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Weekend Event Guide

Here are the top 5 things to do in San Antonio this weekend

Paige Turner
Jul 21, 2022 | 9:29 am
Travis Tritt.
Travis Tritt.
Photo by © Michelle Watson/CatchLightGroup.com

The next several days are looking promising thanks to live concerts, a birthday bash, and a rootin’ tootin’ celebration of all things cowboy. Indulge in debauchery at Hotel Havana in honor of Ernest Hemingway’s birthday, or giddy up to the Briscoe’s annual National Day of the Cowboy festivities. Check out the top five things to do in San Antonio this weekend. For a full listing of events, go to our calendar.

Thursday, July 21

Hemingway's Birthday at Hotel Havana
Celebrate the birthday of one of American literature’s greatest talents at the swanky Hotel Havana. The evening’s party will feature drink specials and a bar takeover by Denim & Leather, a local vendor market offering unique wares, and a classic car show by Alamo City Rods. Admission is free and open to the public. Get more information on the event website.

Friday, July 22

Tobin Center for the Performing Arts presents Q: The Music of Queen
Bring on the nostalgia when you experience a live Queen tribute show on the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts stage. Fans new and old can rock out to a production featuring the music and visuals of Queen’s performances throughout their 21-year history and relive their rise to stardom, including their famous performance at Live Aid in 1985. For ticketing information, click here.

Saturday, July 23

Bricscoe Musuem presents National Day of the Cowboy Celebration
Giddy up and get down to the Briscoe Western Art Museum to celebrate all things cowboy with a full day of fun and activations. The free community event will include live music in the McNutt Sculpture Garden, artist demonstrations, cowboy demonstrations, crafts, chuckwagon eats, and much more. Attendees are encouraged to don their best Western-inspired apparel to pay homage to the cowboys and cowgirls past and present who continue to influence the state’s culture and history. This event is open to the public.

Toxic: The Britney Spears Experience
Be witness to the only Britney Spears tribute band of its kind at Charline McCombs Empire Theatre. Toxic: The Britney Spears Experience is a production almost as iconic as the princess of pop herself and features a full band, backup dancers, 13 costume changes, and a catalogue of more than 30 songs. A limited number of tickets are still available.

Kickin' for a Kure with Travis Tritt, Josh Turner, and Pat Green
Groove to live music for a good cause at the 10th Annual Kickin' for a Kure fundraising concert. This year’s lineup at the Freeman Coliseum includes performances by country music stars Travis Tritt, Josh Turner, and Pat Green. For ticketing information, go to the fundraising event page.

Country stars Travis Tritt, Josh Turner, and Pat Green will perform live at this year's Kickin' for a Kure fundraiser concert.

22 Travis Tritt at Cattle Barons Ball April 2014
Photo by © Michelle Watson/CatchLightGroup.com
Country stars Travis Tritt, Josh Turner, and Pat Green will perform live at this year's Kickin' for a Kure fundraiser concert.
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Hot Headlines

Big Bend named 2023 must-see destination, plus more popular San Antonio stories

Hannah J. Frías
Nov 5, 2022 | 12:00 pm
Big Bend National Park
Photo by Adan Guerrero on Unsplash

brown and green mountains under white sky during daytime

Editor’s note: It’s that time again — time to check in with our top stories. Here are five articles that captured our collective attention over the past seven days.

1. Texas' Big Bend named one of the world's must-see destinations for 2023. The vast natural wonder out in far west Texas landed on National Geographic's list of the top 25 global destinations for 2023.

2. San Antonio museum displays Broadway's 'Wicked' best costumes in new exhibition. The McNay Art Museum's newest exhibit displays costume mastermind Susan Hilferty's beautiful Broadway creations.

3. San Antonio cozies up as No. 5 best winter travel destination for warm-weather lovers. Texas claimed three of the top 10 "best winter vacation destinations for warm-weather lovers," and San Antonio landed at No. 5.

4. San Antonio chef invites locals to explore Europe on guided culinary adventures in 2023. If you've been binging From Scratch lately, these trips are for you.

5. Taylor Swift dawns a new era with world tour coming to 2 Texas cities. San Antonio Swifties who are willing to travel should keep their eye on November 18, when tickets for her Arlington and Houston shows go on sale.

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River Walk hotel swoons with romantic tango series this November

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San Antonio community garden grows with new farmers market and tree giveaway

Movie Review

Life lessons abound in Oscar hopeful Armageddon Time

Alex Bentley
Nov 4, 2022 | 1:01 pm
Life lessons abound in Oscar hopeful Armageddon Time
Photo by Anne Joyce/Focus Features

Banks Repeta and Anthony Hopkins in Armageddon Time.

When a filmmaker decides to tell a personal story about their life growing up, it can go one of two ways. It can be a nostalgic, candy-coated vision of an idealized childhood, or it can be a warts-and-all endeavor, digging deep to expose their bad family experience and the state of the world at that time.

Writer/director James Gray tries to find the middle ground in his new film, Armageddon Time. Set in Queens, New York, in 1980, the film centers Paul Graff (Banks Repeta), a Jewish tween boy with a love of art and a bent toward troublemaking. His mom, Esther (Anne Hathaway), and dad, Irving (Jeremy Strong), have kept him in public school even though his brother, Ted (Ryan Sell), goes to a private school.

Banks Repeta and Anthony Hopkins in Armageddon Time
Photo by Anne Joyce/Focus Features

Banks Repeta and Anthony Hopkins in Armageddon Time.

Paul strikes up a friendship with Johnny Davis (Jaylin Webb), one of the few Black kids at his school. Finding common ground over raising the ire of their teacher, whether warranted or not, the two conspire on a number of minor-to-major infractions. Paul is also close with his grandfather Aaron (Anthony Hopkins), who provides him with pearls of wisdom that come with his age and worldly experience.

On the surface, the film is a type of coming-of-age story as Paul pursues his passion, learns about bigotry, and tries to survive his sometimes-abusive father. Taken on this level, it’s an interesting if uncomplicated narrative. The situations that Paul goes through are typical of a suburban New York kid, with some slight deviations given his choice of friend and inability to stay on the right side of his parents and teacher.

There are several elements that indicate Gray is trying to tell a deeper story. Paul’s family being Jewish is a big part of the film, whether at family dinners or stories about past persecution. And the treatment of Johnny by his teacher and others is an undeniable parallel, with him experiencing subtle and not-so-subtle acts of racism on multiple occasions.

But a few other storytelling choices make it seem as if Gray wants tell an even more expansive allegorical story, as the film’s tagline – “The end of an era. The beginning of everything.” – illustrates. Ronald Reagan, who was running for his first term in 1980, pops up in television clips on a couple of occasions, even referencing his fear of Armageddon in one interview.

Fred Trump (John Diehl) and his daughter Maryanne (Jessica Chastain) are benefactors of the private school, making an appearance in one brief scene (why an Oscar winner was chosen to deliver less than 30 seconds of dialogue is unclear). Fred’s son Donald is not present, but the inclusion of the Trump family at all, especially for the very short time they’re on screen, speaks volumes.

Child actors can be hit-and-miss, but both Repeta and Webb turn in solid performances, making it feel like their characters have a true friendship. Both Hathaway and Strong live up to their reputations, inhabiting their roles fully, although their strong accents might be too much for some. Hopkins, who speaks in his normal voice, doesn’t exactly scream “old Jewish grandfather,” but his excellent acting makes up for that fact.

No matter if you fully grasp Gray’s actual intentions with the film or just take in its basic story, Armageddon Time is one of the best-acted films of the year. At its core, it’s a tale about a family going through a time of change, a universally-relatable idea regardless of where you grew up.

---

Armageddon Time opens in theaters on November 4.

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River Walk hotel swoons with romantic tango series this November

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CMT Awards

Texas will host CMT Music Awards for the first time ever in 2023

Hannah J. Frías
Nov 4, 2022 | 10:56 am
Carrie Underwood Kelsea Ballerini Moody Center
Getty Images for CMT
Airing April 2, 2023, the awards ceremony will be hosted in Texas for the first time ever.

Big news for country music fans: During Carrie Underwood's sold-out show in Austin on November 2, CMT Music Awards co-host Kelsea Ballerini came on stage to announce that the CMT Music Awards will come to the city's new Moody Center next year. Airing Sunday, April 2, 2023, the fan-voted awards ceremony will be hosted in Texas for the first time ever.

Ballerini will return as the event's co-host for the third year in a row, which she also shared during Underwood's set. The Austin stop of Underwood's Denim and Rhinestones Tour was the perfect time to share the announcement, since Underwood currently holds the title as the winningest artist in CMT history. According to a release, she has garnered a total of 25 trophies, and she will be the first performer for the 2023 show.

“Both Austin and Nashville are two of the world’s greatest music cities and we couldn’t be more excited to announce the return of the CMT MUSIC AWARDS on CBS than with co-host Kelsea Ballerini surprising Carrie Underwood, our most awarded artist, in the middle of her incredible live performance at Moody Center – the exact venue where we’ll all be back exactly five months from today!” shared CMT Music Awards executive producers Margaret Comeaux, John Hamlin, Leslie Fram, and Jason Owen.

“Our fans are in for an unforgettable night of music with plenty of surprises, as the Live Music Capital meets Music City for the first time ever on a national stage in what will be a true country music extravaganza.”

The 2023 CMT Awards is the result of two years of planning between CMT, CBA, Paramount, and the Moody Center team. The show will make its global premiere exclusively on the CBS Television Network, available for both live streaming and on demand on Paramount+. For its inaugural year on CBS, the 2022 CMT Music Awards delivered 5.89 million viewers, a 529 percent increase from June 2021.

“The programming team at Oak View Group and Moody Center have spent the past two years cultivating this relationship and working to endear CMT, CBS and Paramount to Austin and our new, world-class arena," says Michael Owens, vice president of programming at the Moody Center, in the release. "CMT’s commitment to Austin reflects those efforts and we couldn’t be more grateful and excited to host them next year."

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River Walk hotel swoons with romantic tango series this November

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