Friday, December 20, 2013

THE BICYCLE MEN!

Tonight is the opening of "The Bicycle Men, which will show tonight, tomorrow, and Sunday.

The guys are onstage right now, doing a sound check and rehearsing the song's shows.

Here are some behind the scenes shots:

John Rubano (R) sings a song as Craig Bushman, Dairy Technical Director, heads backstage.





Derek Manson works through a song as Ryan McCurry works the keyboard












Showtimes for "The Bicycle Men" are as follows:

Friday: 8pm
Saturday: 8pm
Sunday: 2pm

Tickets available at www.thedairy.org
Or by calling the box office at 303.444.7328

Thanks for supporting The Dairy and we'll see you soon!

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Our October 3rd Comedy Show Lineup!

Ladies and Gentlemen,

October is a huge month for Dairy Comedy, and the first show of the month is on Thursday, October 3rd. The lineup is as follows:




GREG BAUMHAUER (The Headliner)


Greg Baumhauer, sometimes referred to as the Dark Prince of Colfax, is a veteran Denver comic who just finished recording his first comedy album-- "Greg Baumhauer: Live at the Squire Lounge."
He performed at the recent High Plains Comedy Festival and is a regular on the Comedy Works rotation.





CHRIS CHARPENTIER


Chris Charpentier likes the lighter side of life, mostly because he is small and he has to ask for help with heavy stuff and that’s embarrassing.  Chris has quickly made a name for himself in the Denver comedy scene and helps run the weekly stand up showcase Too Much Fun! with his comedy cohorts, The Fine Gentleman’s Club.  He is as funny as he is nice and he is nice all day long.  Also, Chris wrote this.



 TIM MESSENGER

Tim Messenger delivers smart, thoughtful, comedy using absurdism and a dark lens of perception he is able to navigate between a number of comedic styles from biting sarcasm to an eccentric blend of silliness and wordplay. Tim began performing stand-up comedy in Denver and soon was performing all over the centennial state before relocating to Boston, then DC earning the laughs and respect from comedians and audiences alike. He recently returned to Denver taking the stage, and stuffing meaning and hilarity into his abnormal views of the world one joke at a time.



JAMES GOLD

James is a California transplant who spent two years writing family-friendly comedic theatre prior to making the transition into stand-up comedy. He is also a cartoonist and has just finished his first book of drawings entitled "Cartoons in the Key of Piranha."  



BOBBY CRANE (your host)

Bobby Crane is a staple of the Denver comedy scene and is also 1/4 of the comedy troupe known as the "Fine Gentleman's Club." The Fine Gentlemen have just released a comedy album and are fresh off the show at Fiddler's Green where they opened for Dave Chappelle and Flight of the Conchords.



For tickets to this show, please visit:
Or call the box office at 303-444-7328 
Please "like" Dairy Comedy Shows on facebook

Dairy Comedy Fans!

Dear Dairy Comedy Fans!
 
It is October which means your next dose of Dairy Comedy is here! Come enjoy another evening of comedy in an intimate space with comfy chairs. See you on Thursday, October 3 at 8:00pm and enjoy yourself with Greg Baumhauer, Chris Charpentier, Tim Messenger, James Gold and your emcee Bobby Crane. Sit Down to an evening of Colorado’s best Stand Up.  Ages 18+.  Tickets can be purchased in person, by phone or online: https://thedairycenterforthearts.secure.force.com/ticket/#sections_a0Fi0000004LyofEAC

Also, we are offering a pass for all three Dairy Comedy shows in October (3, 18, 31) which means savings for the entire month - $35.00.  Call The Dairy box office to purchase at 303.444.7328

Buy a ticket for yourself and even treat a friend to a hilarious night out at The Dairy!  As you all know, this is a very popular show in Boulder and these tickets are hot - Don't wait, get your ticket now.

See you on Thursday!
 
 

Friday, September 20, 2013

Meet Haley!

Undoubtedly, you've heard of these friends of ours:


 Re/Max of Boulder is not only a real estate company, they're also some really great people who have made The Dairy their Featured Friend.

And one of the things we like to do is highlight people who support The Dairy and ask them a couple of ridiculous questions combined with some serious questions, to get to know our friends a little better and to share the process with you guys as well.


Thus,

Meet Haley McKee, Social Media Coordinator for Re/Max of Boulder.

That's her! Right below there!




JG: Haley, where did you grow up?

HM: I grew up in a little town called Big Lake, Minnesota. I moved out here about 6 years ago when my mom landed a job here. I was in high school at the time, so I came out here with her.

JG: Okay, a weird hypothetical-- You have only one day where you can do anything at all that you'd like to do, and money is no object. What would you do?

HM: That's a hard one. I guess I'd travel. I'd have to do a trip to New York because I've never really been anywhere except Minnesota and Colorado.

JG: Okay, so about work-- why work for Re/Max Boulder and what do they offer that other real estate companies do not?

HM: I would say the overall family feel here. The agents and the clients develop close relationships and they're a company that really cares.

JG: Would it be better for someone to do a lot of web research before contacting your agency, or is it better to contact an agent as the first step?

HM: I would say contact an agent. They're more than willing to help get people started on the right path. There are over a hundred agents here, which means there will always be an agent that'll be a perfect fit for anyone. And they always go above and beyond, to make clients comfortable and happy.

RE/MAX of Boulder have agents that handle a multitude of areas from Boulder to Denver and outlying regions. They're friendly and professional and are just a phone call away.

Address: 2425 Canyon Blvd #110, Boulder, CO 80302
Phone:(303) 449-7000


Thursday, September 5, 2013

DAIRY COMEDY RETURNS WITH HILARIOUS VENGEANCE

After a short hiatus, Dairy Comedy has returned with a hilarious vengeance!
And now, we're sponsored! By Twisted Pine Brewing Company and the Scientific & Cultural Facilities District!

Our next show is on Thursday, September 12th, and the lineup is as follows:




Sam Tallent (Our Headliner)

Sam Tallent is a comedian from Denver, Colorado. The Denver Post called Sam “the surreal voice of an absurd generation” and the Denver Westword said that he had “the best comedy moment in Denver in all of 2012”. “An alt-comic road dog in the vein of Kinane and Stanhope” (SF’s courtingcomedy.com), Tallent has performed all over at places like the SF Punchline, the Creek and the Cave NYC, the Laughing Devil, the San Francisco Comedy and Burrito Festival and the New York Television Festival, as well as clubs and colleges across the Mid- and Southwest. He’s done lots of stuff with the Grawlix boys, debauched Bryan Cook’s Competitive Erotic Fan Fiction, crushed Kabin NYC and loves performing at the Business in SF. Sam is a founding member of the Fine Gentlemans Club, producers of the free weekly showcase “Too Much Fun!”, the Denver Post’s “best thing to do on any Wednesday night”. Brendon Walsh, Rory Scovel, Ron Funches, Chris Fairbanks, Kurt Braunholer, Adam Cayton-Holland and Dan Soder are all past guests. He is also the co-curator of Denver’s yearly Too Much Funstival! (“a must-see”-the Huffington Post), a four-day donation- based festival of comedy and music. Past events have included Ben Roy in a dunktank, a guided tour of the Denver Art Museum led by the Fine Gents, luchalibre wrestling opening for Sean Patton and TJ Miller performing in a bocci ball pit. Tallent put out three full-length digital downloads in 2012, recorded in 23 different states, and in March ’13 the Fine Gents are releasing a vinyl (recorded at the Denver Comedy Works, Sam’s home club) on Hot Congress Records. His interests include androgynous women and writing in the third person.





TIMMI LASLEY

You may have seen Timmi Lasley recently as part of the High Plains Comedy Festival. Host of Epilogue Comedy - a monthly showcase in Denver's South Broadway neighborhood, you can see her at the best shows in town (Arguments and Grievances, Delusions of Randeur, Too Much Fun!), and you can find her every Thursday at the Comedy RoomRoom, hosting a popular comedy open mic.



SEAN CUMMINGS

Sean Cummings is a comedian, actor, and the writer of a few award-winning plays and even more award-losing plays. He thanks you for supporting live art.




JAMES GOLD

James is a California transplant with a background in writing family-friendly comedic theatre. He has performed in various dungeons in California that are probably closed by now in addition to various spots in Denver, including Comedy Works. James has played an integral part in helping bring comedy back to Boulder-- he is the founder of Dairy Comedy and is a co-organizer of Amante Comedy in Boulder in addition to helping with the upstart of Boulder's only comedy-only open mic at Johnny's Cigar Bar. He'd like to thank you for supporting live comedy and the arts and hopes you'll come out to a show to say hello and have some good belly laughs.




ROGER NORQUIST (OUR EMCEE)

Out of all the Rogers in the world there are only five named Norquist but only one Roger Norquist tells one-liners to strangers for booze money. Roger has performed throughout the West and one day hopes to tell jokes in the big cities east of the Mississippi.  Roger has appeared in the Laugh Track Comedy Festival, Too Much Funstival, and The High Plains Comedy Festival. This particular Roger is also co-host of the paranormal/comedy podcast Werewolf Radar, co-host of the film/comedy show Il Magnifico Cinema Di Denver at The Deer Pile, and hosts a weekly comedy open mic at Lions Lair in Denver (named one of the best comedy nights in Denver). He wants you to know, and remember, that Han shoots first.


For tickets to the September 12th show, please CLICK HERE.


Dairy Comedy is proud to be sponsored by:






and also the Scientific & Cultural Facilities District:

 




Tuesday, August 20, 2013

"Watt?" musician Darren Kramer




Darren Kramer

 DJ DKO "Beyond The Boneyard" is a groundbreaking new cd and live performance cutting-edge innovation that pushes the boundaries of the typical trombone stereotype and that of the traditional DJ. Darren Kramer has created a new niche as an Electric Trombone DJ but has been working as a professional musician for 30 years as a full-time freelance trombonist, composer, producer, and educator throughout the USA. He is also a pBone Consultant, Edwards Performing Artist, and CEO of his own music company – DKO The Darren Kramer Organization – whose inspiring concerts, educational clinics, exceptional CDs, and numerous arrangements have helped modernize the trombone and expand its role in contemporary music. Kramer is now focused on embracing new technology for his BTB project and fulfilling his role as CEO of TheGigEasy, a company he created for musicians in order to simplify the transition to tablet computers by providing complete music solutions for iPad.

Video/ Media:  CLICK HERE

 Recent Work:



Current Project: CLICK HERE


Darren is the third musician who is part of the lineup for The Dairy's August 23rd electronic music concert "Watt?"

Tickets are available now at The Dairy's website. 















 

Monday, August 12, 2013

WATT? -- Electronic Musician Mark Mosher

This week on our lead up to the August 23rd electronic music showcase "WATT?" we're putting the spotlight on another musician who will be performing in the show...


MARK MOSHER

Mark is a seasoned performer who has played 100s of shows in bands prior to launching his solo act in 2009. He now performs his original sci-fi inspired electronica compositions using synthesizers and expressive controllers. He also visually amplifies his performance using interactive visuals based on live camera input and visual synthesis.

He’s been invited to play festivals and theaters around the country such as Electro-Music Festival NY, Electro-Music Festival in Asheville NC, Pacific Northwest Synthfest, Art Institute of Sunnyvale, Georgia Tech, Midwest Electro-Music Experience, University of Denver’s Performance Black Box and more.

Mark gives back to the community by blogging on electronic music at Modulate This! At a local level, he’s the organizer of the Boulder Synthesizer Meetup and a volunteer at local STEM schools to help create electronic music labs based on his 9 Box instrument.

VIDEO: Click HERE 

PRESS:  Click HERE or HERE


 Mark Mosher is one of the three talented musicians that will be performing in The Dairy's "Watt?" electronic music showcase.

Watt?
Friday, August 23rd
8pm (doors @ 7:30)

Tickets are only $10 and can be purchased at www.thedairy.org 














Tuesday, August 6, 2013

The Unexpected Laboratory and "@ntigone"





 A talk with Joe Hill of The Unexpected Laboratory

by James Gold


On August 15th, a modernized version of the famous Greek tragedy, "Antigone," will be opening at The Dairy Center for the Arts. And one of the many things that makes it a unique production is that it's being produced by young, ambitious college students rather than older, hardened thespians.

It has taken these students over a year to put this production together and along the way they've faced age discrimination, fundraising hurdles, and have burst successfully through the miles of red tape it took to incorporate their production company, "The Unexpected Laboratory."

Recently, I sat down with Joe Hill, the eighteen year old co-founder of the company, and talked to him a little bit about their "Antigone," seen as "@ntigone" on their marketing materials.

But first, I read the promotional postcard they've been using to advertise "@ntigone," which reads as such:

"Thebes, a city ruined by war and drug addiction is about to be rescued. Security cameras on every corner and guards on patrol will prevent any moves toward rebellion. How do you function when every move you make is watched? When your brother hangs for his treason, how deep will you dig in the dirt to hold your ground? When your dreams are stained from the residue of family, what will it take to convince you to look away? One girl will rise from the devastation to stand up for her brother. The question is, when your king is too high, how far can you fall?"

JG: Why such dark material, Joe? Why a tragedy?

JH: Well, it's basically a coming of age piece for us. I mean, I've lived most of my life seeing war, seeing sexual violence, seeing drugs, and being exposed to a state of surveillance that I never could have imagined I would. We felt like making a piece about our experience because as new adults we now have a say in these issues.

JG: Surveillance?

JH: Oh yeah, and during the play the stage is under surveillance the whole time. And the cameras can be used as props by the actors who can pick them up and film what they want.

JG: Does that mean there's no fourth wall, in this production?

JH: Oh no, there's definitely a fourth wall. There's no interaction with the audience in that way.

JG: How did you raise the money to produce this play?

JH: Well, the Boulder County Arts Alliance had a lot to do with that. We are fiscally sponsored by them. We had to go to them with a business plan and our articles of incorporation. And aside from that, we sent out letters in order to raise money and we ended up raising about six thousand dollars in three weeks.

JG: Wow, that's impressive.

JH: Thanks.

One of the clearest and most immediate things you notice about Joe Hill, is that he's a genuinely nice guy with a tremendous level of charisma and drive. He accepts compliments humbly and is quick to include every single member of his production staff and cast as integral to the success of the upstart of the company and this show.

He talks about the more risque elements of their "Antigone"-- the drug use and the mild violence and the profanity and the sexual content. It serves a purpose, he says. The drug use is about escapism from a bleak existence, the representation of complete doom and desperation. "We hope that in our production you find the beauty through that," Joe says.

And he talks about the future. Right now, the headquarters of The Unexpected Laboratory is in a basement. But who knows what the future holds. First, there's a collective plan to graduate from college. And then, they'd like to travel and help people tell their personal stories through theatre.


The Dairy and The Unexpected Laboratory present "Antigone":

Thursday, August 15th @ 7:30pm (w/ talkback after the performance)
Friday, August 16th @ 7:30pm (w/ talkback after the performance)
Saturday, August 17th @ 7:30pm
Sunday, August 18th @ 2:30pm

Tickets are $12 to $15
and can be purchased at www.thedairy.org
or by calling the box office at 303-444-7328


Monday, August 5, 2013

Introducing "WATT?" -- And theremin musician Victoria Lundy

On August 23rd, the Dairy Center will be presenting a musical experience unlike anything else in Boulder.

"Watt?" will be a concert highlighting Electro-music performed on synthesizers, theremins, computers, signal processors, ambient recordings and virtually anything imaginable that makes sound, even a trombone plugged into guitar foot- pedals.

Over the next few weeks leading up to the concert, we'll be spotlighting each of the performing artists on this blog.

This week's artist?


Victoria Lundy

Victoria Lundy has been playing theremin in the Denver experimental/underground/punk scene forever. She played for years with the avant garde Carbon Dioxide Orchestra, who opened for the legendary Silver Apples  in 1997; is a founding member of Denver’s acclaimed nerd rock band The Inactivists; performed with Jackson Induced Mutant Laboratory at the 2011 Denver Noise Festival and at the 2013 Denver Post Underground Music Showcase with ambient project Pythian Whispers. She has appeared on 5 CDs and an EP with the Inactivists (number 6 is on the way in October 2013) and as a guest player live and in recordings with other local artists. She has performed at area venues from underground DIY  -- such as Rhinoceropolis and the late, great punk bar the 15th Street Tavern, to  the Hi-Dive, D-Note, Walnut Room, Cervantes, Unit E, and the Bluebird. Victoria has appeared on Denver television, Radio 1190, and KGNU and demonstrated the theremin at the World Science Fiction Convention.

This event marks a rare appearance in Boulder as well as a return to playing solo classical and ambient work.


Video: HERE.

Press:  HERE.

Current Projects: 

-- The Inactivsts: Currently preparing to release their 6th CD and celebrate their 10th anniversary www.inactivists.com
 
-- Solo work currently in progress.
 
-- Upcoming recording session with ambient project "Pythian Whispers"  



You can see Victoria Lundy perform at The Dairy as part of the "Watt?" music showcase on August 23rd.

Tickets can be purchased by visiting www.thedairy.org 







Friday, August 2, 2013

Why are we called The Dairy? (a brief history)

CU Boulder graduate Griffin Hardy merged his Gilt Edge Creamery with Watts Blue Ribbon Dairy in 1927. By 1960 the Watts-Hardy was only one of two dairies remaining in Boulder and in 1971 opened a new milk processing facility at 26th & Walnut, which quickly became the popular destination in Boulder for great ice cream.

Twelve years later Watts-Hardy sold its facility to the Sinton Dairy which wanted to expand beyond its Colorado Springs roots. However, the dairy closed its doors after only four years of operation and in 1987 a group of artists in Boulder got permission from Sinton to start using the plant for local performances and events.

The concept of repurposing the historic dairy facility was born and in 2000 the city of Boulder bought the property and leases the space to The Dairy Center for the Arts at $1 per year. The performance theaters, art galleries, and events lobbies of today were constructed or improved in 1999, and in 2011 the Boedecker arts cinema was opened as the newest addition to The Dairy.

The Dairy is a unique venue for performances, special events, gallery exhibitions, films and lectures, and houses Boulder's premiere ballet and music schools. The Dairy produces a variety of presentations and productions such as the popular Dairy Comedy Night. It is also home to 11 arts organization offices.

Boulder attorney Bruce Dierking summed it up well, "The Dairy exists to connect people and enliven our spirit in a way like no other place in town."

Friday, July 26, 2013

Introducing "Far Away, So Close"

 
A conversation regarding:


 written by James Gold

 They're not exactly a theatrical company.

Yet they use a stage and they showcase professional actors.

They don't do "plays," but they bring the drama.

There's nothing like them in the region-- they are "Stories on Stage," and The Dairy is proud that they are one of our resident organizations.

Stories on Stage is a unique organization that produces shows in which professional actors perform dramatic readings of top-notch works of literature, on stages from here to Denver. And on August 10th, their showcase entitled "Far Away, So Close" will be hitting the stage for a one-night only performance at The Dairy.

Recently, I sat down with Abbe Stutsman and Lisa McClellan, two of the ladies working hard behind the scenes for Stories on Stage, and talked about the upcoming show.

JG: Can you summarize "Far Away, So Close" for me?

AS: It's a showcase of three different stories performed by three different actors

JG: Is there a central theme that ties the stories together?

LM: They're basically about making emotional connections in life. One of them focuses on a town in Wyoming, and the writer talking about his upbringing.

AS: They're all about travelling and making connections with people and the past.

We then talked about Boulder and what the town is like as an audience.
Lisa, who had recently attended an audience development workshop at the Boulder Public Library, said that the lady leading the workshop had this to say of Boulder: "Boulder is a tough nut to crack."

And it is.
But there's also the dilemma of how to most effectively reach the appropriate demographics without being overly aggressive about it.

We know there are plenty of people in Boulder hungry for very different sorts of cultural experiences, and Stories on Stage offers just that.

JG: What goes into choosing the works of literature that you'll have performed in your shows?

AS: That's all about Anthony Powell, our Artistic Director. He reads tons of stories. And each of our shows tend to have a theme. For example, there was a show called "Because I said So" that focused on growing up-- both from a child's and parent's perspectives. There has also been one on gardening.

In addition to the showcases being themed, they typically showcase three to four stories in each show, each performed by a different actor, but also occasionally involving two actors performing the same story by voicing the different characters together.

In "Far Away, So Close," there are three stories being performed and they are as follows:

"Rawlins" by William Haywood Henderson, will be read by Timothy McCracken

"Earth is Boring" by Jennifer Itell, read by Anne Penner

and "Me: You" by Laurie Sleeper, read by Mare Trevathan.


Timothy McCracken

When I asked the ladies why people should come to this show, Abbe said "It's a chance to see great actors reading great stories by local authors."

 In fact, Abbe continued, "this year is our year of the Colorado Writer."

They're placing a huge emphasis on showcasing works from Colorado writers this year, and there's no better time than now to check out the unique literary/theatrical experience that Stories on Stage has to offer.

"Far Away, So Close" was organized via a collaboration between Lighthouse Writer's and Stories on Stage.

The date and time of performance is August 10th at 7:30pm.
Tickets are $25 and can be purchased HERE.


And if you'd like a little taste of what Stories on Stage performances are like, click HERE to watch a short video.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The 15th Annual International Aerial Dance Festival 2013


 A Conversation with Nancy Smith of Frequent Flyers Aerial Dance Studio

by James Gold


On August 2nd, a show opens at The Dairy that is unlike any other show you will see in the city of Boulder.

Presented by the Frequent Flyers Aerial Dance Studio and The Dairy, this aerial dance event will showcase the talents of world-class aerial dancers performing on bungies, ropes, trapezes, invented apparatuses and more.

Recently, I had the chance to sit down and chat briefly with Nancy Smith, the founder and Artistic Director of Frequent Flyers Dance. What follows are some brief snippets of our conversation.

But first, some quick exposition:

Nancy Smith's background is in ground-based dance but she got into aerial performances in the late 1980’s when she saw a close friend do an aerial performance in Seattle. Instantly, she felt her calling. She locked herself in a Boulder, Colorado studio for 8 months and trained in the aerial arts on a low flying trapeze and other such devices.

Having spent her childhood hanging and spinning and swinging from things, it only makes sense that she ultimately created a life and a career for herself where hanging and spinning and swinging from things was the focal point.
 

JG: There’s a blurb on your website about shows involving vampires, a period swing piece, comic book heroes, and other such things—indicating a theatrical feel to your shows. Are all of your shows themed?

NS: We have some theatrically themed projects but they’re not exclusively themed. One of our fun, more theatrical shows is our holiday show, The Ratcracker (a Nutcracker parody)

JG: Is the upcoming show at The Dairy themed?

NS: No. This is a showcase with each artist doing their own performance piece.
There will be ten pieces.

JG: If someone has never been to an aerial dance performance, what can they expect to see?

NS: Performances with aerial fabric, rope, a cyr wheel, bungies, and invented apparatuses that include, for this show, aluminum ladders hanging from the ceiling... and a steel rectangle hung in the middle so that it turns.

 (Note: For those of you who need a visual for aerial fabric and a cyr wheel [I did too], please look below:)


 aerial fabric


  a cyr wheel



JG: Frequent Flyers has received a lot of honors and awards over the years. Is there a lot of competition in a field like this?

NS: There’s not a lot of competition, really, except when it comes to grant money.
The awards are competitive. and when we get an award, it’s just fabulous to get the recognition.

We rarely apply for it—we’re usually nominated by somebody, so it’s always wonderful to get them.

None of our awards have really been specific to aerial—they’ve all been sort of broadly arts based.




JG: Frequent Flyers has a couple of outreach programs—Kids Who Fly and Teens Inspiring Community Arts. Can you talk about that?


NS: At one point, a therapist suggested we work with at risk youth. Trust and team-building are the focus. We combined adventure based therapies, and psychology got blended in.

Nancy went on to explain how Frequent Flyers has teamed up in their outreach efforts for at-risk youth, also collaborating with the youth programs in other local organizations such as that of BMOCA. And yes, the focus is on trust and team building, but it's also about instilling a positive sense of community within the children.

JG: Regarding the upcoming show at The Dairy, is it a show for all ages? And are the performers local?

NS: Yes, the show is for all ages. And the professional performers in this show are from Australia and the United States. The final performance in the festival is the student performance, and they are from all over.

JG: What is the average age of aerial performers within your company?

NS: They range from about 24 to 40. And the students range from 8 to adult.

JG: And how does one become an aerial performer?

NS: Well, we have a school here in Boulder, a facility near Valmont. People can come try it out for fun or enroll in our 9 month professional training program. It's the only one in the country and in the fall it'll be entering it's third year. It's also the only collaborative program in the country where you can get a degree in dance with an aerial focus.

JG: If there were anything else you'd want to mention about the Aerial Dance Festival coming up at The Dairy, what would it be?

NS: I would say that these artists are never on the same stage at the same time, ever. This is the only chance to come to a local performance where you get to see world class artists on the same stage.
It’s all really high level work but it’s all really different. All of the pieces are short, so you get a real taste of what’s going on internationally.

Before we ended our conversation, Nancy told me about an event where several Frequent Flyers performers dangled off a 239 foot building as part of a performance at The Democratic National Convention. I've provided a link to the video below:


 This exciting Dairy event is one that you do not want to miss.
More information can be found and tickets can be purchased on our website HERE.


 Anyone can learn to Fly