Festival Of Lights returns to Harvest Moon Farm and Orchard through December 31st.

Follow the lit path through a fantasy land of lights and sound.

The fantastic Festival of Lights has returned to Harvest Moon Farm and Orchard in North Salem.  This is a great way to experience the holiday season. 

The orchard is has been  transformed into a wonderland of lights.  You begin at the bottom of the hill and walk through a tunnel of light.  The apple trees are wrapped in thousands of lights as your path winds you up hill. There is a special “under the sea” section this year with lighted fish, mermaids, octopus, and a spectacular display of jellyfish that float overhead.  Hidden speakers play the sound of running water.

Higher up the hill there are special light displays, farm tractors decorated in lights, and other interactive displays.  At the summit you  can enjoy the view back down the hill of the lights. Here is a great place to take a break and purchase a drink of cider or hot chocolate.

Harvest Moon states that there is over 500,000 lights in the display this year.   The trail is roughly one half mile long from start to finish and you can take your time enjoying the display.  The adventure continues as you make your way down hill past a snow globe, shooting star and much more.  As you conclude your magical tour, a tunnel of blue lights is the final step.  Back at the farm, grab a seat by the bonfire or inside the tent and enjoy some of the food and beverages for sale including giant pretzels, cider donuts, hot chocolate or some Hardscrabble Hard Cider.

The tunnel of blue light

Wear proper footwear for walking and dress warm.

For tickets and information: https://harvestmoonfarmandorchard.com/festival-of-lights

Harvest Moon Farm and Orchard

130 Hardscrabble Rd. North Salem NY, 10560

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Clybourne Park, the Tony award winning drama now on stage at Music Theatre of Connecticut

The moving and complex drama, Clybourne Park is now on stage at the Music Theatre of Norwalk.  This two act drama that is set in 1959 and in 2009 examines the state of race relations and of property ownership in the same neighborhood, fifty years apart. This play is both dramatic and thought provoking and we found ourselves talking about it long after its conclusion.

Act One introduces us to Bev (Susan Haefner) as the typical proper 1950s housewife.  Her husband Russ  (Frank Mastrone) is also introduced and we see the couple preparing to move from their home in a working class neighborhood  of Chicago.  The neighborhood is all white.  There is sadness about their move as we find that their adult son committed suicide in the house and the couple feel the need to start over elsewhere. 

The action begins to heat up when Karl (Nick Roesler) a neighbor and member of the community association enters the scene.  He attempts to unravel the sale of the house as he has learned a black family is the purchaser of the house and he and others fear the change to their neighborhood and destroy their property values.  The conversation escalates into an argument as Karl proposes legal strategies to void the sale.  Looking on the whole time are the black maid Francine (Rae Janeil) and her husband Albert (SJ Hannah) who act with remain out of the fray with an air of dignity but obviously repulsed by Karl and his overt racism.  Jim is not persuaded to call off the sale and asks where were the neighbors and their concern when their son died?

Albert offers to help carry a large foot locker belonging to the son down the stairs which Jim plans to bury in the yard.  The foot locker crashes down to the bottom of the staircase and the heavy thud had the audience riveted and questioning what was inside.

Act Two brings us into the year 2009 where we see the house in a state of disrepair.  The neighborhood for decades has been predominately occupied by African Americans who now witness white professionals buying up the homes due to the close proximity to downtown.  The entire scene involves a discussion between the architect, (Matt Mancuso) existing homeowners and the new owners Steve (Nick Roesler) and Lindsey (Allie Siebold) .  The script is now flipped.  The new homeowners want to tear down the existing house and build a larger modern house which is out of scale and style with the neighborhood.  The African American homeowners are resistant to the changes and the gentrification of the neighborhood.  The race relations of 1959 has totally been turned upside down, as the white professionals find themselves unwanted.  It reveals how little progress has been made in 50 years.  A little humor is sprinkled in this argument filled second act as the plumber comes in and out and finally reveals a foot locker he has discovered buried in the yard.  Will opening the box open or heal the wounds of Clybourne Park? Another fine production from MTC.

Written by Bruce Norris, and directed by Pamela Hill.  Kevin Connors is the Executive Artistic Director.Sound Design by Jon Damast, lighting Design by RJ Romeo, Costume Design by Diane Vanderkroef.Scenic Design by Martin Scott Marchitto ,Fight & Intimacy Choreography by Dan O’Driscoll Cultural Consulting by Dr. Sharon J. White and Stage Managed by Abbey Murray.

On stage through November 19th, 2023

For tickets and information https://www.musictheatreofct.com/clybourne-park

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