Some people hear the phrase “Caped Crusader” and think of Batman. But the Utah Shakespeare Festival’s “Three Musketeers” reminds us that caped crusaders were righting wrongs in Paris several centuries before the Dark Knight ever showed up in Gotham City.
mc-arts-culture
Our arts picks this week include Clark County Wetlands Park’s open house and Super Summer Theatre’s production of “Memphis.”
The new production opens Wednesday in the center’s Reynolds Hall for three previews, each including an audience question-and-answer session that will help creators tweak the show prior to July 9’s gala opening.
People can view his paintings at the Sahara West Library, where a 50-year retrospective of Kreloff’s Pop Art-influenced work continues through Aug. 6.
When the first preview of “Much Ado About Nothing” opens the festival next week, it will mark the debut of the Engelstad Shakespeare Theatre, part of Southern Utah University’s $38.6 million Beverley Taylor Sorenson Center.
The $8 million Southern Utah Museum of Art is set to open July 7 in the complex that houses the Utah Shakespeare Festival’s theaters.