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A Charlie Brown Christmas

You know the story! See the play!
Tickets on sale for Dec. 7th 2013 St. Nick’s “A Charlie Brown Christmas” October 16th, 9:30am Tickets: $10 all ages.for 8:30/10:30am Breakfast or 12:30 pm lunch.Food provided by Jason’s Deli! Tickets on sale at www.theartplace.us or limited walk in purchases, check to MVAA or exact cash.

Date:
December 7, 2013 @ 8:30am, 10:30am, & 12:30pm

Admission:
All tickets are $10, sales begin October 16, 2013

Address:
The Art Place-Mt. View
3330 Sandy Plains Road
Marietta, GA 30066

Parking:
Event parking available in The Art Place parking lot.

For more information, please call 770-509-2700

“The Battle of Shallowford” Fall Dinner Theatre

“The Battle of Shallowford” includes that radio broadcast in this fun comedy with MVAA & Centerstage North Coffee-Dessert & Dinner Theatre Shows! October 11 @8pm and October 13 @2pm will be coffee-dessert shows for $15 and October 12 @ 6:30 will be appetizers, wine & dinner for $25 Online tickets will be through Centerstage North! In person purchases can be made at The Art Place and payment with exact cash or check to MVAA.The weekend will be a fundraiser for MVAA & The Art Place!Tickets on sale NOW at www.centerstagenorth.org or in person at The Art Place.

For more information visit: www.theartplace.us

Date:
October 11, 2013 @ 8:00-10:00pm
October 12, 2013 @ 6:30-9:00pm
October 13, 2013 @ 2:00-4:00pm

Admission:
-October 11 & 13: Coffee/Desert Shows $15 per ticket -October 12: Dinner show with wine, appetizers, and dinner $25 per ticket

Address:
The Art Place-Mt. View
3330 Sandy Plains Rd.
Marietta, GA 30066

Parking:
Parking available in The Art Place-Mt. View parking lot.

For more information, please call 770-509-2700

Better Breathers Club

Better Breathers Clubs are welcoming support groups for people with COPD or other lung diseases. Participants learn skills that help manage their condition and improve their quality of life. For more information contact Marilyn at 770-644-1565.

Date:
Noon – 1 pm
September 11, 2013
November 13, 2013
January 8, 2014
March 12, 2014
May 14, 2014

Admission:
free

Address:
WellStar Windy Hill Hospital
2540 Windy Hill Rd
Garden Room
Marietta, GA 30067

For more information, please call 770-644-1565

Empty Bowl Brunch

Purchase your tickets at The Art Place using exact cash or checks made out to Mountain View Arts Alliance (MVAA). The Empty Bowl Brunch consists of pottery teachers, staff, and students donating their time and talents to make bowls and then donate them to be sold for $15.00 a ticket. Our Empty Bowl Brunch has raised over $20,000 for local charities since our first brunch in 2002. Volunteers are needed to make bowls, donate soup, chili or bread, sell tickets, assist patrons in selecting bowls or serve food and beverages.

By far our favorite day of the holiday season! Get your ticket to purchase a beautiful hand made bowl decorated by our students, instructors and volunteers. Then wonder down the hallway for yummy donated soups or chili’s! All funds go to local charities helping to make everyones season bright!

Date:
December 15, 2013 11:00am-1:30pm

Admission:
Tickets are $15, sales begin October 16, 2013

Address:
The Art Place-Mt. View
3330 Sandy Plains Road
Marietta, GA 30066

Parking:
Event parking is available in The Art Place-Mt. View parking lot.

For more information, please call 770-509-2700

Cobb Diaper Day

The Cobb Diaper Day Committee is sponsoring a diaper drive with the goal of collecting more than 100,000 diapers for low-income families. The diaper day event was founded by a concerned group of community leaders with the goal of raising awareness that, in tough economic times, securing the most basic needs—having diapers to care for infants and children– is a challenge that low-income families face on a regular basis.

Cobb Diaper Day photo credit: cobbdiaperday.com
Cobb Diaper Day photo courtesy cobbdiaperday.com

“Raising a family today is difficult enough without the added burden of wondering where the necessities of life will come from,” said the late Cobb Diaper Day founder Barbara Hickey. “Often times it is the little things in our lives that make the biggest difference. Together, we can help hundreds of families in Cobb County by this single act.”  Barbara envisioned the community coming together to support local families in need and reminded us all that it is often the little things in our lives that make the biggest difference.

Typical problems that low income families face:

  • Food Stamps do not include hygiene products such as diapers.
  • Diapers are expensive – on average, the cost to purchase diapers is around $100/month.
  • Daycare centers require parents to provide their own diapers.

All sizes are needed and every donation helps. One package of diapers from your family or a truck load from your place of employment will make the difference in the life of a child. Cobb Diaper Day is asking the business community, concerned citizens and non-profit organizations to collect diapers from employees, members and friends throughout the months of September and October.

Organizations, companies and individuals are encouraged to participate in various
ways:

  • Make a donation at www.cobbdiaperday.com.
  • Purchase diapers on Amazon through the Cobb Diaper Day Wish-list.
  • Drop off donations on one of the community collection days at Cobb EMC Solar Flower Garden in Marietta on October 22, 2024 from 2 pm to 6 pm and October 24, 2024 from 2 pm to 6 pm.
  • Email DiaperDayCobb@gmail.com to schedule a pick-up.
  • Donate to the Barbara Hickey Children’s Fund for their committee to purchase diapers.

All donated diapers will be given to local charities to help ease some of the burden of the hundreds of families with infants and young children they serve.

For more information, please visit CobbDiaperDay.com or email diaperdaycobb@gmail.com.

Cobb Heart Walk

When you join Heart Walk, you join more than a million people in 300+ cities across America in taking a stand against heart disease and helping save lives!

The funds you raise in the Heart Walk will support projects like these:

  • Putting up-to-the-minute research into doctors’ hands so they can better prevent and treat heart disease among patients.
  • Groundbreaking pediatric heart and stroke research.  About 36,000 babies are born with heart defects each year —research is the key to saving babies’ lives.
  • Getting life-saving information to those who need it most – information that can save a life, like how to eat better, how to recognize the warning signs of heart attack, and how to talk to a doctor about critical health choices.

Date:
October 26, 2013
7:45 am – 10:00 am

Admission:
Must raise $100 to walk.

Address:
Marietta Square
4 Depot St
Marietta, GA 30060

Parking:

For more information, please call 678-224-2097 or visit www.cobbheartwalk.org

The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia

Movie presentation of The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia

The Big Picture: Rethinking Dyslexia provides personal and uplifting accounts of the dyslexic experience from children, experts and iconic leaders, such as Sir Richard Branson and financier Charles Schwab. Directed by James Redford, the film not only clears up the misconceptions about the condition, but also paints a picture of hope for all who struggle with it. Shining a spotlight on the latest scientific and psychological research, the film also highlights the work of Drs. Sally and Bennett Shaywitz, co-founders and co-directors of the Yale Center of Dyslexia and Creativity to illuminate the hidden origins and implications of dyslexia. Proving that dyslexia is a neurological issue and not a character flaw, The Big Picture beautifully illustrates that while the condition is an obstacle, it also carries some unique advantages, and ultimately can be overcome.

Date:
November 14, 2013 at 7:30 pm

Admission:
$12

Address:
GTC Merchant’s Walk Stadium Cinemas 14
1301 Johnson Ferry Rd
Marietta, GA, 30068

Parking:
plenty of free parking

For more information, please call (678) 560-1111 or visit http://www.tugg.com/events/5882

Habitat Road Race

20th Annual Habitat Road Race – 5K, 5K relay, 1 mile and Tot Trot. The proceeds from the race will be used to build Mt. Bethel’s 33rd Habitat for Humanity house.

USATF certification (Peachtree qualifier), chip timing and silent auction.

Post-Race Celebration: Refreshments, Concert by The Cottrells, food, vendor exhibits, amusements for kids … fun for the entire family!

For more information, please call Pam Skelton at (770) 971-6657 or visit www.HabitatRoadRace.com, www.facebook.com/habitatroadrace or twitter@HabitatRoadRace

Date:
October 5, 2013 at 8:00 AM

Admission:
$20 by October 1, 2013
$25 after October 1, 2013

Address:
Mt. Bethel UMC
4385 Lower Roswell Road
Marietta, GA 30068

Parking:
Parking onsite at Mt. Bethel UMC

For more information, please call (770) 971-6657

Cobb EMC: Illuminating 75 Years

cobb-emc-75-yearsWhile the North Georgia State Fair has been going strong for 81 years, this year another Cobb institution, Cobb EMC, is celebrating 75 years of its own. To mark such a historic year, Cobb EMC is holding its annual meeting at the North Georgia State Fair, promising a fun-filled day for Cobb EMC employees and their families. After the annual meeting wraps up in the arena, all attendees and their families will get their hands stamped to enjoy unlimited rides inside the park.

“For our 75th anniversary, we wanted to have a meeting with a carnival-like atmosphere,” says Mark Justice, associate vice president of education and community relations for Cobb EMC. “In the past, we’ve always had our meetings at Cobb EMC, but with 8,000 members, we really couldn’t have this celebration on site. The fair gives us a lot more room and it’s such a great, family-friendly place to meet.” Although the agenda for the company meeting has yet to be set, the morning will start at 9:30 with a performance by singers from Dodgen Middle School, and part of the day will be spent listening to Youth Tour delegates relate experiences from their recent trip to Washington, D.C.

Cobb EMC’s decision to celebrate at the fair is particularly fitting because all the glittering sights and sounds would be impossible without the steady, silent hum of Cobb EMC power. “I think this anniversary is very exciting for the community because there was a time when Cobb County was so rural, there was no electricity,” says Justice. “In the days leading up to the creation of Cobb EMC, the county was covered with farms and you could drive for miles and miles without seeing a single light.”

Though Edison’s great discovery had illuminated nearly every major city in the nation, 50 years after the invention of the light bulb, most rural areas remained in darkness because it was too expensive to run lines to the country’s most remote and under-populated areas. In a movement that became known as “the quiet revolution,” in 1935 the Rural Electric Administration enabled EMCs to empower their own communities by bringing electricity directly to their citizens.

As the quiet revolution hummed along, kerosene lamps and fireplaces gave way to washing machines, refrigerators and radios, which fueled the transformation of Cobb County’s farmland into booming suburban communities filled with top-rated schools, Fortune 500 companies and mammoth entertainment complexes. “On Dec. 17, 1938, Sen. Richard B. Russell flicked the switch to energize our lines and began the modernization effort that we now take for granted,” says Justice. “It was such a symbolic day because those first lines were really energized that day. Electricity is very much a necessity now, but when we began Cobb EMC was providing energy to 489 homes and 14 businesses. Today we have more than 177,000 members and many more meters.”

In celebration of the company’s 75 years in business, Cobb EMC designed a special 75th anniversary logo and has posted memorabilia and historic documents on its company Facebook page. There, interested consumers can find original documents about the electrification process, as well as historic newspaper clippings about how electrification progressed throughout the county. Cobb EMC will unveil additional documents and special events throughout the year as the company counts down to its anniversary on Dec. 17. “We are proud to have served our members for so many years and we look forward to the annual meeting at the North Georgia State Fair,” says Justice. “The venue is going to be a great, family-friendly place to have our meeting and we hope to have a great turnout.”

Keeping the Arts Alive in Cobb

keeping-arts-alive-in-cobb

The arts in Cobb County are growing immensely due to the host of museums, performances, festivals and concerts available in the area. Whether you’re passionate about dance, music or visual arts, local organizations are providing opportunities for people of all ages to develop their artistic abilities, all while staying local.

Shall We Dance?

The Georgia Ballet is committed to inspiring the students of Cobb County by teaching them to appreciate the art of dance. The organization is three-fold—encompassing a dance school, professional company and community outreach program. Now under new leadership, the ballet is offering more dance classes and expanding its performance season this year. “In the past we have had three professional performances, but this year we are looking to do five or six,” says Keri Toggerson, marketing associate for the Georgia Ballet.

Outside the Georgia Ballet’s dance school and live performances, the organization gives back to the community through its Arts in Education programs. The ballet offers field trip opportunities where Cobb County schools, as well as home school groups, can enjoy special daytime performances. “We make up a study guide for the performance that we send to the teachers beforehand to get students involved and so the teachers can learn more about the ballet as well,” says Toggerson.

The organization also offers a program for local Title I elementary schools called Momentum, giving underprivileged children the chance to learn the basics of dance training. “We do a six- to 12-week program, and the kids go to dance during physical education class once or twice a week,” Toggerson says. Kids in the Momentum program are also offered admission to the Georgia Ballet’s summer classes free of charge if they wish to continue their study of dance.

The final component of Arts in Education is the Dance-Ability program, a fully-funded dance class for special needs children. “It is for students who may not be able to perform in a traditional dance class,” Toggerson says. “We provide uniforms and ballet shoes, and we have a multitude of volunteers to help.” The ballet tries to pair each student with a volunteer and tailor the class so everyone can participate. This program is especially close to Toggerson’s heart, as she herself is a volunteer. Her student, Courtney, was diagnosed with a brain tumor four years ago. Today, at age 12, Courtney is in remission and has used dance to further improve her motor skills and cognitive function. “She came in a few years ago in a wheelchair, and now she walks through the door,” Toggerson says.

Strike up the Band

keeping-arts-alive-in-cobb-six-flagsSeveral events are happening across Cobb County to give local musicians the opportunity to showcase their talents. At Six Flags Over Georgia, musicians can perform in the amusement park through its Live and Local concerts. These concerts are performed daily for Six Flags patrons and are included in the price of admission. “It’s a way for the bands to get their face and name out there to the thousands of people at the park on any given day,” says Emily Murray, communications manager at Six Flags.

Another Cobb County event is helping to showcase local musicians of a very specific genre—smooth jazz. The 6th annual Atlanta Smooth Music Festival is on Sept. 14 from 1:30–9:30 p.m. at the Mable House Barnes Amphitheatre. “Since the demise of the jazz radio station, it has become increasing difficult to keep this genre alive,” says Joe Cleveland, managing partner of Jazz Grooves, LLC and promoter of the festival. “We are dedicated to bringing live music and performance arts to our community to support the improvement of the arts.”

The festival opens with local jazz artists, moving into national and international talent as the day progresses. “We always open with the local artists in an attempt to provide them with a little more exposure than they get every day playing at the smaller clubs throughout the area,” Cleveland says.

In addition to great music, guests can browse the marketplace and patronize local vendors, who will be selling items including food, clothing, jewelry and art. After each performance, the artists will also head to the marketplace to sign autographs and take pictures with fans.

Cleveland believes it is important for aspiring musicians to hear good jazz music through showcases like the Atlanta Smooth Music Festival. “To do a live performance, you have to be an accomplished musician,” he says. “But before you become accomplished, you have to be a student and learn not only the process and environment, but the particular instrument you are going to play.”

State of the Arts

With a multitude of exhibits, festivals and museums, the visual arts are also thriving in Cobb County. Helping to lead the art movement is the Marietta/Cobb Museum of Art. “The MCMA’s mission is to inspire and educate a diverse community through the exhibition, interpretation, collection and presentation of works of American art,” says Sally Macaulay, executive director of the museum.

The MCMA hosts several events throughout the year to bring patrons into the museum. Martinis and Music occurs four times a year where guests can enjoy live music and light refreshments, all while viewing the gallery’s art.

Under the direction of MCMA’s education director Katie Bush, the museum has also expanded its education programs. “With our new education program, we brought back summer art camps, expanded our art classes and introduced the Traveling Trunk program, where we go to different schools in Cobb County and take art to the classroom,” says Macaulay. “We also started a sensorial art program for children with sensory problems.”

Macaulay is passionate about supporting the arts—and has read the statistics to prove its importance. “I recently graduated from Art Leaders of Atlanta, where I learned that, statistically, children score better on achievement tests and SATs if they are exposed to the arts,” she says. “Also, the economic development of a city is greatly enhanced by having a variety of arts in the community.”

In addition to all the MCMA has to offer, plenty of other events are promoting the arts in Cobb as well. The Cobb Arts Ball is an annual event hosted by the United Arts of Cobb. This year, the event will be held on Oct. 26 at the Renaissance Waverly Hotel in Marietta with an old Hollywood glamour theme. “When I first signed on to help with the ball three years ago, it was just a regular ball,” says MaryClarie Andres, a special event producer in Cobb. “I wanted to make it very unique and bring in a lot of the arts. We started having a costume theme each year, paintings on site and performances from the different organizations and volunteers.”

Andres is also helping to promote a new event in the area. “I am working currently with a company that is putting on a hot air balloon festival at Kennesaw State University,” she says. “We will be having an artist market where people can come and debut their work and have it on display to sell.” The festival, where glowing balloons will take flight as a different take on a traditional art form, will take place on the evenings of Oct. 26 and 27.

“In my opinion, keeping the arts alive is keeping your community alive,” Andres says. “We have had a lot more galleries open up on the Marietta Square, and I think that’s wonderful. The fact that there are artists moving their work to Marietta says a lot for where the future of arts is going in Cobb County.”