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ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT NOVEMBER 14, 2024
YOUROBSERVER.COM
GREEN & GROOVY The Ringling celebrates the environment with its free, funky SunHAT Eco Performance Fest. MONICA ROMAN GAGNIER ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
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he Ringling Museum, filled with Renaissance art and a jewelbox theater plucked from an Italian palace in Asolo, was built by a man who accumulated his wealth by bringing clowns, acrobats and “trained” wild animals to the masses. When John Ringling died in 1936, he left his art treasures and his Ca d’Zan mansion to the state of Florida. His will specified that visitors could come for free one day a week. (It’s Monday, if you don’t know.) As The Ringling prepares to host its first SunHAT Eco Performance Fest (try saying that three times fast), somewhere, John Ringling is smiling. Why? Because the festival continues Ringling’s legacy of mixing high and low entertainment that he championed at his circus with ringmasters in tuxes, aerialists in sequins and elephants dancing a ballet choreographed by George Balanchine. Despite his appetite for cultured collectibles and living well, Ringling was a man of the people. He understood how to bring everybody together in the same tent with a bawdy, brash and beautiful show. His estate plan recognized that even though everyone wants to see art, not everyone can afford it. With that in mind, Elizabeth Doud, The Ringling’s Currie-Kohlmann Curator of Performance, has persuaded the bigwigs at the museum to foot the bill for a pay-whatyou-wish festival. Here’s the fine print: There’s a 99-cent processing fee when you buy tickets online and donations are encouraged. So what is a SunHAT Eco Performance Fest anyway? In marketing materials, Doud calls SunHAT (for The Ringling’s Historic Asolo Theater) “SPF for the times ahead.” More on that later. Think of the monthly Ringling Underground on Friday nights during season ($15; free for students with ID). Cross it with a fringe festival. Add Miracle-Gro (yeah, that’s not kosher in environmental circles) and watch it pop up, literally overnight. Kind of like mushrooms.
($75), but it will give diners a taste of plant-based cuisine, by way of Sarasota’s Petrichor Mushrooms urban farm, and includes a talkbalk with Heginbotham. The real mushroom extravaganza is a performance by Heginbotham’s dance troupe called “You Look Like a Fun Guy.” Like a fungi — get it? You don’t have to like mushrooms to enjoy the show celebrating the miraculous powers of you-knowwhat. If you haven’t already, sign up for this show now because it’s on the SEE ECO FEST, PAGE 2
Courtesy images
IF YOU GO SUNHAT ECO PERFORMANCE FEST When: Nov. 13-18 Where: The Ringling, 5401 Bay Shore Road Tickets: Free with 99-cent fee. Info: Visit Ringling.org.
Fringe fest “goddess” Moira Finucane will deliver the keynote speech.
What do you get when you cross a vegan with a hip-hop artist? DJ Cavem, who will shake things up on Nov. 14 at The Ringling’s SunHAT Eco Performance Fest.
Local herbalist Bob Linde will give a talk on the “edible and medicinal landscape.”
MAD ABOUT MUSHROOMS
Speaking of champignons and their cousins, choreographer John Heginbotham will host a Mushroom Dinner during the festival that will be presided over by chef Leonardo Pileggi. That event costs real money
Image courtesy of Juwn79.
Three clowns from Madagascar who call themselves Compagnie Zolobe pay tribute to water in “Sakasaka” from Nov. 15-18.