62 - CAPE GAZETTE, Friday, August I - August 7, 1997
Holt's Landing State Parkoffers summer family fun
Holts Landing State Park in Aug. 1, at I0 a.m. The limit is 15 pavilion. Also on Aug. 1, it's
Ocean View will host Kids' participants and the cost is $1.50 Seining the Bay time at 1 p.m. at
Crafts, an arts and crafts program per child. Register prior to pro- the beach area, and participants
designed just for kids on Friday, gram at booth and meet at the park are encouraged to wear shoes.
Kerry Kester photo
Students of Miss Flossie's Dance School in OceanView and
other performers participate in a week-long workshop con-
ducted by members of the International Ballet Theater prior
to performing at Rehoboth Convention Center Aug. 2.
International Ballet Theater
returns to Rehoboth Aug. 2
The International Ballet Theater
of the Performing Arts (IBT) will
perform at the Rehoboth Beach
Convention Hall at 6 pm, Aug. 2.
The IBT will highlight various
poignant moments of Russian bal-
lets and folk dances.
The featured performers, Ballet
Master Alexander Boitsov and
Prima Ballerina Irena Matiash,
will present such classics as
Bolero, Swan Lake, Gypsy Suite
and La Bayadere, the pride of
Russian culture.
These two performers are her-
aided as "groomed to be the
finest," "stunning skill as well as
wholehearted and wholespirited
energy."
The four founders and partners
of IBT, Vladimir N. Shumeikin,
Artistic Director/Choreographer;
Galina Shumeikina, Costume De-
signer, Alexander Boitsov and Ire-
na Matiash, collectively bring 60
years of experience to their shows.
They began the school to further
the unique quality of the Russian
School Ballet that they left be-
hind.
The Russian School Ballet was
where some of the world's great-
est ballet performers like Mikhial
Baryshnikov, Rudolph Nureyev,
Irina Matiash and Natalya
Makarova were trained.
The International Ballet Theater
of the Performing Arts (IBT) was
founded in the United States in
1992 by the four former schbol
mates to foster, maintain and pro-
mote the Russian jewels (Russia's
greatest ballets) of their heritage
by preserving and sharing with
new generations.
The ballet will begin with a per-
formance by the Classical Kids
Company from Flossie Vogel's
'Dance Factory, Inc.
The students will perform a
dance routine that was choreo-
graphed expressly for them by the
IBT company.
They will be immediately fol-
lowed by the members of the IBT.
The IBT dancers are either cur-
rent or former students of
Shumeikin.
Often guest artists from major
ballet companies in America and
abroad perform for their former
teachers at various theaters.
Joy V. Cadden, director of the
Flossie Vogel's Dance Factory,
Inc. said the gala is like a dance
recital, but it has some of the most
talented dancers you will ever see.
Her advice to any attending the
ballet is to dress casually and
comfortably, relax and simply en-
joy the performance.
Tickets are $15 for general ad-
mission and $12 for seniors and
students.
Tickets can be bought at the
door Aug. 2 or at J. Wilgus Clean-
ers in Rehoboth Beach, 227-7223;
South Bethany Seafood Market,
• Seashore Village Shopping Cen-
ter, Rt. 1, Bethany Beach; or
Dance Wear, Etc., Court Plaza
Shopping Center, 1506 Salisbury
Boulevard, Salisbury, Md.; or to
charge over the phone, call 1-800-
'552-2123.
BOOKSIGNING AT BROWSEABOUT BOOKS
Ballet Master Alexander
Boitsov and Prima Ballerina
Irena Matiash will showcase
many of the Russian ballet
and folklore classics, 6 p.m.,
Saturday evening at the Re-
hoboth Beach Convention
Hall.
The Hor,00
you &=, dine and
enjoy a00ca...
Kid's Night at the Sea under EAT FREE/
At/-You-Can-Eat Crablegs and/or Shrimp - $18.95
Wednesdg_
Lobster Night with Complete Lobster Dinner ~ $13.95
t_Jlq d2 rida H
Our Award Winning Seafood Buffet - $22.95
Saturday
Surf and Turf Buffet ~ $24.95
Seniors Off Entreds
! ~gn addition toom" specials, join us for the
raystar Dinner rChecter ¢kmtags • Saturdays ~
ea Horse Restaurant
330 Rehoboth Avenue • 302-227-7451
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK AT 4 P.M.
Seniors-lO% Off Entire Check Mon. thru Sat. 4-6p.m.
"Two W..us:
JURASSIC PARK."
-- Los ANGELES TIMES
A Novel of Deep Terror
Meet Steve Alten
Wednesday, August 6th
7-9p.m.
Synopsis:
The title share makes Jaws look like a guppy. Lurking
somewhere beneath the Pacific Ocean, a prehistoric
predator lives and breathes in the black depths --
Mogalodon, the lO0-miHion year-old, 60-foot-long,
20-ton granddaddy of today's great white shark.
When one of these monsters accidenUy reaches
the tropical heat of the ocean's warm surface,
only paleontologist Jonas Taylor has the knowl-
edge and expertise to keep it from destroying
everything in its path. It proudly trumpets itself
as Jurassic Shark.
133 Rehoboth Avenue • 226-BOOK