Bringing Arkansas History to Life

As a part of its commitment to arts education and the students of Northwest Arkansas, Walton Arts Center provides a rich lineup of live educational arts performances through the Colgate Classroom Series. Students come to the venue and experience live theater. Since 2020, this service is offered at no cost to the students or the schools.

In addition to school performances, the Colgate Classroom Series also offer public performances so that families can attend and learn together. With affordable ticket prices, this is way for parents and children to experience the thrill of live theater as a family, while giving them a meaningful topic to discuss afterwards. Parents and students alike will find the performances to be inspirational, moving, historically-accurate and thought provoking.

Bringing educational content to the stage is always a goal of Walton Arts Center – as is actually creating the content or facilitating the creation of educational theater. Trike Theatre’s production of Digging Up Arkansas, appearing on Saturday, Jan. 29, is an original play dedicated to Arkansas history.

The creation of Digging Up Arkansas came about when talking with educators throughout the region, Walton Arts Center staff noticed a common thread: students were not engaging with Arkansas history. When our education team heard about this problem, they knew that the arts could help bridge the gap. So, they enlisted the expertise of Arkansas playwright Mike Thomas and Trike Theater to create Digging up Arkansas, an original play designed to teach Arkansas history to students in a new and exciting way.

Digging Up Arkansas tells the story of three writers from the Federal Writer’s Project. They were sent to Arkansas to collect and present its history to the president. Along the journey, some of the train’s crates holding artifacts are rocked loose. Now with everything out of order, they have to work together to get the artifacts recategorized. The play uses artifacts, songs, stories and audience participation to teach Arkansas history.

Nearly 70,000 students, representing every county in Arkansas, have experienced Digging Up Arkansas since it started in 2010. Research, conducted with professors from the University of Missouri, Texas A&M University, and WAC's former VP of Learning and Engagement Laura Goodwin, measures the benefits of the original stage production Digging Up Arkansas. By randomly assigning school groups to participate in this program, researchers found that students who experienced Digging Up Arkansas demonstrated greater historical content knowledge, specifically content that is mandated by state curricular standards. Additionally, participating students demonstrated increased enthusiasm for learning history, greater historical empathy, and an increased interest in the performing arts.

These findings suggest that there are valuable educational benefits from arts-integrated learning opportunities provided through school partnerships with arts organizations. In recent years, studies have documented a decreased emphasis in arts and humanities instruction that correlates with the rise of test-based accountability pressures in public schools. One potential way for schools to fill this gap includes partnering with arts and cultural organizations to provide arts learning opportunities through arts integration.

Ever since the production first toured the state, Walton Arts Center and Trike Theatre have gotten requests from teachers to tour Digging Up Arkansas again. With these upcoming performances, the organizations are essentially creating Digging Up Arkansas 2.0.

Trike Theatre’s upcoming performances of Digging Up Arkansas will be filmed by students through a partnership with Springdale Public Schools. That footage will be used to create a video version of the play along with teaching resources. The ultimate plan is to have the project completed in coordination with the professional development cycle for Arkansas History in 2024 which will make the program on-demand for teachers across the state.

The play aligns with 3rd through 5th grade Arkansas history curriculum goals. The show engages young people in Arkansas history through drama. Through music and interactive theater experiences, the play brings Arkansas history to life right in front of students’ eyes. The show takes distant concepts and facts and transforms them into a tangible experience that students can latch onto and learn from.

Trike Theatre’s production of Digging Up Arkansas has two showings on Saturday, January 29 at 2 pm and 4 pm. Tickets start at $10, plus applicable fees.

Click here for Digging Up Arkansas Tickets

An Officer and a Gentleman: Reimagining a Classic

The brand-new musical An Officer and a Gentleman had completed training, shined up its boots and was ready to hit the ground running with its national tour in early 2020…then the pandemic shut the production down.

“On the one hand, it was really difficult,” says Producer Stephen Gabriel. “But then there was a terrific positive.” The lockdown allowed the show’s creators to completely rework the production, he explains. After a “tremendous amount” of rewrites and swapping out songs, Gabriel says the productions “made leaps and bounds from what we originally had.”

Appearing at Walton Arts Center January 4-9, this love story follows two people going through different, but parallel struggles. A Naval officer candidate must learn to balance his ego with the ever-present demands of his strict drill sergeant. He falls for a local woman struggling to improve her life while working in the backbreaking conditions at the local factory.

This uplifting story comes packed with beloved music from the ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s. In addition to the Academy Award®-winning hit “Up Where We Belong,” the musical includes smash hits like “Renegade” by Styx, “Higher Love” by Steve Winwood, “Love Is a Battlefield” by Pat Benatar and others by Rick Springfield, Wilson Phillips and Melissa Ethridge.

“I hope that if people know the songs, they love how we’ve used them. And I hope if they don’t know the songs, then they just found a whole cache of favorite new tunes,” musical director Dan Lipton says.

Those who love the 1982 movie will get a dose of nostalgia, while still enjoying a lot of surprises. The show’s creative team wanted to bring the musical out of the 80s and into the present by placing a priority on the way that women are portrayed. Off the screen and onto the stage, the women are smarter, stronger and more empowered, explains writer and director Dick Scanlan. “Since 1982, the world has changed and our political perspectives are different,” Scanlan says. “We’ve really rethought the young women in the story.”

An Officer and a Gentleman is guaranteed to delight those who love the film as well as those who are new to the story. With a charming love story, toe-tapping songs and stunning choreography, this breathtaking production celebrates triumph over adversity and includes all of the iconic romance you’d expect.

With eight performances, tickets prices for An Officer and a Gentleman start at $41 plus applicable fees.

And don’t forget to make your theater night even more fun with show-themed cocktails that you’ll learn to make yourself at the Officer and a Gentleman cocktail class on Friday, Jan. 7. You’ll make and enjoy two cocktails along with light appetizers. Tickets are $35, and space is limited so act fast.

Purchase tickets for the show and the cocktail class by clicking below, by calling 479.443.5600 or by visiting the Walton Arts Center Box Office

Purchase Tickets for An Officer and a Gentleman + Cocktail class

Tickets Make Great Last Minute Gifts!

Everyone has someone on their shopping list who is just so hard to buy for! Gift giving can be so daunting – especially when you’re shopping in a last minute pinch. Most people have too much “stuff” as it is, and no one needs another candle. So, what do you get those hard-to-buy-for loved ones in your life? We suggest the gift of live entertainment!

Tickets to a Walton Arts Center show are a gift anyone would love to see under the tree or in their stocking. And depending on who it is that you’re buying for, maybe you’ll get lucky and be their plus one!

Take a look at our gift guide suggestions!

For Parents or In-Laws

Treat your parents or in-laws to a night at a classic Broadway show with Fiddler on the Roof or A Chorus Line.

Fiddler on the Roof (May 10-15) is filled with iconic songs and choreography, while telling the beloved story of life in a Jewish community in a pre-revolutionary Russian village.

A Chorus Line (June 24-26) shows a cattle call audition for a Broadway show, where dancers show off stunning choreography through catchy and emotional songs that recollect their lives.

A Chorus Line

For Your Significant Other

Darrell Scott

Nothing says “date night” like an intimate night of live music. Choose between any number of genres. Or better yet… why choose at all? Check out our Unilever Starrlight Jazz Club, West Street Live or Land O’Lakes Concert series shows for a fun night out together.

Sullivan Fortner Trio (Feb. 18) is led by the Grammy Award®winning bandleader, pianist and composer, and promises to be an unforgettable evening of music.

Darrell Scott (March 4) is a multi-instrumentalist singer-songwriter whose masterful songs and charming demeanor are a gem in the Americana/Folk music movement.

Tower of Power (April 10) is an American-based R&B horn section and band that has been performing 50 years of funk and soul hits.

For Your Girlfriends

Make it a girls’ night out with the fun ‘80s musical, An Officer and a Gentleman or feminist cultural icon Fran Lebowitz.

An Officer and a Gentleman

An Officer and Gentleman (Jan. 4-9) is guaranteed to lift you up where you belong! Based on the hit movie, the 80s soundtrack to this brand-new Broadway musical is a must for girls’ night.

A Conversation with Fran Lebowitz (Feb. 4) promises to be an evening of sharp wit from a cultural satirist whose works are regarded as classics of literary humor and social observation.

For Kids

We’ve got something for evening the littlest theater fans this season! From performing pets to singing zoo animals, kiddos are sure to be amazed.

Popovich Comedy Pet Theater (April 28) features circus veteran and “America’s Got Talent” finalist Gregory Popovich alongside the extraordinary talents of his performing pets! 

Madagascar the Musical (June 3-4) follows all of your favorite characters from the hit movie as they escape from the zoo and find themselves on the unexpected adventure of a lifetime.

Madagascar the Musical

For Teens and Preteens

Now is the time to turn your teens and tweens into theatre lovers! In addition to Broadway shows, we’ve got two performances that they’re sure to love.

Turning 15 on the Road to Freedom (Feb. 3) is a new musical that tells he inspiring true story of Lynda Blackmon Lowery, the youngest person to walk from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama during the Voting Rights March in 1965.

VoiceJam Competition (April 9) brings together the best a cappella groups from across the country along to battle it out live on stage. Ticket to this one will make an aca-awesome gift!

Something for Everyone!

Walton Arts Center works hard to bring something for everyone to its stages throughout the year. Whether you’re gifting a music-lover, a theatre-aficionado, a dance enthusiast or a classical music fan, we’ve got you covered.

Don’t see anything in this guide that fits the bill? Take a look at our calendar or consider a gift certificate. You just might find the gift that will be the hit of the season! 

Tickets to these and all Walton Arts Center shows can be purchased in-person at the Walton Arts Center Box Office, by calling 479.443.5600 or by visiting waltonartscenter.org.

Turning 15 on the Road to Freedom

Cirque Mechanics Brings the Circus to Walton Arts Center

Enter the most unlikely setting for a circus - a factory where the workers are acrobats and the machines are circus props. Welcome to Birdhouse Factory!

See a contortionist perform on a turntable powered by unicyclists. Be captivated by the trapeze artist powered by the spins of an acrobat inside a giant wheel. Be stunned as the trampoline wall artists defy the laws of gravity. Giggle at the antics of the characters, be impressed by the acro-dancing and find yourself enchanted by the story of laughter, love, flight and birdhouses.

Birdhouse Factory was inspired, in part, by the masterful industry murals of Mexican artist Diego Rivera, the outrageous illustrations of cartoonist Rube Goldberg and the slap-stick humor of Charlie Chaplin’s film Modern Times. While these inspirations make Birdhouse Factory artful, nostalgic and funny, the true essence of the show comes from the circus.

Birdhouse Factory is a simple story of daily life in a “widgets” factory circa 1935 as workers are brought together by the most unlikely of events: a bird accidentally injured by the main steam boiler. The accident and caring for the bird, brings the workers closer together and inspires them to break away from the monotony of the assembly-line. They showcase their true inner talents and abilities by using their bodies and machines to build birdhouses in a more joyous and soulful way.

Come be amazed by Cirque Mechanics Birdhouse Factory on Thursday, November 18. Tickets are only $10 (plus applicable fees), making this a perfect show for the whole family. Tickets are available by clicking the button below, calling the box office at 479.443.5600 or by visiting the box office in person.

Click Here for Tickets to Cirque Mechanics Birdhouse factory

Music Made of Memories

Have you ever heard an old song and immediately been transported to different a place and time? Maybe you’re pushing a grocery cart through the store and a song suddenly floods your memory with images of your high school prom. Perhaps you’re getting your teeth cleaned when a song takes you right back in time to your wedding day. Or maybe it’s as simple as a song on the car radio reminding you of the carefree days of your childhood. That’s the power of music. It’s a universal language that we all speak, and it has the ability to invoke some pretty powerful emotions.

Walton Arts Center is celebrating two distinct eras of music that are bound to stir up some memories. Whether you lived through the time when the music was made, or became a fan after it was already popular, the Glenn Miller Orchestra and RAIN – A Tribute to the Beatles, The Best of Abbey Road Live! has the ability to move people.

Starting with the Glenn Miller Orchestra, the sounds of big band, swing and jazz will ring in the air Thursday, Nov. 11 at 7pm. The legendary Glenn Miller was one of the most successful dance bandleaders back in the swing era of the 1930s and 40s. A matchless string of hit records, the constant impact of radio broadcasts and the power to draw a big audience, built and sustained the momentum of the music’s popularity. The group made a big impact right before and during the war, and had more hit records in one year than anybody in the history of the recording industry. In fact, its recording of “Chattanooga Choo-Choo” earned the first Gold Record ever awarded to a performing artist!

The Glenn Miller Orchestra packs a punch with a setlist that is sure to send audiences down memory lane with classics such as “Someone to Watch Over Me,” “Danny Boy” and “Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree.” Not to mention their signature song, with which they would sign on and off at their engagements and radio broadcasts – “Moonlight Serenade. Today, the 18-member ensemble continues to play many of the original Miller arrangements both from the civilian band and the Army Air Force Band libraries.

Just as it was back in Glenn’s day, the Glenn Miller Orchestra is still one of the most sought-after big bands in the world. Their show is guaranteed to transport audiences back to the times of swing dancing, listening to music programs around the family radio and USO entertainment. Tickets prices to see the Glenn Miller Orchestra start at $10 plus applicable fees.

Click here for tickets to Glenn Miller Orchestra

Moving from the sounds of big band to the sounds of one of the BIGGEST bands of all time, RAIN – A Tribute to The Beatles The Best of Abbey Road Live! is an experience that is certain to appeal to music fans of all ages and invoke an array of emotions and memories. Appearing at Walton Arts Center on Friday, Nov. 12, at 8 pm, this mind-blowing performance takes audiences back in time with the legendary foursome that is “the next best thing to seeing The Beatles!” (Associated Press).

Little did anyone know that a Sunday night in 1964 would change the course of popular music, popular culture - and history, forever. Millions of Americans tuned into The Ed Sullivan Show to watch a group of four mop-topped Englishmen in dark suits who called themselves The Beatles. What they witnessed was a new and exciting brand of melodic, guitar-and-harmonies-driven rock 'n' roll that was as infectious as it was original and unique. After that performance, Beatle-mania quickly swept the country – and the world. Even today, the music of the Beatles, and their iconic album “Abbey Road,” is still beloved by all ages.

Together longer than The Beatles, RAIN has mastered every song, gesture and nuance of the fab four, delivering a totally live, note-for-note performance that’s as infectious as it is transporting. With songs like “Here Comes the Sun,” “Oh! Darling” and “Maxwell Silverhammer,” this adoring tribute will take you back to a time when all you needed was love, and a little help from your friends!

Experience one of the world’s most iconic bands with RAIN – A Tribute to The Beatles The Best of Abbey Road Live! Ticket prices start at $41 plus applicable fees.

Click here for tickets to RAIN - A Tribute to the Beatles

Whether you lived through it, became a fan after it was first made popular, or are altogether new to the music, come be transported to a different time and place in history at Walton Arts Center with these two performances. The Glenn Miller Orchestra and with RAIN – A Tribute to The Beatles The Best of Abbey Road Live! are two shows that celebrate yesteryear and the undeniable power of music.

Tickets for these and all Walton Arts Center performances are available by clicking the buttons above, by calling 479.443.5600 or in-person at the Walton Arts Center Box Office.

Up Close and Personal with Hasan Minhaj

Hasan Minhaj

If you had the opportunity to sit down with a famous person and ask them anything, what would you want to know? Obviously, it would depend on who it was and what earned them their status as a celebrity. On Monday, Nov. 8, at 7 pm, Hasan Minhaj is coming to the Walton Arts Center stage ready to talk about his background, career and experiences in an intimate conversation with the audience.

In today’s political and social climate, there is an interesting form of entertainment that blends commentary and comedy, and at the top of those performers is Minhaj. He is an American comedian, writer, producer, political commentator, actor and television host. As a first-generation American, Minhaj has a unique perspective that clearly resonates with audiences.

Heena Patel will moderate the conversation with Hasan Minhaj.

In 2017, Minhaj earned rave reviews for his performance hosting the 2017 White House Correspondents' Dinner, and for his one-hour Netflix comedy special Hasan Minhaj: Homecoming King, which earned him a 2018 Peabody Award. Minhaj joined The Daily Show with Jon Stewart as a correspondent in November 2014, where he was Jon’s last hire. He continued on in that role after Trevor Noah took over as host the following year and remained on the show through August 2018. Most recently, Minhaj has joined the cast of Apple TV+’s The Morning Show.

Although he is currently touring in support of his newest one-man show, The King’s Gesture, his engagement at the Walton Arts Center promises to be much more special. Appearing alongside guest moderator, Henna Patel, A Conversation with Hasan Minhaj will give you a first-person point of view into his life, career and viewpoints. Questions will be sourced from the audience and public, for a truly one-of-a-kind experience. You can submit a question for Minhaj to answer by emailing info@waltonartscenter.org.

Ticket prices for A Conversation with Hasan Minhaj start at $50 plus applicable fees and can be purchased in-person at the Walton Arts Center Box Office weekdays 10 am until 2 pm, by calling 479.443.5600 weekdays 10 am until 5 pm or by clicking below.

Click Here for Tickets

Northwest Arkansas Couple Experienced the Real Come From Away

Jason (seated) and Britny (center) Yandell with their hosts in Newfoundland. (Photo courtesy of the Yandells)

Jason and Britny Yandell have been in Fayetteville for nearly 17 years. Just three years prior to their move here, 9/11 shook our country and the world. Most Americans can tell you exactly where they were when they found out what had happened, and some can recall even the most mundane details of that fateful Tuesday. Jason and Britny are no different, but their memories focus much more on a little town called Gander

Come From Away is the hit Broadway musical that tells the remarkable true story of what happened to the passengers of 38 diverted planes on 9/11. Rather than arriving at their intended destinations, 7,000 passengers were forced to land in the small town of Gander in Newfoundland, Canada. Jason and Britny were two of those passengers who were taken into the homes and the hearts of the local townspeople.

Returning home to the US from a vacation in Prague, the couple were on a Delta flight when they were rerouted. They had been in the air for seven hours when they were told they were being diverted. “No one could tell us why,” Britny remembers.

The captain came on the radio and announced they were going to land. Jason said, “I don’t think he even said where. Just we were going to land because of a national airspace emergency and that’s all he said.”

Jason said that after taxiing clear, they had to stay in the plane on the ground because there was fear that there could still be terrorists aboard planes. While on the ground, Jason said they found out what had happened.

“The captain said there was a terrorist attack and was really holding back tears – well, crying really – on the radio. And for the captain of a wide-bodied airplane, that is obviously not common, so we knew it was a big deal.”

A view of busses that transported the “come from aways” around Gander. (Photo courtesy of the Yandells)

The Yandells and their fellow passengers were kept on their plane for 18 more hours In total they had spent more than an entire day on the plane. “We got bussed out (to a neighboring town) and went to go get deodorant and toothbrushes,” Britny said. “We hadn’t brushed our teeth in 28 hours!”

At that little convenience store where they stopped for essentials, is where Jason and Britny’s story began their very own Come From Away experience.

“Judy was running the convenience store, and she immediately shut down the store,” Jason said.

Britney elaborated saying, “She made us get in her car!”

Jason went on to say, “She drove us to her house, made us feel at home and then just left us for the rest of the day in her home. She went back to open up the store and go to work.”

Originally, the Yandells had been assigned to stay in the small gymnasium that had been set up with cots. Instead, they (along with another passenger from their plane) were welcomed into Judy and Tom’s home, where they stayed for the next five days.

“They gave us their bedroom,” said Britny. “We didn’t know it at the time that we were in their room. They had been sleeping on the floor.”

The Yandell’s experience with the hospitality of the people of Newfoundland mirrors what audiences experience when watching Come From Away. One of the lines from the musical that always get audiences laughing has a clerk saying, “Thank you for shopping at Walmart. Do you want to come back to my house for a shower?” And that’s how it really happened. The locals literally opened their homes to the “plane people” and made sure they were as comfortable as possible.

“The only word that comes to mind is benevolence. The whole experience. I don’t understand how they did it, but I guess it’s just an innate behavior. It was northing they had to do, it was just what they’re used to doing.” Britny said.

“I think also, they understood the gravity of the situation – how much we were hurting because our country was under attack.” Jason added.

Another aspect of the musical that Jason and Britny got to experience firsthand was getting “screeched-in,” a fun ceremony to make those who ‘come from away’ official Newfoundlanders. They said a boat that sits on the bank in the little town was brought in to the gym for the party, where they all sat and were given shots of rum and made to kiss a cod.

The real “come from aways” experience the Screech-in ceremony (Photo courtesy of the Yandells)

“The ceremony was so much fun. We kissed the fish. We drank the rum – and it was potent!” Britny recalls laughing. “Everybody got in the boat,” Jason said. “And these are people from all over the world. It was really cool that we’re all together and bonding together, trying to make each other feel better.”

Jason and Britny could have never imagined that what they experienced in Newfoundland could one day be turned into a hit Broadway musical. In fact, Britny was taken by complete surprise when she first heard of the play’s existence on a “60 Minutes” segment.

“I was in the kitchen and was like, whoa, wait, time out. what… they’re doing a play about the experience we all shared on 9/11? Are you kidding me? So, I told Jason, we have to see this. I don’t know how we’re going to see it, but we have to.” Walton Arts Center gave Jason and Britny that opportunity.

Britny said that the musical could have been taken directly from their memories. When the question “Where were you on 9/11?” comes up, they said that they usually tell their incredible story, but there’s no way to fully make people understand how special it was. Britney says “We know the experience and I just love that more people can experience it now. Because, let me tell you, they nailed it. They really nailed every aspect.” She says of the musical.

The Yandells and the other 7,000 passengers experienced something truly incredible. Come From Away is the uplifting story of the power of the human spirit that Jason and Britny assure us is accurate. “We were there five days,” she said, “All the people that we met, all the different personalities, the stories they shared, we shared… They taught us love.”

Just like in the show, the day the planes were finally able to leave it started to rain. (Photos courtesy of the Yandells).

Five Reasons to Volunteer at WAC

We’re looking for people to join our team of dedicated volunteers! Jessica Temple, volunteer programs assistant, shares more about the program in this guest post.

There’s an age-old saying in theater: “the show must go on.” At Walton Arts Center, we say something similar about our volunteer team: the show can’t go on without them! We have a dedicated corps of volunteers that are involved in every aspect of the WAC—helping in the administrative office, box office, concessions, ushering in the hall and more. What is it about WAC that keeps this team engaged and keeps them coming back to volunteer? We asked and according to our volunteers, it’s the people, patrons, volunteers, shows and fun. We think you might agree that these are great reasons to volunteer with us too! 

Volunteers work closely with WAC staff

Volunteers at Walton Arts Center get to interact with a variety of people behind the scenes and during performances. Volunteers work alongside staff and crew at Walton Arts Center before performances to stuff and deliver programs, greet vendors, decorate, and set up for special events. At performances they provide excellent customer service to our patrons.

Volunteers are central to patron experience

For the volunteers at Walton Arts Center, the patron experience is the top priority. Volunteers are the first and last people patrons see when arriving at and departing from a performance! Our volunteers love interacting with our patrons and ensuring that they have the best possible experience. They make this a priority for patrons of all ages whether it’s helping students at education shows get to and from buses or scanning tickets for a family attending a Broadway performance. 

Volunteer relationships turn into friendships

The volunteer team is a great place to meet other service-minded individuals. Friendships are formed and socializing occurs as our volunteers work alongside each other in a supportive and creative environment.  

Volunteer perks include social activities

Volunteering isn’t all work and no play. There is an incredible sense of community that is established inside and outside of the performance hall. We host a variety of social activities like game nights, happy hours and potlucks for our volunteers! 

Volunteers are part of the show!

All of our volunteers share a common interest in support the visual and performing arts for our community. Our volunteers help us bring a variety of world class entertainment to the area and our volunteers are a vital part of that process.  

To sign up to receive more information about volunteering at WAC, create a volunteer profile by clicking below!

Volunteer at Walton Arts Center
0V6A0173.JPG

Live Music and Jazz Return to WAC in 2021/22

The greatest musicians in modern history began in clubs, cabarets, restaurants and listening rooms. With the 2021/22 season return of West Street Live and the Unilever Starrlight Jazz Club, Walton Arts Center gives patrons a special opportunity to see powerfully talented jazz and singer-songwriter artists in an intimate setting.

West Street Live

West Street Live features artists displaying a variety of genres from traditional roots music to immigrant folk songs in an atmosphere reminiscent of neighborhood listening rooms and nightclubs. The setting allows patrons to connect with both the music and the musicians.

Wild Ponies

Wild Ponies

Wild Ponies

Oct. 21

Wild Ponies look to their roots in Southwest Virginia for inspiration. The result is bold Appalachian music created by a multi-cultural band whose members span several generations.

Ray Bonneville

Dec. 9

With a greasy guitar style, horn-like harmonica, smoky vocals and pulsing foot percussion, Ray Bonneville is a hard-driving, blues-dipped, song-and-groove man writing about people on the fringe of society.

American Patchwork Quartet

Feb. 19

This group seeks to reclaim the immigrant soul of American roots music. Drawing on a repertoire of American folk songs, this group encourages audiences to discover their commonalities and bond across cultures and races.

American Patchwork Quartet

American Patchwork Quartet

Darrell Scott

March 4

Darrell Scott wrote songs recorded by more than 70 artists including The Chicks, Garth Brooks, Tim McGraw and more. Darrell Scott’s lyrics make sense of the world around us – encouraging us to consider what’s at stake and our place in it.

Rani Arbo & daisy mayhem

May 5

Combining wit, camaraderie and songs that can shake or hush the room, this American Roots string band leave audiences humming and hopeful, spirits renewed.

Subscribe to West Street Live

Unilever Starrlight Jazz Club

The Unilever Starrlight Jazz Club celebrates America’s original art form by hosting top musicians from around the world in an intimate jazz club atmosphere with cabaret-style seating options and tiered seating.

The Huntertones

Sept. 10

The Huntertones brings people together around the globe with their high energy, horn-driven sound fuses inspired improvisation and adventurous composition melding jazz, funk, rock, and soul.

Jane Bunnett and Maqueque

Oct. 22

Jane Bunnett’s band showcase the finest musical talent from Canada, the U.S. and Cuba. The group were voted as one the top ten jazz groups by the prestigious DownBeat magazine.

Samara Joy

Samara Joy

Samara Joy

Dec. 10

With a voice of velvet, Samara Joy’ star rises with each performance. At just 21 years old, Samara has performed in many of the great jazz venues in NYC and worked with legendary jazz greats.

Sullivan Fortner Trio

Feb. 18

A Grammy Award®-winning pianist, composer and band leader, Sullivan Fortner pulls distinct elements from different eras, preserving tradition while evolving the sound.

Clark Gibson Quintet

March 5

A star-studded original jazz music project featuring bandleader Clark Gibson on alto saxophone; trumpet performer, Sean Jones; trombonists Michael Dease; two-time Grammy®-nominated organist Pat Bianchi; and drummer Lewis Nash.

Subscribe to Starrlight Jazz Club

Subscriptions for both the West Street Live and Unilever Starrlight Jazz Series are available now by clicking the buttons above, by visiting waltonartscenter.org or by calling our box office at 479.443.5600. Single tickets for both series will go on sale later this summer.

Five Memories to Share through "My Walton Arts Center"

We recently marked our 29th anniversary at Walton Arts Center. To celebrate the milestone and in looking ahead to our 30th anniversary, we launched My Walton Arts Center, a year-long campaign to collect memories from patrons, volunteers, staff, artists and partners.

The project launches as we are gearing up for the return of Broadway shows and full-scale performances after over a year of modified operations due to the pandemic. During the performance suspension, we consistently heard from patrons and community members about how much Walton Arts Center means to them. This inspired us to capture those memories and celebrate our place in the cultural fabric of Northwest Arkansas for nearly three decades.

 We’re looking for all kinds of memories—the first show you saw at WAC, what you value most about WAC, a favorite memory attending a WAC event with family or friends, a time you got to be part of an educational experience or why you consider WAC to be your theater.

 Memories can be submitted in two ways.

Option one: call us and leave a voicemail! We’ve set up a special My Walton Arts Center voice mail box. Just call 479.571.2702 and state your name, the city you’re calling from and your memory.

Option two: visit our website. The My Walton Arts Center page on our website. Follow the instructions there to record your memory.

 Our goal is to incorporate memories from the community into our 30th anniversary celebration in 2022. By recording your memory, patrons give Walton Arts Center permission to use their voice or memory in next year’s celebration.

Five Ideas for Memories to Share

Your First Time at Walton Arts Center

WAC’s Grand Opening in 1992

WAC’s Grand Opening in 1992

We’ve been here for almost 30 years—did you see a show in our first season in 1992? Or maybe you discovered WAC when you recently moved to the area? Tell us how you found us and what the first performance you saw in our venue was!

A favorite show you’ve seen at WAC

In a normal year, we host over 500 events in the Northwest Arkansas region including Broadway, dance, classical music, VoiceJam, Artosphere and more. What is your favorite performance you’ve seen? Maybe a singer-songwriter you discovered through West Street Live, seeing touring Broadway show you’d waited years to experience, traipsing through Artosphere: Off the Grid with family or even a concert at the AMP? Tell us about it!

An Educational Experience

During a normal school year, over 26,000 students hop onto school busses to see an educational show at WAC. Did you take a field trip to WAC as a child? Maybe you’re a teacher who looks forward to bringing their students to a show—or even a parent who makes a point to be a field trip chaperone when your child is heading to WAC. Tell us what you learned from visiting WAC or why you enjoyed the educational show!

Your Performance at WAC

We want to hear from artists too! Touring performers visiting our venue often say that the Northwest Arkansas area is a hidden gem on their tour route. Have you performed at WAC before? Tell us why stopping here sticks out in your memory.

Special Events

WAC knows how to plan a party! We host special events like Art of Wine and the Masquerade Ball, but we also throw patron events too! Did you attend a gala, a private party or even a wedding at WAC? Tell us why your special night at WAC was one to remember.

Patrons enjoy Art of Wine: Uncorked! (Novo Studio)

Patrons enjoy Art of Wine: Uncorked! (Novo Studio)

2021 Artosphere Photography Contest Winners

This year Artosphere, Arkansas’ Arts + Nature Festival, returned following a year off during the COVID-19 outbreak. For the annual Artosphere photography contest, Arkansas-based photographers submitted original photos inspired by the theme “art in nature.” Adjudicator Rebecca Drolen, assistant professor of photography at the University of Arkansas, selected a grand prize winner and nominated several photos for the People’s Choice Award, which was voted on by members of the public. We are excited to announce the winners of this year’s competition!

Grand Prize Winner: Elijah Aron

“Black Vulture at Lee Creek” by Elijah Aron

“Black Vulture at Lee Creek” by Elijah Aron

Judge’s Statement: Aron’s dramatic photograph of a vulture has a dream-like quality that complicates the notion of a nature photographer as someone who simply documents.  Aron's intimate photograph inspires wonder as well as some intimidation at the beauty and closeness of these creatures.

Artist Statement: My dog Sonja and I were out in the woods testing a rare cine lens (the Schneider Xenon 50mm f0.95) when we stumbled upon this black vulture. I slowly approached it as Sonja waited nearby. I was only about 10 feet from the bird as I captured this shot before it flew to a higher position.

People’s Choice Award Winner: Jade Edster

“Frozen Bubble” by Jade Edster

“Frozen Bubble” by Jade Edster

The People’s Choice winner was chosen based on voting that took place via Walton Arts Center’s Facebook page.

Artist Statement: A picture of the way bubbles freeze in the extreme cold.

Thank you to everyone who participated in this year’s Artosphere Photography Contest. There are still several events left in this year’s Artosphere lineup, including a performance by Dover Quartet, the signature Trail Mix event, the Artosphere film series and Art Heist, a immersive true-crime theater experience! Find tickets, info and more at artospherefestival.org.

Click here for Artosphere tickets and info!

Nonprofit Partner of the Month: Arkansas Immigrant Defense

This winter Walton Arts Center launched the Nonprofit Assistance Program to provide assistance to fellow nonprofits within our community. Made possible by support from Walmart, the Nonprofit Assistance Program enables Walton Arts Center and the Walmart AMP to share resources, like space and the talents of our team, so local nonprofits can continue to pursue their missions.

We might not all serve the same people or the same causes, but we all work together to make Northwest Arkansas better.

Our team of advocates contacted local nonprofits about the resources available to them through the program, including:

  • Complimentary space for a socially distanced meeting or small private event

  • Walton Arts Center and/or the Walmart AMP as a drop-off location for collection drives

  • Consultation with staff members

  • Professional services

  • Volunteers for projects and events

The response has been amazing, not just in the requests for assistance, but in the myriad of nonprofits who continue working hard, despite current challenges, to meet the needs of our community. If you want to learn more about the Nonprofit Assistance Program please visit waltonartscenter.org/nap.

In addition to helping, we also wanted to introduce you to some of the dedicated people and organizations who are making a difference every day. So, we will be highlighting a nonprofit partner of the month. This month we want to introduce you to Arkansas Immigrant Defense (AID). Walton Arts Center provided volunteers to help pack and deliver fresh food to area immigrant and refugee families.

5 Things You Need to Know About Arkansas Immigrant Defense

Luis Paganelli Marin

Luis Paganelli Marin

Luis Paganelli Marin, COVID Coordinator for AID

1.    AID is a nonprofit law firm that provides immigration legal services to immigrants and refugees, community education and advocacy primarily in NWA.

2.    As a result of the pandemic, AID clients have experienced income loss and food insecurity due to reduced work hours. In response, AID created a fresh food assistance program in partnership with St. James Food Pantry.

3.    The program has served over 4,200 individuals since October 2020 and will continue through the end of April 2021.

4.    Volunteers meet every two weeks to pack and deliver 160 boxes full of fresh foods to the doorsteps of food-insecure immigrant and refugee families across Washington, Benton and Carroll counties.

5.    Through partnerships with UAMS and the NWA Council, AID has also helped meet the needs of clients and members of the immigrant and refugee community by providing health education and rent/utility assistance.

 

How You Can Get Involved

Image from iOS (10).jpg

What is AID’s biggest need right now?

AID clients have disproportionately suffered from the social and economic effects of the pandemic and require broad financial relief for rent, utilities and other essentials including food.

How can people get involved with AID?

People can get involved by following us on social media, sharing our posts, signing up for packing or delivery volunteer opportunities and by reaching out to AID offering your advocacy, expertise and passion.

What do you want people to know/understand about the immigrant and refugee community in Northwest Arkansas?

Like other regions in the U.S., immigrants and refugees are integral to our communities. They are your friends, neighbors, co-workers and loved ones who seek to thrive with dignity in NWA.

Learn more about the work of AID at aidarkansas.com.

Statement on Discriminatory Legislation in Arkansas

WAC_TransgenderStatement.jpg

The current Arkansas legislature has passed and continues to discuss policies that unfairly restrict rights of the LGBTQ+ community, specifically transgender Arkansans. This type of legislation does not advance the interests of all Arkansans as it harms individuals and impacts the ability of businesses and industries across the state to recruit talent and bring artists and tourists to the region.

This legislation does not reflect Walton Arts Center's core values and commitment to create inclusive spaces where everyone feels welcome to experience the performing arts. We are committed to working alongside stakeholders across the state to ensure Arkansas laws reflect an inclusive and equitable community.

Walton Arts Center’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Mission Statement

Walton Arts Center brings great performing artists and entertainers from around the world to Northwest Arkansas, connecting and engaging people through inspiring arts experiences. We are committed to presenting these experiences in and from an environment that is inclusive, equitable, and diverse, free from hate and violence. We embrace all races, ethnicities, and genders with compassion; we amplify authentic voices; and we exemplify curiosity about the peoples, cultures, and perspectives of our global community.

WAC-Front-Exterior-TW.jpg

Diversity Digest: Black History Month

Each month, Walton Arts Center’s staff Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee distributes an employee newsletter highlighting the DEI focus for the month, recommendations on DEI resources and more. Starting this month, we’re sharing portions of that newsletter here on our blog. This month’s newsletter celebrates Black History Month.

Black History Month Must-See Movies and TV by Mallory Barker, School Services Specialist

Black History Month Must See Movies & TV (1).png

The weather outside is frightful and most of us are still stuck inside a la COVID, so what better way to celebrate Black History Month than with the perfect binge-worthy watch list!  Whether you want to take a look back and celebrate where we have come from, relive historic moments, relish in a good love story, or just enjoy a good Indie film, this list has got you covered! Here’s my list of must-see films and television during Black History Month. 

1.    Sylvie’s Love – When a young woman meets an aspiring saxophonist in her father’s record shop in 1950’s Harlem, their love ignites a sweeping romance that transcends changing times, geography and professional success. Streaming on Amazon Prime

2.    Queen Sugar Queen Sugar, follows the life of three siblings who move to Louisiana to claim an inheritance from their recently departed father-an 800-acre sugarcane farm. Season four begins on February 16th so you can binge the first three seasons now and catch new episodes on OWN.

91SLzt0pF4L._RI_.jpg

3.    Insecure-Created by and starring Issa Rae, this acclaimed HBO comedy series centers around best friends Issa and Molly as they navigate the challenges of being black women who defy all stereotypes. Streaming on HBO Max

4.    Toni Morrison, The Pieces I Am - Author Toni Morrison leads an assembly of her peers, critics and colleagues on an exploration of race, history, America and the human condition. Streaming on Hulu

5.    Malcolm and Marie - John David Washington and Zendaya star in this “not a love story…love story”. Washington stars as a filmmaker who returns home with his girlfriend (Zendaya) on the night of a successful movie premiere. Smoldering tensions and painful revelations push them toward a romantic reckoning.  Streaming on Netflix

one-night-793x1175.jpg

6.    One Night in Miami - On the night of Feb. 25, 1964, in Miami, Cassius Clay joins Jim Brown, Sam Cooke and Malcom X, and they discuss the responsibility of being successful black men during the civil rights movement. Streaming on Amazon

s592.jpg

7.    I Am Not Your Negro - This 2016 documentary film is based on James Baldwin's unfinished manuscript Remember This House. Narrated by actor Samuel L. Jackson, the film explores the history of racism in the United States through Baldwin's reminiscences of civil rights leaders Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., as well as his personal observations of American history. Streaming on Hulu

8.    Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom - Tensions and temperatures rise at a Chicago music studio in 1927 when fiery, fearless blues singer Ma Rainey joins her band for a recording session. Streaming on Netflix

9.    Bridgerton - The eight close-knit siblings of the Bridgerton family look for love and happiness in London high society. Inspired by Julia Quinn’s bestselling novels. Streaming on Netflix

10.  Middle of Nowhere – When her husband is sentenced to eight years in prison, Ruby drops out of medical school in order to focus on her husband’s well-being while he’s incarcerated-leading her on a journey of self-discovery in the process.

I Was Wrong: Reflections On Growing as an Ally by Rachel Burkevich, Programming Specialist

Originally, I had intended to call out “Black Female Excellence” in this piece….

That is, until I read a blog post shared on Facebook by a playwright who I had intended to highlight no less. The post is called Full Stop: Casually Anti-Black Behaviors You Need to Quit NOW and is written by playwright Sharai Bohannon.

Her FIRST point in a list of 17 is “Don’t co-opt phrases like ‘Black Excellence,’ ‘Black Girl Magic,’ or ‘Black Boy Joy,’ or anything similar to those phrases.” Which is exactly what I was about to do.

I encourage everyone to take the time and read her entire post linked above, but basically she is saying that those phrases and accolades are not for white people to determine and give. 

That realization just reminds me The point that I would now like to make with this piece is that we are always learning. It is so important to note when we are wrong and not hide in our shame. By sharing our ignorance others can learn, and the trauma we cause can finally begin to dissipate. Admit when we’re wrong. Apologize (publically when necessary). Do not pretend that it didn’t happen. And then change the behavior.

Having said that, we should absolutely not ignore lists of “Black Excellence” or Netflix’s “Celebrating Black Voices” category - but we should notice who has made the list. Who has collected these names, movies, songs, etc. and told me they are important? 

I was wrong to assume that I had any authority to curate a list of “Black Excellence”. I apologize and I will do better. I will continue to listen, read, and use my privilege to amplify voices that are often not heard. Please read Shari’s full post. 

 

Lessons in Resiliency from the Story of Annie Easley

The best stories come from real life, and that’s the case with a show featured as part of this year’s virtual Colgate Classroom Series. Students have the opportunity to learn about an amazing Black mathematician thanks to Syracuse Stage’s Resiliency, a virtual arts education experience using the play Commanding Space: The Rise of Annie Easley and the Centaur Rocket.  

The education unit is based on the life of Annie Easley, a Black woman who worked for 34 years at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, known today as NASA.

Daisha Abdillahi appears as Annie Easley in Commanding Space

Daisha Abdillahi appears as Annie Easley in Commanding Space

When Easley was hired as a computer in 1955, she was one of just four African Americans out of 2,500 employees – a true trailblazer in her field. Easley quickly realized her dream was to be on the team of mathematicians working to launch the Centaur Rocket.

During her life, she saw many incredible changes both in the workplace and in the country at large. Annie’s resiliency is a personality trait that helped her to succeed despite adversity. Her mother always told her that she could be anything she wanted to be as long as she worked at it and that instilled in her a drive and determination that led to her long and groundbreaking career.

Syracuse Stage produced a play about Easley’s life, Commanding Space: The Rise of Annie Easley and the Centaur Rocket by playwright Stephanie Leary, and took it to schools in their area.

“It brought me such joy to be able to introduce to a lot of students who don’t have access to theater to such a wonderful show about such a strong, beautiful human that really teaches them the importance of striving for something,” said MiKayla Hawkinson, stage manager for the original production of Commanding Space and community engagement and education specialists with Syracuse Stage.

MiKayla Hawkinson addresses students in one of the educational videos from Resiliency

MiKayla Hawkinson addresses students in one of the educational videos from Resiliency

Because of the impact of the stage production, Syracuse Stage wanted to find a way to take Easley’s story to a larger group of students.

Resiliency is targeted toward grades 2-8, but the lessons about the importance of resiliency taught through the lens of a Black woman mathematician in the age of Jim Crow, are applicable to all. The virtual arts experience includes clips from the original play about Easley but students also get to hear from the actor who plays Easley and the playwright and learn how their own resiliency has helped them.

Ultimately, this story about a bright, driven, resilient young woman of color gives us a personal glimpse into her life, her dreams and her challenges. And Easley’s drive and determination encourages all of us to cultivate our own resiliency tools to reach our goals.

For more information on Resiliency and other virtual educational arts experiences available to Arkansas teachers through the Colgate Classroom Series, visit our website.

Spirit of Holidaze Continues with Charitable Donations

Holidaze brought some cheer to the end of a difficult 2020 when the pop-up bar was able to safely open in Walton Arts Center’s indoor and outdoor spaces. Now, that cheer is continuing into 2021 in a tangible way with charitable donations made to local nonprofits from the bar’s proceeds.

IMG_1669.jpeg

The Stony Bird was the signature cocktail for Holidaze, and a Secret Santa donated $10 for each one purchased. Patrons purchased 928 cocktails resulting in $9,280 raised. Fayetteville Independent Restaurant Alliance, Northwest Arkansas Equality, Peace at Home Family Shelter and Roots Festival’s Meals for Musicians will each receive $2,320. Each of these nonprofits does important work for our community.

Two of these nonprofits, Fayetteville Independent Restaurant Alliance (FIRA) and Meals for Musicians benefit employees in industries hard-hit by the pandemic. FIRA provides resources for local hospitality professionals with a focus on livable wages, healthier lifestyles and access to benefits that are not often prioritized in the industry. Roots Meals for Musicians provides meal care packages for members of the music community to help them bridge the gap during these uncertain times.

The two other nonprofits benefitting from Holidaze proceeds, NWA Equality and Peace at Home Family Shelter, focus on creating safe, inclusive spaces in our community. NWA Equality provides programming, education and advocacy to serve, connect and empower the LGBTQ+ community in Northwest Arkansas.  Peace at Home Family Shelter provides shelter, services and support to women, men, and children fleeing domestic violence in Northwest Arkansas.

In addition to funds raised from Stony Bird sales, FIRA also hosted its annual “Nog Off” eggnog competition. Participants included bartenders and mixologists from nine local restaurants, bars and breweries. Amber Hurlbut from Infusion took home the trophy, and the event raised an additional $800 for the FIRA which will be used in their efforts to provide relief to hospitality professionals

As the host location for Holidaze, Walton Arts Center’s Ghost Light Recovery Fund will receive $30,000. The Ghost Light Recovery Fund helps Walton Arts Center offset lost revenue from canceled performances, continue education and public programming, maintain facilities and support staff until full-scale performances can resume.

More than 9,400 patrons attended Holidaze during its 40-day run. Holidaze and Walton Arts Center were able to employ 22 hospitality workers and 30 event staff, and throughout the run seven artists or groups were hired to provide entertainment for patrons. Workers in these industries have been hard-hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, and this seasonal employment provided some relief for the workers and artists.

We are proud to have partnered with Holidaze for the 2020 iteration of the festive Fayetteville favorite, and even prouder of the good it will do in our community.  

Celebrate Arkansas Profiles Bret Shuford and "Charming"

Celebrate Arkansas recently chatted with Bret Shuford, who is bringing his one-man show Charming: A Tale of an American Prince to Walton Arts Center this month. This piece appeared in Celebrate’s January issue. Read on to hear the inspiration behind Shuford’s show, why he’s particularly excited to bring it to Northwest Arkansas and more. Charming: A Tale of an American Prince hits the Walton Arts Center stage for one night only on January 16. Get tickets here!

By Marisa Lytle

We always hear the tale from the princess’s point of view, but what about from the prince’s? In his one-man show, Charming: A Tale of an American Prince, Broadway actor Bret Shuford bucks tradition and presents a refreshing take on the fairy tales and musicals we all love.

dscf5500.jpg

In Charming, Shuford tells the tale of one prince’s trek from the faraway kingdom of Texas to a castle in The East Village. Shuford’s quest is highlighted by the music of Stephen Sondheim, Steven Lutvak, Prince the Artist, Stephen Schwartz, Rascal Flatts, Sara Bareilles, and more, with a little Disney magic thrown in for good measure. Friendship bracelets, giants, and perhaps even a furry woodland creature help guide this prince along the way. Will he get his “happily ever after”?

According to Shuford, Charming was born out of a cabaret conference he attended at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center in Wisconsin several years ago. For him, the show became a unique way to tell his own autobiographical story of growing up in southeast Texas and the tension he felt with his family over politics and religion, as well as his early struggles with his sexuality. Performing a one-man show like this, he says, is definitely a vulnerable experience.

“My hope with this show is that people, especially right now, will be lifted up and have some hope and see that there’s a lot that’s in there that you can pull from to live the life you want to live,” Shuford says. “You don’t need other people’s permission. The kingdom you’re looking for is within you. So, how do you become prince or princess of your own kingdom?”

With musical direction by Tracy Stark and direction by Lennie Watts, Charming, A Tale of an American Prince features Shuford, a Texas native bitten by the theater bug at a very young age who has spent the last 20 years working in New York City. He has been seen on Broadway in The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Cirque du Soleil’s Paramour, and Wicked. In addition to working as a Broadway actor, he found a passion for being a content creator, director, choreographer, producer and collaborator with other artists.

“Charming has some really great medleys that Tracy and I put together,” Shuford says. For example, “Something Better Than This” from Sweet Charity mashes up with a song from Into the Woods, and Shuford teases intriguingly that he performs a solo version of “Agony,” which in its original Broadway stage form is a humorous duet sung by two sparring brothers.

dscf5611.jpg

For the past year, while Broadway has been shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Shuford hasn’t been able to do any theater work and no acting work other than sending in a few audition tapes for ads and commercials. While he and his husband, Stephen Hanna, were self-isolating, someone made an offer on their New York City apartment, so the couple sold it and moved to Texas to be near Shuford’s family. He says he was very grateful to receive the call from Walton Arts Center asking him to perform Charming at the beginning of this year.

As an acting teacher, Shuford has tried to bolster his students’ morale during the pandemic by likening current events in New York City to the trouble the city faced after the terrorist attacks of 9/11. He was living and working in NYC at the time and says that although that was a really tough time for the city, they got through it, and they’re going to get through it this time, too. Additionally, the advice he gives is this: “I would say, the main thing right now is to be gentle with yourself. Don’t expect to be really on top of creating and working right now. We are grieving and mourning. You have to be gentle with yourself. But also, don’t get lost in that. Every day, try to do two or three more things that take you a step closer to who you’d like to be.”

In looking to the future, Shuford says one of his main goals is to be a dad. Professionally, his dream role would be to create something new that makes an impact and that causes people to say, “Wow, that’s that role that Bret Shuford created.”

Get Tickets for Charming: A Tale of an American Prince

Education Returns to WAC with Small Group and Virtual Tours

Under normal circumstances, Walton Arts Center’s Learning and Engagement teams would be welcoming busloads of students from area schools into our building for Colgate Classroom Series performances, artist talkbacks, workshops and other educational activities. While that isn’t possible right now—that hasn’t stopped our team from finding new ways of engaging with students!

Sallie Zazal shows the Teen Leadership ‘X’Perience Group the Baum Walker Hall stage

Sallie Zazal shows the Teen Leadership ‘X’Perience Group the Baum Walker Hall stage

The L&E team is now offering in-person and virtual venue tours, giving students or community groups an opportunity to learn about the various spaces in Walton Arts Center including the unique opportunity to go on-stage and backstage.

Recently, the L&E team continued WAC’s relationship with the Fayetteville Chamber of Commerce’s Teen Leadership ‘X’Perience. The program engages high school juniors and educates them about community issues while also connecting them with local businesses, nonprofits, educational institutions and public offices.

Two groups from the program’s current cohort visited WAC in early November for small, socially distant venue tours lead by Sallie Zazal, director of L&E. The students also learned about WAC’s history and place in the Fayetteville community. After the tour, they were joined by President and CEO, Peter B. Lane, in the Bradberry Rose Garden for a question and answer session. The students diligently took notes and photos for a presentation given to their larger cohort.

Peter B. Lane answers questions from students in the Bradberry Amphitheater and Rose Garden

Peter B. Lane answers questions from students in the Bradberry Amphitheater and Rose Garden

“It’s been so great to have students in the building again,” Zazal said of the tour. “Working with students is such a huge part of who we are and what we do and we didn’t realize how much we were missing that interaction until we started giving these tours again. It’s really helped us rediscover our purpose, and it’s so good to have learning happening in Walton Arts Center.”

For larger groups, the L&E team has adapted their venue tour to a virtual format. The virtual tour process was recently piloted with a local Girl Scout troop. Each troop member joined the tour from home via a Zoom meeting while L&E team members Mallory Barker, Sallie Zazal and Dr. Patricia Relph joined the meeting from various spaces in the venue, allowing for smoother transitions during the tour.

Mallory Barker took the troop through patron-facing spaces including Tyson Plaza, Walker Atrium and the General Mills Box Office. Sallie Zazal then showed off the stage in Baum Walker Hall and included educational touchpoints about the theater’s proscenium arch and fly system. Finally, Dr. Pat taught the scouts about Starr Theater’s black box layout and how it can be adapted for many kinds of performances.

The virtual tour format was successful and has been offered to all teachers that the L&E team works with on a regular basis. Any groups interested in a tour can contact Sallie Zazal at szazal@waltonartscenter.org.

Dickson Street Gift Guide

IMG_7076.JPEG

Small businesses and nonprofits have been hit hard this year due to COVID-19. Now more than ever, it’s important to support local business. With the holiday season upon us, you can do just that while also marking friends and family off your gift list!

Walton Arts Center is a member of Dickson Street Merchants, an organization of businesses that celebrate Dickson Street as an epicenter for culture, cuisine, entertainment and the arts. We’re offering gift cards this holiday season (they’re good for five years!) and several other members of our partners in Dickson Street Merchants offer gift cards too. We’ve put together some gift ideas that will help you mark off your gift list while also supporting local.

Dinner and a Show

First up, give the gift of an arts night out! Pair a gift certificate from Walton Arts Center with a gift card to Bordinos Restaurant and Wine Bar, an upscale restaurant on Dickson Street. Your loved one can enjoy a meal before or after taking in a performance at Walton Arts Center—be it a smaller Procter & Gamble Ghost Light Programming show or a Broadway show when full-scale performances return.

A recent menu item from Bordinos (credit: Bordinos on Facebook)

A recent menu item from Bordinos (credit: Bordinos on Facebook)

With this idea, your gift will not only support local businesses but will have even more of an impact! Throughout the month of December, Bordinos will donate $10 to the Fayetteville Independent Restaurant Alliance (FIRA) for every $100 spent on gift cards. FIRA provides immediate financial relief to local hospitality professionals in need, and is also one of the beneficiaries of funds raised through The Stony Bird drink sales and Nog Off at Holidaze at Walton Arts Center.

Cheers to You

For the alcohol connoisseur in your life, pair a bottle of their favorite booze from Dickson Street Liquor with a Walton Arts Center gift certificate that can be redeemed for a Broadway cocktail class. One of our performance add-ons during full-scale programming is a series of cocktail classes where patrons learn to make craft cocktails created by local bartenders and inspired by Broadway shows! With this gift, you give a fun experience to look forward to and a bottle that will come in handy as they recreate those themed cocktails at home.

Live Music Legacy

We can’t forget live music lovers! Walton Arts Center gift certificates can also be redeemed for tickets at the Walmart AMP. Grab a gift certificate and a piece of merchandise from George’s Majestic Lounge, a iconic music venue right down the street from Walton Arts Center, for a gift that the supports live music in Northwest Arkansas. George’s also offers gift certificates that can be purchased on-site.

The Local List

Dickson Street Merchants member businesses that we confirmed as offering gift cards or gift certificates this holiday season include:

  • Walton Arts Center

  • C4 Nightclub & Lounge

  • Wasabi

  • Farrell’s

  • Marley’s Pizza

  • Bordino’s Restaurant & Wine Bar

  • Puritan Coffee & Beer

  • George’s Majestic Lounge

Other Members of Dickson Street Merchants:

  • Collier Drug Store

  • Infusion

  • Brewski’s

  • Theo’s

  • Arsaga’s at the Depot

  • Buster Belly’s Bar

  • Dickson Street Liquor

No matter where you shop this holiday season, we hope you’ll consider supporting Dickson Street Merchants and other local businesses and give a gift that also gives back!

Purchase WAC Gift Certificates
A preview of merchandise available from George’s Majestic Lounge (courtesy of George’s)

A preview of merchandise available from George’s Majestic Lounge (courtesy of George’s)