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Weekend Event Guide

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

Paige Turner
Sep 24, 2020 | 9:30 am

A breathtaking exhibition, annual art sale, and live music al fresco are among the hottest happenings in the Alamo City. Check out the top five things to do in San Antonio this weekend.

Thursday, September 24

McNay Art Museum presents "Hollywood’s Sistine Chapel: Sacred Sets for Stage & Screen"
The artistry of both theater and cinema are celebrated in this unique exhibit at the McNay. Six large-scale, hand-painted replicas of Renaissance masterpieces, featured in the 1968 MGM drama The Shoes of the Fisherman, staralongside works from The Tobin Collection of Theatre Arts. Explore Renaissance art and the theater arts at this exhibition, on display through April 4, 2021.

The Texas Tribune Festival
The final days of the Texas Tribune Festival promise insightful conversations with some of the biggest names in politics. On the docket for the last week of the virtual event are Gary Cohn, Rachel Maddow, Beto O’Rourke, and more. Visit the festival website for a full schedule of events and to purchase tickets. The festival concludes on September 30.

Blue Star Contemporary presents Augmented Reality Red Dot Art Sale and Exhibition
For the first time, Blue Star Contemporary's Red Dot Sale will also be a 12-day art show, open to the public. Approximately 140 works representing the local art scene can be viewed at the space. Schedule your time slot to survey of artwork — and consider making a piece your own — on the Blue Star website.

Saturday, September 26

Magic for Humans at Home with Justin Willman
Best known for his regular appearances on The Tonight Show, Ellen, and Comedy Central, Justin Willman's new interactive show serves as an extension of his hit Netflix series, Magic For Humans. Willman will be able to see, hear, and engage with the audience in real time, creating a one-of-a-kind evening of magic and fun. Your ticket grants viewing access on one device.

Ward Davis in concert
Singer-songwriter Ward Davis takes the stage for an open-air concert at the AT&T Center Bud Light Courtyard. The Tennessee-based artist comes to San Antonio in support of his new album, Asunder. Social distancing guidelines are in place, and reserved tables are available with seating for up to six people. Select seating is still available.

Peruse approximately 140 pieces of San Antonio art at Blue Star Contemporary.

Blue Star Contemporary gallery patrons
Blue Star Contemporary/Facebook
Peruse approximately 140 pieces of San Antonio art at Blue Star Contemporary.
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Wurst Week

Beat the crowds for a weekday jaunt through Wurstfest

Brianna Caleri
Nov 7, 2022 | 1:28 pm
Wurstfest
Courtesy of Wurstfest
If you can't relax with some sausages, when can you relax? Wurstfest doesn't have to be a weekend marathon.

San Antonians could stop by their favorite after-work haunts for happy hour this week, but New Braunfels, a relatively short drive away, can offer a lot more.

Wurstfest is in full swing again, coming out of its first weekend of 2022 festivities. This year’s fest runs from November 4-13, spreading that massive population influx across two weekends, and shorter days in between. Sweetening the pot, admission is free from Monday to Thursday.

Realistically, although the German food is at least half the draw, Wurstfest could be called Bierfest with the sheer volume of beers it serves. And they’re not expecting too many visitors drinking before business hours end in the rather quaint New Braunfels. So, Wurstfest starts at 5 pm on weekdays, but the five hours it’s open (ending at 10 pm) offer plenty of ways to pass the time.

All weekdays start with live music at 5:30 pm on all five stages across the old German grounds. (For those who haven’t visited, this is basically a theme park: visitors wander through timber framed beer halls, past many, many concession stands, down the Comal River to a fairground, all without stepping out of Germany, it seems.) From those opening sets, there’s near-constant music on three of the stages.

Most of the entertainment comes from live music and the novelty of wandering around amongst the lederhosen and dirndls. (Those drinking less than friends should strongly consider bringing a book — this is from experience.) But there is some light programming every day to break up the drinking and dancing, especially for visitors with kids.

Monday promises a science show and masskrugstemmen (beer holding) contest. On Tuesday, more beers are held and Rapunzel and Flynn Rider make an appearance. Wednesday brings, you guessed it, more beer holding, and a magic show. On Thursday, kids can hear some storytelling, and Friday, Veteran’s Day, honors veterans with a salute. Following crowds will also bring visitors to shopping, sausage-making demonstrations, and children’s fair rides.

Perhaps needless to say, the food is legitimately excellent; this is, at its heart, a culinary event, and serves more than standard fried fair foods. Obviously, sausage is a great choice, but there are potatoes, gravy, pickles, and sauerkraut to go around. Returning revelers are thrilled to share their best recommendations for the food and imported beers. Pacing yourself, three to five hours is a very reasonable stretch for trying as much as possible and returning to old favorites.

Wurstfest tickets (free Monday to Thursday, $18 online for the weekend) are available now at wurstfest.com, along with more information and entertainment schedules.

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Native American Heritage Month

San Antonio museum celebrates Native American Heritage Month with free, family-friendly event

Hannah J. Frías
Nov 7, 2022 | 11:40 am
Briscoe Western Art Museum presents Yanaguana Indian Arts Festival
Photo courtesy of Briscoe Western Art Museum
The Briscoe Western Art Museum hosts its Yanaguana Indian Arts Festival on November 19.

November is Native American Heritage Month, and the Briscoe Western Art Museum is inviting San Antonio families to celebrate at its free annual Yanaguana Indian Arts Festival. Taking place on Saturday, November 19, from 10 am to 5 pm, the colorful event highlights the vibrant, artistic traditions of Native American communities and celebrates the impact Native Americans had in shaping the West.

Named in honor of the Payaya people who were indigenous to the San Antonio area, “Yanaguana” was the word used to describe what is now known as the San Antonio River. The Briscoe has hosted the annual festival since the museum first opened in the beautifully restored 1930s San Antonio Public Library in 2013.

Featuring storytelling, artist demonstrations, pottery and carving, the free event includes admission to the museum, which strives to preserve and present the art, history, and culture of the American West in each of its exhibitions and educational programs. This year's event will feature two drum circles with Pow Wow-style dancing, one in the morning and one in the afternoon.

United San Antonio Pow Wow, Inc., will start the event with a special spiritual blessing, joined by Enemy Horse Drumming for a Pow Wow-style drum circle to kick off the day. Inviting event attendees to join, the drum circle will explain common pow wow dance styles and the afternoon installment will feature the Great Promise Dancers.

Native American-inspired cuisine will help fuel the day's activities, including items from REZR’vation Only, a food truck owned and operated by a registered member of the Navajo Nation. In addition to the drum circles, the event will feature workshops and lectures celebrating traditional and contemporary Native American culture, with highlights including:

  • Live music by Native American artists, including flute player Tim Blueflint Ramel. An enrolled member of the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Chippewa, a federally recognized American Indian Tribe, Blueflint has opened for and shared the stage with Grammy Award Winner Mary Youngblood and a wide variety of artists.
  • Stories from Amy Bluemel, Chickasaw storyteller and great-granddaughter of Eastman Kaney, an original Dawes Commission enrollee. Through elaborate storytelling, Bluemel shares the customs of Chickasaw and other southeastern tribes.
  • Ledger art with artist George Curtis Levi, showcasing how ledger art captures a moment in time. Originating amongst the Cheyenne in the late 1840s, ledger art utilized pages of repurposed record books to depict everyday life. A member of the Southern Cheyenne tribe in Oklahoma, Levi also has ties to the Arapaho and Oglala Lakota communities.
  • Pottery making with artist Jereldine Redcorn showcasing Caddo pottery, an art form she single-handedly revived. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Redcorn’s father was Caddo and her mother was Potawatomi. In 2009, First Lady Michelle Obama selected one of her pieces to decorate the Oval Office.
  • Kachina carving with Kevin Horace Quannie, a Hopi/Navajo contemporary artist. Living on the Hopi reservation, Quannie specializes in carving contemporary kachina dolls using cottonwood roots.
  • Crafts and demonstrations include making your own drum, creating a community weaving basket, paper bead necklaces, pottery making, loom weaving, wood carving, and leather stamping.
Make the most of free museum admission by exploring the Briscoe's 14 galleries, including its fall exhibition, Thomas D. Mangelsen - A Life In The Wild, which features 40 of the renowned nature photographer Thomas D. Mangelsen’s most resonant wildlife and landscape photographs of the West. Open to the public through January 29, 2023, the exhibit takes viewers on a journey across the West and around the globe through the lens of one of the most prolific nature photographers of our time.
To learn more about the event, museum hours, exhibit, and parking details head to briscoemuseum.org.
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Movie Review

Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is as wacky and over-the-top as expected

Alex Bentley
Nov 7, 2022 | 9:29 am
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is as wacky and over-the-top as expected
Photo courtesy of The Roku Channel

Evan Rachel Wood and Daniel Radcliffe in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story

For over 40 years, “Weird Al” Yankovic has reigned as the world’s most popular comedy musician. Given the unserious nature of Yankovic’s songs, a movie about his life was never going to be straightforward. Taking inspiration from a 2013 Funny or Die video of the same name, Weird: The Al Yankovic Story plays out as – what else? – a parody of music biopics, which tend to have many of the same beats, such as a rough childhood, music providing a salvation, issues with drugs and/or alcohol, and, ultimately, redemption.

And so, hilariously, the young Al yearns to play the accordion and make up fake lyrics to real songs, only to be stymied by his well-meaning mom, Mary (Julianne Nicholson), and angry and violent dad, Nick (Toby Huss). After hearing things like “We agree that you should stop being yourself and doing the things you love,” he rebels by going to … a teenage polka party. (Unintentionally funny is that Nicholson recently played Marilyn Monroe’s mom in Blonde, a 1-2 punch that’s hard to beat.)

When Al (now played by Daniel Radcliffe) finally gets out of the house, he’s able to spread his wings and make the weird music he wants, overcoming the skepticism of record executives like Tony Scotti (played by Yankovic) with the help of mentor Dr. Demento (Rainn Wilson). When Madonna (Evan Rachel Wood) becomes his girlfriend to, in part, get the sweet bump that one of his parody songs can provide, it starts in motion a series of events too ridiculous to be true.

Directed by Eric Appel (who also made the short film) and written by Appel and Yankovic, the film can essentially be split in two. The first half is the more successful part, as the pure comedy of his parents' overreactions to his music tastes, the random ways in which he draws inspiration for songs like “My Bologna,” and other out-of-nowhere things never fail to draw a laugh.

Not content to play out the whole movie that way, the filmmakers make the second half into something … weird. Without spoiling anything, it radically shifts the perspective of Weird Al as both a musician and a person, a change that, while still objectively funny, takes on a much different tone. It also features less of his music, a decision that takes some of the early fun out of the film.

The film features a bevy of celebrity cameos, like Lin-Manuel Miranda as a surgeon, Conan O’Brien as Andy Warhol, and Quinta Brunson as Oprah Winfrey, as well as a pool party scene featuring a slew of ‘80s icons like Devo, John Denver, Pee Wee Herman, Tiny Tim, Gallagher, Divine, and Elvira. You never know who’s going to pop up next, giving the film an extra dose of enjoyment in addition to the story.

Radcliffe, though much shorter than the actual Weird Al (likely a joke in and of itself), is a great fit for the role, bringing the type of energy it deserves. Even when lip-synching (the voice when singing is definitely the real Weird Al), he’s all-in on the performance. Wood is also great, delivering a depiction of Madonna that’s even more out-there than the real-life version.

Weird: The Al Yankovic Story ultimately hits more highs than lows thanks to the funny “origin” stories around songs like “Eat It,” “Another One Rides the Bus,” and “Like a Surgeon.” You can give the filmmakers credit for trying something different, but like any popular musician, things are better when they play the hits.

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Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is now streaming on The Roku Channel.

Evan Rachel Wood and Daniel Radcliffe in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story

Photo courtesy of The Roku Channel

Evan Rachel Wood and Daniel Radcliffe in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story

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CultureMap Emails Are Awesome
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San Antonio chef invites locals to explore Europe on guided culinary adventures in 2023

River Walk hotel swoons with romantic tango series this November

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