symphony ticket
Tickets for the next performance of the Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra Orchestra Series will be held at the Raising Cane River Center Performing Arts Theater, 300 St. Louis St., on Thursday, March 21 at 7:30 p.m. The concert will feature guest conductor Tania Miller. She directed Haydn's “Creation” program.
Tickets range from $19 to $65. Visit Baton Rouge Symphony.org.
central sherlock holmes
Tickets are on sale now for “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and the Elusive Ear,” which opens on Friday, April 5 at the Sullivan Theater, 8849 Sullivan Road.
Tickets are $25. Call (225) 778-8990 or visit sullivantheater.com.
Rosie Revere
Tickets for TheaterWorks USA's production of “Rosie Revere, Engineers & Friends” go on sale Sunday, March 24 at 2 p.m. at the Manship Theater in the Shaw Center for the Arts, 100 Lafayette Street.
Tickets are $25. Call (225) 344-0334 or visit manshiptheatre.org.
Gregorian calendar
Gregorian is a German band led by Frank Peterson that performs contemporary pop and rock songs inspired by Gregorian chant on Sunday, April 7 at 7:30 p.m. at the Manship Theater in the Shaw Center for the Arts. Tickets are on sale at. 100 Lafayette Street
Tickets are $36 to $46, call (225) 344-0334 or visit manshiptheater.org.
LSU's “Carousel”
Tickets for LSU's Turner Fisher Opera Center's production of Rodgers & Hammerstein's “Carousel” with the LSU Symphony Orchestra on Friday, March 22 at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, March 24 at 3 p.m. It is sometimes sold at LSU's Shaver Theater. Music and Dramatic Arts Building, Dalrymple Drive.
Tickets are $32 for general admission and $12 for student admission. For tickets, visit lsu.edu/cmda/events.
spring tap
The deadline for applications for the second round of the Greater Baton Rouge Arts Council's Talent Development Program is March 31st and will begin April 6th. The spring session, led by Chris Jeansonne, offers specialized training in video production that combines coursework and practice. About training from local experts.
Participants must be 18 years or older. The 10-week session will be held Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon at the Cary Saurage Community Arts Center, 233 St. Ferdinand St. To apply, visit artsbr.org.
Posting “Art Flow”
The Greater Baton Rouge Arts Council invites submissions for its biennial “Art Flow,” the capital city's first juried exhibition showcasing work by visual artists from across the Arts Council's 11-parish area. I am. Both literal and figurative expressions are encouraged for works inspired by the phrase “No Place Like Home.”
The application deadline is March 27th, and selection notifications will be sent on March 29th. The exhibition will be held from April 5th to May 15th at the Cary Solarage Community Art Center's Shell Gallery, 233 St. Ferdinand St.
For submission requirements, see artsbr.submittable.com/submit/287965/art-flow-2024-no-place-like-home.
At Elizabethan Gallery
The Elizabethan Gallery, 680 Jefferson Highway, is hosting a Women's History Month art exhibit featuring the work of Baton Rouge native and LSU graduate Carol Hallock. She is widely praised for her oil painting-like, loose strokes. She often paints the surrounding bayous and marshes from her kayak.
Other featured artists are Carol Creel, Marianna Calceve, Dana Mosby, Krista Roche, Kathy Daigle and Janice Evans, Kay Lusk and Felicia Noel, and Alice Michelle. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and Saturdays, 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
For more information, call (225) 924-6437.
In Opelousas
The Opelousas Museum & Interpretive Center, located at 315 N. Main St. in Opelousas, will honor Sgt. Bran Marks-Ardoin, St. Landry Parish's first female law enforcement officer, on Thursday, March 28th from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm.
When Bran Marks-Ardoin was a child, someone robbed his grandmother's house. This incident made a strong impression, and from then on, the girl from the small town of Grand Coteau began to admire her crime-fighting profession. Her family feared for her safety but could not stop her.
As an adult, Marks began working for the St. Landry Parish Sheriff's Office in 1973. Once he graduated from the police academy, he joined the Opelousas Police Department. Eventually, she moved to north Louisiana, where she worked in other fields, including narcotics. She held many positions including sergeant, detective, and undercover investigator.