Also on the holiday schedule at the California: The San Jose Symphony’s afternoon show on Dec. 1 with ace pianist Taylor Eigsti ($5-$15, http://sjys.org) and the Dec. 5 “You-Sing-It-Messiah” with the San Jose Symphonic Choir and the Mission Chamber Orchestra. Tickets are $15-$20 (www.ticketmaster.com), and the Vivace Youth Chorus of San Jose will sing songs of the season in the lobby before the show. But the end of the month does bring in a reportedly quite spectacular live version of the film “How to Train Your Dragon” which will run for 10 shows Dec. 26-30. Tickets are $31-$102.50, www.ticketmaster.com.
The simultaneous public art performance will bring people of all ages and occupations together to dance around the world, from Buenos Aires to Estonia, And the Bay Area vintage caparros wedding flats, women's size 7, ivory ballet flats, vintage bride's shoes, vintage bride's flats, wo is at the forefront of the event with more than two dozen participants, The event was designed, according to its organizers, to celebrate communities and a sense of collaboration, Confirmed dancers and venues in the Bay Area include Amused Collective at Doyle Hollis Park, Emeryville; Antoine Hunter at Fremont School for the Deaf, Fremont; AXIS Dance Company at Oakland Museum of California, Oakland; Carol Kueffer at Bentley School, Oakland; Claudine Naganuma and dancers with Parkinson’s Disease at 4th St., Berkeley; Eric Kupers/Bandelion at Frank Ogawa Plaza, Oakland; Impromptu no tutu elder movement ensemble at the grass median strip across from 2020 Oregon Street, Berkeley; Luna Dance Institute at New Highland Academy, Oakland; Sarah Bush and Company at the Berkeley Art Center, Berkeley; Sonia Hinrichsen in Berkeley; Susan Wolf at several traffic circles starting at Hillegass & Webster, Berkeley; Tanya Chianese at Berkeley High School, Berkeley; Taylor Fisher at Downtown Berkeley Bart Plaza, Berkeley; and tsg networks at 10462 San Pablo Avenue, El Cerrito..
“We’ve been wanting to work together for a long time,” says King, 66. “Since we both travel and perform so much, it’s taken almost 12 years to find a period of time when we could do it. We’re all thrilled about it.”. A seemingly inexhaustible precious resource, Kronos has worked with some of the world’s most celebrated choreographers over the years, artists as different as Nederlands Dans Theater, Merce Cunningham Dance Company, Eiko and Koma, Margaret Jenkins Dance Company and Oakland Ballet. Many more choreographers have set dances to Kronos recordings, including Paul Taylor, who designed an entire New York City Center residency around pieces from the 2002 Kronos album “Nuevo” (Nonesuch).
• At 2 p.m, Dec, 7, the annual Bay’s Got Talent will feature a one-day competition that will include popular songs and stunning dance moves by local rising stars who will vie for a $500 shopping spree grand prize and will be cheered on by shoppers, • From 6 to 8:30 p.m, Dec, 8 and Dec, 15, pet owners may bring their pets to Serramonte Center for festive pet photos with Santa, Proceeds will benefit the Peninsula Humane Society & SPCA vintage caparros wedding flats, women's size 7, ivory ballet flats, vintage bride's shoes, vintage bride's flats, wo that will have a representative on-site to answer questions with a special four-legged friend..
So now cities need more “full-spectrum” housing, I call it, because it offers different options for various lifestyles, for people at different stages of life. Cities definitely need to keep providing housing for families with kids. But in the coming decades, we need to add new housing products and adapt neighborhoods, making them exciting to booming populations of seniors and millennials. Because what people want moving forward is a four-letter word: W-A-L-K. They want to be able to walk to amenities. They want to be able to walk to work, walk to transit, hop on their bikes — a real neighborhood feel. It’s especially true for the millennial population.