Jul 09 Wednesday
Join us in the Great Hall of the Arkell Museum and Canajoharie Library on July 9th at 2 pm for a paint and plant program. We will be painting little pots, planting seeds and taking them home to watch them grow.
This is a free program for kids and teens. Registration is requested.
For questions, please call 518-673-2314 ext. 106 or email info@arkellmuseum.org
Woodstock's weekly farmer's market bursting at the seams with local produce, live music, artisan producers and events for all ages - don't forget to bring the kids!
Join us each Wednesday afternoon at High Rock Park from 3-6 PM for the Saratoga Farmers' Market!
Enjoy live music, restock your kitchen with fresh and local goods, or grab dinner from our ready-to-eat vendors!
Let's make Wednesdays local and lively - see you at the market!
The Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum continues the 44th season of the Wednesday Folk Traditions concert series on Wednesday, July 9th, 2025, with Rebelle. ReBelle’s powerful vocals energize eloquent compositions of pulsing rhythms and multi-instrumental arrangements, which combine Rasta, soul, folk, and poetry. Concerts are held Wednesday evenings at 6:30 pm, outside in the Sunken Garden at the Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum, 130 River Drive, Route 47, Hadley MA 01035. Admission is $12, $2 for children 16 and under. Cash only please. Picnickers are welcome on the museum’s grounds starting at 5:00 pm. The museum and its grounds are a smoke-free site. For further information please call (413) 584-4699 or view www.pphmuseum.org.
Jeff Stein, 1h 49m
From Maximum R&B-playing mods to arena-rock anthem makers: Jeff Stein’s scrapbook of The Who’s career collects tidbits from the band’s TV appearances, Woodstock performance footage, interviews and other flotsam and jetsam in an attempt to pay tribute to one of rock’s greatest (and loudest) groups. Like the quartet themselves, the movie is often disjointed, totally chaotic, and hits with the force of a Fender Stratocaster being smashed on a stage. It also doubles as a history of rock and roll’s British Invasion-and-beyond era, as blues fixations give way to Pop Art, feedback, psychedelica, ambitious attempts at high-art evolution and self-expression, and the power of a well-placed power chord. It also inspired the “This one goes to 11” scene from This Is Spinal Tap, for which we owe this movie an immeasurable debt. —Rolling Stone
Co-presented with Next Chapter Records.
The New York City Ballet returns for its 59th season at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, July 9-12, with iconic classics and an exciting new work. Experience the full-length story ballet Coppélia, which held its world premiere at SPAC in 1974; Jerome Robbins’ The Four Seasons, an audience favorite set to Verdi’s vibrant melodies; George Balanchine’s masterpiece Stravinsky Violin Concerto; and Justin Peck’s newest work for NYCB, Mystic Familiar.
Coppélia Wednesday • Jul 09, 2025 • 7:30pm Thursday • Jul 10, 2025 • 7:30pm Friday • Jul 11, 2025 • 7:30pm Saturday • Jul 12, 2025 • 2:00pm
Robbins, Balanchine & Peck Friday • Jul 11, 2025 • 2:00pm Saturday • Jul 12, 2025 • 7:30pm
Learn more and buy tickets at spac.org
New York City Ballet returns for its 59th season at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, July 9-12, with iconic classics and an exciting new work. Experience the full-length story ballet Coppélia, which held its world premiere at SPAC in 1974; Jerome Robbins’ spirited In G Major; George Balanchine’s masterpiece Stravinsky Violin Concerto; and Justin Peck’s newest work for NYCB, Mystic Familiar.
Music by Sir Arthur Sullivan, Libretto by W. S. GilbertJuly 9, 10, 12 at 7:30 pm, July 11 at 2:00 pm
Start your summer season with this staple of stages from Broadway to Main Street. All are promised a swashbuckling good time and laughs a plenty. From “Poor wand’ring one” and “Oh, is there not one maiden breast” to “I am the very model of a modern Major General”, no one will walk out of this show without a tune in their head.
Jul 10 Thursday
The Norman Rockwell Museum is honored to present a rare series of early twentieth century lighting advertisements by Norman Rockwell and fellow Golden Age illustrators Maxfield Parrish, N.C. Wyeth, Dean Cornwell, Stanley Arthurs, Worth Brehm, and Charles Chambers created for Edison Mazda Lamps, a division of the General Electric Company. These luminous, richly painted works were widely circulated in published advertisements through the 1920s and are on loan to the Museum for the first time through the generosity of GE Aerospace.