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Little Art Theater

Explore. TEDxDayton Hype Event | Sept. 25 at Little Art Theatre

September 22, 2014 By Dayton Most Metro

Hype-Event2-300x111Ever wondered what it would be like to give ‘the talk of your lifetime’ at a TEDx event?

Find out by joining this year’s TEDx Dayton team along with Furaha Henry-Jones and Justin Howard, speakers from last year’s inaugural event, as we host a talk back session at the Little Art Theatre in Yellow Springs.

Following our theme, “Explore. Exchange. Excite,” speakers from last year will exchange information about the audition process, prep for the event, ‘day of’ concerns, and how their participation has impacted them. Ask your probing questions and learn all about what it

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Little Art Theater, TedX Dayton

$25 Monday Dinner & A Movie Deal

August 4, 2014 By Dayton Most Metro

rim1kuvfmeq7jstnhuoblrwtog71m1m4Two Yellow Springs businesses have found a way to make Monday’s worth looking forward to.  Enjoy a delicious dinner at Sunrise Cafe  and the latest independent movie at the newly refurbished Little Art Theater all for just $25.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Little Art Theater, Sunrise Cafe

Will You Help Fund the 5th Annual Horror Movie Marathon?

June 6, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Since 2007, the Little Art Theatre, now a nonprofit cinema, has hosted a horror movie marathon each October. The marathon has featured at least seven feature-length films annually, in addition to dozens of classic trailers, a costume contest, concessions, and more. Films have included classics as varied as Psycho, The Shining, Jaws, Videodrome, The Evil Dead, Evil Dead II, The Thing, Re-Animator, Repulsion, Night of the Living Dead, and Eraserhead. In past years the lineup has also included an area premiere, examples being Black Sheep, Splinter, The House of the Devil, and Best Worst Movie.

The cost of classic film rental and/or licensing is increasingly prohibitive. Each year, this event has grown its audience, but it’s always a struggle to break even while still putting on a worthwhile event. Though our preference would be to show 35mm prints of all the featured films, in the last couple of years we’ve turned to projecting films digitally in high-definition in an attempt to reduce costs. The event is always staffed by volunteers, and is often understaffed in critical areas like concession sales and projection.

We want this event to survive. We have a ton of fun putting it on, and we always get great feedback from our audience, who have come to look forward to the event each year. Yet each fall it becomes more and more difficult to plan the event with little feel for how it will perform, and weighing the very real risk that the event will lose money.

We need your help. We’ve set a goal of $2,500, which is the minimum cost to put on the marathon we’ve all come to know and love each year. In exchange for your $25+ contribution, you’ll be able to reserve your seat(s), and at the $100+ level you can also get a limited edition t-shirt, designed especially for the marathon.

If we exceed our minimum goal, every dollar you contribute above that will be invested in the event, too. We don’t just want the event to continue, we want it to be better than ever. That means:

1) More 35mm prints. See classic horror flicks in the highest possible resolution, in 35mm, on the big screen.

2) More films. Imagine a super-sized lineup — more than our usual seven or eight films. We’ve always reluctantly dreamed of putting on a 24-hour marathon, with a wide variety of classic fare — from suspense to hard gore. If you help us raise the money, we’ll summon the stamina.

3) More staff. Keeping a massive crowd well attended in a venue as cozy as ours for more than half-a-day is a challenge. If we can bring on more of our regular staff (in addition to our excellent volunteers) for the marathon, we’ll have the person-power to keep a better eye on the auditorium for disruptions like talkers and cell phone-abusers; to keep the concession stand fully stocked and operational throughout the entire event; and to tend to running projection more smoothly than ever.

This fest will only continue if they can reach the $2500 goal in funding by Wed, June 22nd.  As of this morning they had $575 raised.  If you’d like to help  click on the green button to the left.

Filed Under: Charity Events Tagged With: Annual Horror Fest, Horror Movie Marathon, Little Art Theater

Friends really can drop out of the sky!

March 7, 2011 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Imagine a warm summer day in July— you are shucking corn on your dairy farm when without warning, an old wood and fabric airplane just misses your silo and lands on your hay field…. followed by yet another antique flying machine.  What do you do?  If you are a young lad, you race toward these colorful contraptions and the brave souls piloting them screaming, “Wow! Cool!”

This scene was a common occurrence thousands of times throughout the Midwest in the 1920s and 30s, but it was not common at all when two such gypsy pilots “dropped in” unannounced on the Dirksen family’s farm in nearby Winchester, Indiana in 1999.

That accidental meeting between those bonded to the earth and those bonded to the sky initiated an annual fly-in that now features nearly a dozen vintage aircraft (plus local vintage automobiles to complete the ambience) and close to 200 neighbors, friends, and family… and as the documentary film Barnstorming celebrates, just showing up makes you part of the family.

We have the added value of witnessing something so special happening here in our own area.  The film features local landmarks and local individuals, and I find it particularly poignant that this annual celebration of flying at its most basic— wind in the wires, leather flying helmets, goggles, and silk scarves trailing in the slipstream— takes place just a short drive from the big iron at USAF Museum and the regular, unremarkable commercial flights in and out of Dayton International Airport.  Flying has long ceased being romantic because there is nothing romantic about being body-searched and crammed into an Airbus like clowns in a circus car.  But to hop into an open-cockpit Waco for a free spin around the patch? Simpler times indeed, and a smile guaranteed.

One of the pilots observes, “flying gives you an entirely different perspective, not only on the world but on life.” From 1,000 feet, the Midwest looks much the same as it did to the original barnstormers nearly 100 years ago.  There are many parts of our collective American mythology that, once we have studied the facts, we should be glad are gone forever.  This documentary, shot in a visually charming unpretentious style with a lovely soundtrack to match, is a timely reminder that there are some parts of Americana past that embody an innocence for which we have every right to wax nostalgic.

The title of the motion picture pays homage to those daring barnstormers of yesteryear—the pilots in this story are even prone to asking “WWWD?” What Would Waldo (Pepper) Do?— but Barnstorming is definitely not just for propeller-heads like this author.

The children in the film are as integral to this story as the pilots because both groups share the wonder of flight.  The sheer joy of the Dirksen kids straining their eyes skyward in unconstrained anticipation of the annual return of the airplanes to their farm is itself worth the price of admission.  As one very young girl asserts matter-of-factly, “I’ll just go in the sky.” And because the sky is so much larger than our television sets, this film demands to be seen on the big screen.

Barnstorming plays at the Little Art Theatre in Yellow Springs at 4:00pm Saturday, March 12.  For those of us without hayfields welcoming the gypsy pilots, this will be as close as we get to experiencing the “Wow! Cool!” of our own private air show.

Thomas Girvin is a local screenwriter and film professor who flies modern day light aircraft in real life and open-cockpit biplanes in his dreams.

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton Tagged With: Barnstorming, Little Art Theater, Thomas Girvin

Monday Night Dinner & A Movie Deal

September 19, 2010 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

In a very affordable package the Sunrise Cafe and the Little Art Theatre have partnered to present a Monday night dinner and a movie package for just $20.  The catch- you have to arrive in Yellow Springs for dinner by 6pm to take advantage of the this deal to make the 7:30 showing.

The Sunrise Cafe is known for using locally grown and organic food  and has many vegan and vegetarian option. There is no deep fryer or microwave in the restaurant,

Thai Peanut Tofu

so you can count on lots of fresh, home made options.  There is a special menu to choose from for the Dinner & a Movie promotion and it starts with  your choice of soup or salad. The entree choices include Sunrise Crab Cakes, a 5oz Waguy Sirloin, Thai Peanut Tofu, a Surf & Turf option and several pasta and risotto options as well.
Desserts change weekly and according to  the restaurant they’ve been featuring a lot of homemade sweet potato or pumpkin baked goods lately.  The package does not include drinks, tax or gratuity. And for drink options, be sure and check out the extensive wine list or enjoy one of their signature cocktails like the tart raspberry martini or even a blueberry fizz.

The Sunrise Cafe is located at 259 Xenia Ave and Little Art is just down the road at 247 Xenia Ave in Yellow Springs.


Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Little Art Theater, Sunrise Cafe, Yellow Springs

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