Susie Glaze & Hilonesome in Concert, Plus Celtic Gold Academy Dancers
Grand Annex (434 W. 6th Street San Pedro, CA 90731)
- Full Price:
- $18.00
- Our Price:
- $9.00*
* Additional fees apply.
All offers for Susie Glaze & Hilonesome in Concert have expired.
The last date listed for Susie Glaze & Hilonesome in Concert was Saturday December 5, 2009 / 8:00pm.
Currently at Grand Annex:
Latin Dance Fire: Josie Neglia's Dazzling Dance Journey
- Full Price:
- $20.00
- Our Price:
- $10.00
You will feel the intensity and passion of dance with Josie Neglia's exhilarating stage show. Latin Dance Fire is an exciting collage of dance performance incorporating salsa, cha-cha, bachata, the dramatic Argentinean tango and gaucho, and samba, the heartbeat of Brazil. This breathtaking, high energy show continues in a non-stop flurry with dancers rarely coming up for air. With passionate music from Michael Battista and amazing choreography by Neglia, this show will give audiences a wide sampling of Caribbean and South American dance culture. Learn More
More Information About Susie Glaze & Hilonesome in Concert
Quotes & Highlights
- “She can blow the roof off of any joint lucky enough to book her.” --Entertainment Weekly
Description
Broadway actress and singer, award-winning recording artist and critically-acclaimed Bluegrass powerhouse vocalist, Susie Glaze has been called by Bluegrass Unlimited "...an important voice on the California Bluegrass scene." A native Tennessean, Susie grew up in the shadow of the Grand Ole Opry, learning the craft of country and bluegrass from a short distance by regular immersion of Flatt & Scruggs, Dolly Parton and Loretta Lynn among others. When just 16 she sang for her brother Rick's writer's nights song showcases in Nashville.
New York audiences saw Susie's Broadway debut when she played the role of the young Southern matriarch Mary Jane Wilkes in the original Broadway company of Roger Miller's musical play "Big River." During her two years with that company, Susie began researching the works of the pioneering artists who developed country, folk and bluegrass music from the early years in America and was led inevitably to the work of The Stanley Brothers, The Carter Family, Bill Monroe, Doc Watson and Jean Ritchie among many others. After relocating to Southern California and joining the bluegrass group The Eight Hand String Band, Susie debuted as a recording artist with the group's 2000 release "The Simple Truth" and was the winner of the Los Angeles 1999 Topanga Banjo and Fiddle Contest and Folk Festival for Traditional Singing. In 2002, Susie's debut solo CD "Home On the Hill" reaped praise from Sing Out! and Bluegrass Unlimited magazines. The following year Susie appeared alongside Jean Ritchie at the Conner Prairie Living History Museum's White River Folk Festival, and in 2004 Susie premiered her new concert piece "The Appalachian Songs of Jean Ritchie" at Southern California music festivals. The year 2003 also saw the formation of The Hilonesome Band with Susie and her husband, mandolinist Steve Rankin, to debut and showcase the work of Santa Clarita songwriter Rob Carlson. Susie's second solo CD "Blue Eyed Darlin'" was released in July 2005 to praise from Bluegrass Unlimited and Folkworks magazines (their top Bluegrass Album of 2005), and won her the Just Plain Folks 2006 Music Award for Best Roots Album. Her concert/theatre piece: "Singing the Moon Up: The Voice of Jean Ritchie" was a critical success in its debut at The Pennsylvania Centre Stage Company at Penn State University in September 2005, and the live soundtrack album of that piece was released in 2007. Susie has just released her third solo CD project "Green Kentucky Blues" produced by Bluegrass legend Laurie Lewis.
About the Ticket Supplier: Warner Grand Theatre
When the Warner Grand Theatre opened in 1931 it was the first sound-equipped theater in the South Bay. It quickly became the glamorous center of public life. Designed by famed architect B. Marcus Pritica, who also designed Hollywood's Pantages theater, the Theatre is one of the nation's few surviving Art Deco movie palaces. It was one of three similar theaters constructed in suburbs of Los Angeles by Warner Bros. Motion Picture Studio (the other two were built in Beverly Hills and Huntington Park.) The 1400-seat Warner Grand is the only one of these three theaters left intact. Six years ago, the theatre's future was in danger.
In 1996 the City of Los Angeles and its Community Redevelopment Agency purchased the Warner Grand for $1.2 million. Today, the Theatre is managed by the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs and is home to regular foreign and classic film series.