Daniel Eugene

This Week in New Haven (December 4 -10)

The holiday season hits high gear, and because this is New Haven, the ride is easily, expectantly shared between the mainstream and the countercultural.

Monday, December 4
Local artist Daniel Eugeneโ€™s photography series #NHVDrag is being exhibited at the New Haven Pride Center (84 Orange St, New Haven; 203-387-2252), starting with a 6 p.m. opening reception today. Featuring images of local drag queens and performances, organizers say โ€œthis event will focus on the photographs, their historical implication, documentary nature and the overarching dynamics of the evolution of gender and sexual identity.โ€ Free to attend.

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Peace on Earth - 2017 Christmas crรจche exhibit at the Knights of Columbus Museum

Tuesday, December 5
Through December 17, Long Wharf Theatre (222 Sargent Dr, New Haven; 203-787-4282) is conjuring the black, white and more importantly gray and sepia tones of the 1940s via The Chosen, a drama now out of previews. Following Reuven and Danny, two young Jewish men from rival sects who strike up an unlikely friendship, producers call it a โ€œstory of fathers and sons, tradition, modernity and the difficult choices one must make to achieve understanding.โ€ Tickets to tonightโ€™s 7 p.m. show cost $70.50 or $80.50, depending on where you sit.

Wednesday, December 6
Gateway Community Collegeโ€™s Chefs of Our Kitchen (COOK) series continues with featured guest John Baricelli, a lifelong chef and the owner of SoNo Baking Company and Cafe in South Norwalk. The evening begins with a 6 p.m. โ€œpre-event reception with wine, beerโ€ฆ soft drinks and hors dโ€™oeuvres,โ€ then finishes with a 6:45 interactive demonstration and meal, paired with beer or wine, of โ€œthree courses of delicious food prepared by the featured chef and GCC Hospitality Management students.โ€ Tickets, which include a memoir or recipe booklet by the guest chef and validated parking in the Temple Street Garage, cost $70. Church and George Streets, New Haven.

Thursday, December 7
Inside the quaint bookshop Books & Company (1235 Whitney Ave, Hamden), actors Colin Lane and Rebecca Zaretsky give โ€œa delightful, dramatic readingโ€ of Dylan Thomasโ€™s A Childโ€™s Christmas in Wales. Itโ€™s the seventh annual such reading, and it coincides with the storeโ€™s โ€œFall into Winterโ€ sale and Hamden Kidsโ€™ Gift Drive, the latter of which invites people to donate either by bringing โ€œa new, unwrapped giftโ€ or buying a gift from the shop at a 25% discount.

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Holiday party shopping at EBM Vintage and Civvies

Friday, December 8
The annual Odds and Ends Art Book Fair happens from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the lobby of the Yale University Art Gallery (1111 Chapel St, New Haven; 203-432-0601). โ€œThe fair includes books from small independent publishers who focus on art, architecture, photography and design; rare and limited-edition books and zines printed in short runs and showcasing a range of publishing endeavors; and artistsโ€™ books by students and alumni of the Yale University School of Art and the Rhode Island School of Design.โ€ Free to browse.

At Whitneyville Cultural Commons (1247-53 Whitney Ave, Hamden), the second annual Vegan Holiday Bazaar offers โ€œthreeโ€ฆ days of inclusiveness, celebrating people animals in harmony with the land.โ€ Active today from 5 to 9 p.m., Saturday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., nearly 50 gift vendors and 20 food and drink vendorsโ€”all cruelty-free, with some sticking around for the whole weekend and others popping in and outโ€”are currently announced, in addition to speakers and musical performers on Saturday. Admission costs $5.

At 7:30 p.m., The Second Movementโ€”a local group performing and organizing โ€œsocially conscious chamber musicโ€โ€”presents a concert of music inspired in part by Henry VIIIโ€™s five beheaded wives: โ€œSongs of Longing and Solitude: the music of Libby Larsen, Beethoven, Weinberg and Schubert.โ€ Happening at the First Presbyterian Church (704 Whitney Ave, New Haven), regular tickets cost $20 at the door or $15 in advance, with discounts available for students and seniors.

Saturday, December 9
Itโ€™s a very busy Saturday, especially in Westville. Starting at noon, an โ€œAnti-Mall : shop smallโ€ pop-upโ€”โ€œan eight-hour event focused on selling curated gifts and art for the holiday season,โ€ like ceramics, prints, skincare, jewelry, metal- and woodwork and moreโ€”fills up The Range at Lotta Studio (911 Whalley Ave, New Haven). A few blocks away at Lyric Hall (827 Whalley Ave, New Haven; 203-389-8885), a Flair Fair Holiday Bazaar offers quirky pins, buttons, patches and more from 1 to 7 p.m. At Kehler Liddell Gallery (873 Whalley Ave, New Haven; 203-389-9555), Deck the Walls, the galleryโ€™s annual holiday season group show, gets an opening reception from 3 to 6 p.m., coinciding with the launch of UNFRAMED, the galleryโ€™s annual unframed art sale. From 5 to 8 p.m., the first Westville Wine Walk, beginning from the Range at Lotta Studio, gives participants a glass and a map of spots where they can fill it, with tickets costing $20 at the door or $15 in advance. Meanwhile, at 5:30, Westvilleโ€™s annual tree lighting festivities take over the parking lot at Blake Street and Whalley Avenue.

From noon to 4 p.m. along Broadway, the Shops at Yale are putting on an ice carving competition to a soundtrack of live singing from the Whiffenpoofs, the Connecticut Yuletide Carolers and others. โ€œWatch as six professional ice carvers each transform 900 pounds of ice into a spectacular sculpture in only 4 hours,โ€ organizers say, touting โ€œgreat photo opportunities with the ice sculptures after the event.โ€ Free to attend.

From 4 to 6 p.m. in Marquand Chapel (409 Prospect St, New Haven), Yaleโ€™s Institute of Sacred Music hosts a performance of From Prison to Release, a work of theater in which โ€œsurvivors of the criminal justice system recount their journeys from prison to release.โ€ Co-created by ISM professor Ron Jenkins, students of his course โ€œPerformance Behind Barsโ€ and a group of formerly incarcerated men and their families, the play takes inspiration from The Divine Comedy, โ€œframed by Danteโ€™s journey from Inferno through Purgatory to Paradise.โ€ Free.

Sunday, December 10
Starting Friday at 7 p.m. and finishing today with 10 a.m and 1 p.m. performances, the Shubert Theatre (247 College St, New Haven; 203-562-5666) presents the very family-friendly Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Musical. โ€œItโ€™s an adventure that teaches us that what makes you different can be what makes you special,โ€ producers say. โ€œDonโ€™t miss this wonderful holiday tradition that speaks to the misfit in all of us.โ€ $39-89.

Written and photographed by Dan Mims. Readers are encouraged to verify times, locations and prices before attending events.

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