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Beethoven’s “Eroica” with Naples Philharmonic
March 20 & 22, 8pm
Christopher Seaman—Conductor
Britten—Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra Haydn—Symphony No. 88 Beethoven—Symphony No. 3, “Eroica”
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The beloved former Music Director returns for one weekend. The program includes favorites from Britten and Haydn as well as Beethoven’s Third Symphony, “Eroica,” hailed as one of the most sublime works in classical music. Join us as the Naples Philharmonic offers their own heroic performance of this masterpiece.
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The Peking Acrobats
TONIGHT! March 17, 8pm
Building on an acrobatic tradition stretching back to the Ch’in Dynasty, The Peking Acrobats have dazzled audiences worldwide by “pushing the envelope of human possibility.” (New York Post) Come let this Guinness World Record-holding troupe take your breath away.
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Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
March 25, 8pm
Gianandrea Noseda—Principal Guest Conductor
Fauré—Pelléas et Mélisande Suite, Op. 80 Ravel—Ma Mère l’Oye (Mother Goose) Suite Ravel—Daphnis et Chloé Suite No. 2 Berlioz—Symphonie Fantastique, Op. 14
The internationally acclaimed orchestra takes to the stage for a program of exquisite French composition including the much belovedSymphonie Fantastique.
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A Tribute to Ella Fitzgerald Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra
March 23, 7pm
Don’t miss A Tribute to Ella Fitzgerald, the singing legend that brought us the hits Dream a Little Dream of Me, My Heart Belongs to Daddy and At Last. The program features many of Ella’s original big band arrangements by Count Basie and Billy Strayhorn.
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Barber of Seville
March 29, 8pm
Opera Naples with the Naples Philharmonic
Figaro! Figaro! Figaro! You would be hard pressed to think of a more perfect comic opera than The Barber of Seville. Full of cheek, charm and memorable music, Rossini’s masterpiece never fails to delight.
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Evita
April 1-6
The Broadway Production Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Tony Award®-winning musical returns at last.
Eva Perón used her beauty and charisma to rise meteorically from the slums of Argentina to the presidential mansion as First Lady. Adored by her people as a champion for the poor, she became one of the most powerful women in the world — while her greed, outsized ambition and fragile health made her one of the most tragic. Evita tells Eva’s passionate and unforgettable true story, and features some of theater’s most beautiful songs, including Don’t Cry for Me Argentina; Another Suitcase in Another Hall and High Flying, Adored.
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