Berkshire Lyric to Hold Cabaret Fundraiser

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Lyric will present "An Evening Cabaret", a benefit concert for the Blafield Children’s Chorus, its tuition-free music program for children ages 6 through 13, on Saturday, Aug. 21. The performance will take place at The Lichtenstein Center for the Arts, 28 Renee Ave., at 7:30 p.m.

The concert will be an evening of Broadway and Jazz, showcasing some of the finest young talent in the Berkshires in a wonderfully intimate setting. Vocal selections include music by Sondheim, Rodgers, Legrand, Bacharach, Styne, Stephen Schwarz and other pieces from the American Songbook.

The singers will be accompanied by a jazz ensemble featuring Steve Murray, Joe Rose, Caleb Davis and Alfred Brewer. Steve Murray, an award-winning composer and arranger, is known to Berkshire audiences as the leader of the Steve Murray 8, a jazz band with several recordings to their credit. Joe Rose is well known as a jazz pianist, arranger and producer. He is the accompanist for Berkshire Lyric as well as the director of the Berkshire Singers, Berkshire Lyric’s teen chorus. Caleb Davis, a former member of the Blafield Children’s Chorus, is a member of the New York State Percussion Ensemble.

A 2009 graduate of Mountain Regional High School, he had the rare distinction of being selected as the drummer for the Massachusetts All State Jazz Band during each of his four years in high school. He is currently studying music at Purchase College, State University of New York. Trombonist Alfred Brewer is a 2010 winner of Berkshire Lyric’s Young Musician’s Scholarship. He is a junior at Monument Mountain Regional High School and has been the first trombone in the Massachusetts’ All State Jazz Band.

Among the participating singers are two former members of the Blafield Children’s Chorus, Kim Gritman and Liz Butler. Gritman has performed lead roles in several high school and college productions as well as with the Barrington Stage Youth Theater and the Berkshire Theater Festival. She was recently the Valedictorian at BCC. Butler has been a voice student of Berkshire Lyric Artistic Director Jack Brown at the Berkshire Music School. In 2009, she began voice and theater study at the very competitive Walnut Hill Performing Arts High School in Boston.

Also performing will be the 2009 and 2010 recipients of the top vocal prize given at the Berkshire Lyric Young Musicians Scholarship competition, the Joy Barnes Award. Elaina Pullano, who also studies voice at the Berkshire Music School, was the 2009 award winner and the featured soloist at the Berkshire Lyric 2009 Christmas Concert. Soprano Gwen Tunnicliffe, the 2010 winner, recently graduated from Mt. Greylock High School and will be attending Bennington College in the fall. A voice student of Keith Kibler, she has already appeared in several musicals and opera productions.

The Blafield Children’s Chorus, named in honor of founding director Robert Blafield, continues a tradition of joyous music making, presenting five high quality programs throughout Berkshire County each season. It is the only tuition-free, professionally led children’s choir in the county.

Tickets are $25, including refreshments. For more information, contact Berkshire Lyric Artistic Director Jack Brown at 413-298-5365.

This concert is supported in part by a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council awarded by the following local cultural councils: Pittsfield, Great Barrington, Dalton, Stockbridge, Lenox, Lee, Washington, West Stockbridge and Richmond.
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Pittsfield Housing Project Adds 37 Supportive Units and Collective Hope

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— A new chapter in local efforts to combat housing insecurity officially began as community leaders and residents gathered at The First on to celebrate a major expansion of supportive housing in the city.

The ribbon was cut on Thursday Dec. 19, on nearly 40 supportive permanent housing units; nine at The First, located within the Zion Lutheran Church, and 28 on West Housatonic Street.  The Housing Resource Center, funded by Pittsfield's American Rescue Plan Act dollars, hosted a celebration for a project that is named for its rarity: The First. 

"What got us here today is the power of community working in partnership and with a shared purpose," Hearthway CEO Eileen Peltier said. 

In addition to the 28 studio units at 111 West Housatonic Street and nine units in the rear of the church building, the Housing Resource Center will be open seven days a week with two lounges, a classroom, a laundry room, a bathroom, and lockers. 

Erin Forbush, ServiceNet's director of shelter and housing, challenged attendees to transform the space in the basement of Zion Lutheran Church into a community center.  It is planned to operate from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. year-round.

"I get calls from folks that want to help out, and our shelters just aren't the right spaces to be able to do that. The First will be that space that we can all come together and work for the betterment of our community," Forbush said. 

"…I am a true believer that things evolve, and things here will evolve with the people that are utilizing it." 

Earlier that day, Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities Secretary Ed Augustus joined Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll and her team in Housatonic to announce $33.5 million in federal Community Development Block Grant funding, $5.45 million to Berkshire County. 

He said it was ambitious to take on these two projects at once, but it will move the needle.  The EOHLC contributed more than $7.8 million in subsidies and $3.4 million in low-income housing tax credit equity for the West Housatonic Street build, and $1.6 million in ARPA funds for the First Street apartments.

"We're trying to get people out of shelter and off the streets, but we know there are a lot of people who are couch surfing, who are living in their cars, who are one paycheck away from being homeless themselves," Augustus said. 

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