s the sounds of the prim, brac, taburitza cello, bugarija and tamburitza bass under the stars, as Grcevich leads the five-piece Jerry Grcevich Tamburitza Orchestra at First Niagara Presents First Fridays at the Frick. The series encourages picnicking while you listen on the lawn of the Frick Art & Historical Center. BO 7 p.m. 7227 Reynolds St.,

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as punishment. And what better way to stage this high-water mark of modernist theatrical misery and restraint than by staging it inside a giant inflatable plastic bubble? bubble:PGH and the Carnegie Mellon School of Drama are doing exactly that with a four-show run on Flagstaff Hill, in Schenley Park, starting tonight. DW 9 p.m. Continues through Aug. 9. Oakland. $10. www.bubblepgh.com

Canadian painter Thomas Frontini combines pastel-colored minimalism and elegant depictions of architecture with the impossible spaces of surrealism to produce his own unusual take on the landscape. Active since 1990, Frontini has displayed his artwork in galleries around the world. Now, Pittsburgh receives his work for the first time; his exhibit Once Again Calm opens tonight at the Gallery 4. The opening reception includes complimentary cocktails and refreshments. DW 7 p.m. Exhibit continues through Aug. 30. 206 S. Highland Ave., Shadyside. Free. 412-363-5050 or www.thegallery4.us

AUG. 01 Investigations in Terraforming

Art by New Academy Press

that the century-old Rex Theater was originally a vaudeville house. That makes it the natural choice for a nationally renowned neo-burlesque act like the Boston Babydolls, whose Madame Burlesque tour stops there tonight. Performances include: Miss Mina Murray doing a Sally Rand-inspired

fan dance; Brigitte Bisoux’s (pictured) tap-dancing balloon-pop routine; and a solo show by local performer Lita D’Vargas. The event is 21 and over, and tickets can also be purchased at the neighboring Culture Shop. DW 8 p.m. 1602 E. Carson St., South Side. $15. 412-381-6811 or www.bostonbabydolls.com

AUG. 01 2014 Pittsburgh Biennial

+ SAT., AUG. 02 + SUN., AUG. 03 {WORDS}

Pittsburgh-based mystery writer Nancy Martin speaks

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{BURLESQUE} Local history buffs might know

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A R T S

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+ TUE., AUG. 05 {SCREEN} Film fans know that the original Godzilla was a reaction to Japan’s fears about nuclear war and atomic energy. But Japanese filmmakers also confronted those issues on a more human scale. One contemporary of the humongous reptile was Akira Kurosawa’s I Live in Fear (1955) — not one of the director’s samurai epics, but a poignant domestic drama about an elderly industrialist who wants to move his entire family to Brazil to protect them from nuclear fallout. Toshiro Mifune stars. The Pittsburgh Filmmakers screening is co-sponsored by the group Remembering Hiroshima, Imagining Peace; a Skype talk follows with peace activists in Japan. BO 6 p.m. Melwood Screening Room, 477 Melwood Ave., Oakland. $7-8. www.pittsburgharts.org C L A S S I F I E D S

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