Josh Blue opens up about cerebral palsy, `Last Comic Standing`
Transcription
Josh Blue opens up about cerebral palsy, `Last Comic Standing`
Cue THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2015 SECTION C Audra McDonald Saturday, October 17th, 8:00 pm TICKETS START AT $40 309.671.1096 peoriasymphony.org PE-4493521_V2 Josh Blue opens up about cerebral palsy, ‘Last Comic Standing’ BY THOMAS BRUCH OF THE JOURNAL STAR PEORIA — One of the best stand-up comedians in the business, Josh Blue, will be performing at the Jukebox Comedy Club this weekend. Blue, 36, won Season Four of “Last Comic Standing” in 2006 and has since been a staple on the stand-up comedy circuit. Though he has earned many plaudits and has been featured frequently in stand-up specials, he might be best known for having cerebral palsy — something he pokes fun at in a self-deprecating manner in his performances. Yet he also talks about it to highlight what you can accomplish while living with the disorder. Blue will appear at the Jukebox at 8 p.m. Thursday, and at 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Tickets cost $20 except for the Thursday show and the late Friday show, which are $15. Tickets can be purchased at the comedy club or online at www.jukeboxcomedy.com. The Journal Star talked to Blue recently about his career, “Last Comic Standing” and another one of his successful endeavors. Q: In retrospect, what’s your opinion on “Last Comic Standing” for younger comedians or comedians who haven’t gotten a shot yet? A: I have mixed feelings about it. Obviously it really helped me blow into the scene. But it’s still a dumb reality show. Any chance a comic can get to get on TV is huge, so it’s definitely Please see BLUE, Page C2 BY THOMAS BRUCH OF THE JOURNAL STAR MAGICIAN AND ‘AMERICA’S GOT TALENT’ CONTESTANT DAN SPERRY TO PERFORM WITH ‘THE ILLUSIONISTS’ AT CIVIC CENTER If you go ! What: The Illusionists — Live From Broadway ! When: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 21; 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 22. ! Where: Peoria Civic Center Theater. ! Cost: Tickets cost $40, $57 or $70. To purchase tickets, visit the box office, ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster locations or call (800) 745-3000. he magician insists that no specific moment precipitated his career in magic and illusions, but he tells a tale that pretty much suffices as one. When Dan Sperry was very young — maybe four or five years old, he estimates — his grandparents took him to a David Copperfield show. The first trick was “The Death Saw,” a big spinning saw blade that Copperfield must elude before it cuts him in half. The real premise was far more harrowing. Instead, the saw “malfunctions” and the blade drops too early, cutting Copperfield in half without warning. The young Sperry couldn’t comprehend the theatrical illusion and thought he had just seen Copperfield die. That was the end of the show for Sperry and his grandparents. They exited the theater with a mortified Sperry in tow. As a mode of therapy, Sperry was later given a magic kit from a toy store, something simple like a ball disappearing in a cup and then reappearing. It was meant to assuage Sperry’s fears, to show it wasn’t sinister. “This is normal,” he remembers being told. A few decades later, Sperry has established a living as a touring magician. He will appear alongside a troupe of magicians at the Peoria Civic Center Theater for two nights next week in “The Illusionists” as part of the Illinois Ameren Broadway Series. For years, his magic act mirrored the tame parlor tricks of the toy magic kit from his youth. He landed a job performing at children’s birthday parties as a teenager and continued that for a long time. Though he couldn’t frighten them, he carefully cultivated a role he would later inhabit on stage. “There was a Gene Wilder, Willy Wonka antagonistic element to what I was doing,” Sperry said. Please see ILLUSIONISTS, Page C2 PHOTO OF DAN SPERRY COURTESY OF “THE ILLUSIONISTS” Fall Dinner Specials $19.95 PE-4516512 Your Choice of: • Fresh Salmon with Grand Marnier Orange Sauce • Fresh Scallops A La Danielle • 5oz. Filet Mignon with 2 Broiled OR Cajun Prawns All Dinner Specials Include: House Salad and Baked Potato Li M Live Music i Wednesdays - Ed & Judy Howard wa Thursdays - Gene Farris Fridays - Ben & Kate Saturdays - 3 ½ Men Comedian Josh Blue will appear at the Jukebox Comedy Club at 8 p.m. Thursday, and at 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Tickets cost $20 except for the Thursday show and the late Friday show, which are $15. 5 SEE CALENDAR ON PAGE C6 THINGS TO DO THIS WEEKEND 1 The Peoria Riverfront Museum, 222 SW Washington St., is hosting Wine & Art Night from 7 to 9 p.m. Oct. 17 featuring painting with Kayla Phillips. Cost is $33 for nonmembers. To register call Taylor Stef at 863-3034. Ages 21 and over only. The Haunted Infirmary at the Bartonville Insane Asylum, 4500 Enterprise Drive, Bartonville, is open every Friday and Saturday night in October from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Event is sponsored by Limestone JFL and Insane Women Productions. Admission is $15 per person. Tickets available at http://hauntedinfirmary.org/ or at the gate on haunt nights until midnight (cash only). Central Illinois Jazz Society House Band performs at 6 p.m. and The Brazilionaires begin at 7:15 p.m. Oct. 18 at the Starting Gate Banquet Room in Landmark Recreation Center. Admission: $5/members; $7/nonmembers; free/ students. Call 692-5330 or visit www.cijs.org. “I Feel a Song Coming On!,” Pride of Peoria Barbershop Chorus 73rd annual concert will be at 2 p.m. Oct. 18 at the Northminster Presbyterian Church, 10720 N. Knoxville, Peoria. $10/advance; $12/at the door. Call 231-2471. Salsa at CAC: Dance lessons and open dancing will be from 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Oct. 16 at the Contemporary Art Center of Peoria, 305 SW Water St. Admission: $4/CAC members; $7/nonmembers. Call 674-6822. 2 3 4 5 DOWNTOWN 110 SW. Jefferson Peoria, IL 61602 RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED (309) 673-5300 CUE C2 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2015 JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. HALLOWEEN FRIGHTS Judge’s Chamber is a hidden AND THRILLS AWAIT lunch spot in Downtown IN CENTRAL ILLINOIS BY STEVE TARTER OF THE JOURNAL STAR PEORIA — Downtown Peoria is not Central Illinois offers Halloween attractions for all ages and levels of fear. Here is a listing of some of the events. ! Spider Hill Haunted Attractions, hosted by Three Sisters Park, every Friday and Saturday evening in October from 7 to 11 p.m. (Closed Halloween night). Features a Haunted House, Haunted Walking Trail and Paintball Zombie Shoot, where participants get to shoot zombies in the woods. There will also be vendors, food, roaming actors, a bonfire and other entertainment. ! The Haunted Infirmary at the Bartonville Insane Asylum, 4500 Enterprise Drive, Bartonville, is open every Friday and Saturday night in October from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Event is sponsored by Limestone JFL and Insane Women Productions. Admission is $15 per person. Tickets available at http://hauntedinfirmary.org/ or at the gate on haunt nights until midnight (cash only). ! Spook Hollow with M.C. Manor & M.C. Nightmare — three horrifying events for one admission price — will be Oct. 16,17, 23 and 24 in Marquette Heigihts. Spook Hollow leads guests into the deep woods of Independence Park, M.C. Manor is a spine tingling Haunted Mansion and M.C. Nightmare will lead guests through a twisted and run down Industrial Haunt. Admission is $25 and $40 for a speed pass to avoid long lines. Tickets are available online at: http: //spookhollow.ticketleap.com/ 2015/ and at the gate from 6:30 p.m.-11 p.m. Gate opens nightly at 7 p.m. The event is located just off Interstate I-474 Exit 9, look for the search light (613 LaSalle Blvd., Marquette Heights). Event is sponsored by the Marquette Heights Men’s Club. ! Haunted Peoria area tours, based on historical documentation, sponsored by Central Illinois Paranormal Investigative Team: Springdale Cemetery: 6 p.m. Oct. 13, 17, 23 and 27; French-Native American Burial Ground, downtown: 6 p.m. Oct. 16; Cole Hollow Trail, Pekin: 5 p.m. Oct. 20; Chillicothe Cemetery: 6 p.m. Oct. 24. Call 282-6768 for reservations. ! 27th Annual Witches Walk, a “not so scary” illuminated walk, 6-8 p.m. Oct. 15-17 and 22-24, Fon du Lac Farm Park, 305 Neumann Drive, East Peoria. Cost: $3/adults; $2.50/children ages 1-15. Call 694-2195. ! On Oct. 16-18 and 23-25 Wildlife Prairie Park will transform into Wildlife Scary Park! The Park will become a family friendly Halloween party. Ride the Trainsylvanian Express through the woods and see the fright. Take a walk down our Giant Trick or Treat Trail, don’t forget a bag for candy. Or take a ride on our Not So Scary hayrack ride. This year will include a new extra scary event. Hours are 5 to 9 p.m. Oct. 16-17 and Oct. 23-24 and 4 to 8 p.m. Oct. 18 and 25. For information, call 676-0998. Admission is $10 for non-members; $8 for members. ! Special Halloween fun at the Peoria PlayHouse this October includes a Halloween Costume Creations workshop for kids ages 8-12 at 10 a.m. Oct. 17. Cost is $10 per child, $8 per member. On Oct. 10, the park will be transformed into a haunted forest. There is no additional charge to participate in this event. Admission to the PlayHouse is $8 for ages 1-65, $7 for ages older than 65 and active military personnel, and free for infants under 1. The museum is free for members; membership begins at $85 per family. For more information, visit www.peoriaplayhouse.org or call 323-6900. ! Peoria Zoo will present its new Pumpkin Bash from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 24. Event includes a mini trick-or-treat trail, games, crafts, and spooky decorations. This event is open to the public and is included with regular Zoo admission of $6/children 2-12, $9/adults, $8/seniors and active military. Zoo admission also includes free admission to Luthy Botanical Garden with its Hogwarts Garden of Botanical Wonders Oct. 9 - Nov. 8. Call 681-3559 for more information or go to www.peoriazoo.org. ! Pearce Community Center will host its 25th annual Spooktacular on Oct. 30. The event will begin at 4 p.m. with carnival games and a cake walk. There will be a haunted house, live entertainment, costume contest and a monster mash dance beginning at 7 p.m. A hot dog dinner with chips and a drink will be available to purchase. Game tickets can be purchased for 25 cents. The hot dog dinner will be $3 for children 12 and under and $5 for adults. A large adult meal with two hot dogs will be available for $7. For more information, call 274-4209 or visit Pearce at www.pearcecc.com. ! Peoria Heights Chamber of Commerce Second Annual Fall Celebration includes a Halloween costume contest and parade at 11 a.m. Oct. 31. An afterparade party will be at Heights Flowers on Prospect Road with games and refreshments plus trick or treats at participating chamber businesses. Register for the parade online by Oct. 28. For more information and to register for the parade visit the Peoria Heights Chamber website: www.peoriaheightschamber.com or call 282-7733. ! The Peoria Magicians Assembly is presenting “Halloween Magic Spook-tacular,” a family-friendly show featuring Spook Magic, Comedy Halloween Skits, and plenty of Monster Characters to give everyone a fun scare just in time for Halloween! Event will be at 3 p.m. Oct. 31 at the Exposition Gardens Opera House, 1601 W. Northmoor Road. General admission tickets are $5 for ages 3 and up; under 3 are free. Tickets available at the door the day of the show. Doors open at 2:30 p.m. without its dining options. You know about the food carts, impending food trucks and, of course, a number of long-standing restaurants. But sometimes we forget — or at least I forget — that bars serve food, too. That leads us to the Judge’s Chamber, 514 Main St., right across the street from the Pere Marquette/ Marriott hotel complex. The trail for a Downtown lunch led me there after learning that Ulrich’s Rebellion Room, just down the street, now serves lunch only on Thursdays and Fridays. “There’s just not enough business Downtown to serve every day,” an Ulrich’s employee said. But the Judge’s Chamber, right alongside Hoops, was open this Monday afternoon, so we headed in. The atmosphere during the day at the Chamber is pretty much like it is at night: it’s dark. It was also pretty quiet. There were two customers at the bar, plus the bartender, and that was it. A battery of video poker machines sat idle while TVs showered sports news down on us as we scanned the Halloween decorations over the bar. You’re not looking at a big menu at the Chamber. You have a hamburger ($5), cheeseburger ($5.50), pork tenderloin ($6.50), fish sandwich ($5) and chicken strips ($6). As for appetizers such as onion rings, mini-tacos or breaded mushrooms, the price is $4.75 apiece. There’s also Butch’s pizza, Morton’s own, which probably gets plenty of takers in the wee hours. But during the lunch hour, I went for the tenderloin with fries, while my dining companion settled on a cheeseburger with onion rings. The tenderloin was the standard overwhelm-the-bun job that you get at a lot of places. It came with pickles, tomato and onion which you need to boost the whole tender- BLUE Continued from Page C1 something comics look at as a serious way of getting out onto the road. The other side of that is that it doesn’t mean success. After I won, I had to work like five times harder. Q: Your cerebral palsy plays a big role in your jokes and show. When did you become comfortable with doing that? A: I still don’t (long pause). No, I’m just kidding. You know, I didn’t really talk about it much when I first started doing comedy. I was more of a storyteller, talking about experiences. Pretty early on I realized when I started getting personal, I found that people could really relate to it. Not just cerebral palsy but any disability. I really believe everyone has some type of disability. I’m loin experience. I add mustard and ketchup and anything else I can find on the table. The fries at the Chamber were particularly good — hot, crisp and tasty. You can also get them as an appetizer, a move that I’d recommend. The bartender who brought me my Diet Pepsi ($1.50) was also our server. He was particularly friendly and attentive and made our stay at the Chamber enjoyable. My partner opted for the burger, which he devoured hungrily. I snatched one of his onion rings (research) and judge them good but A: I got to be on the National Team for eight years in the Paralympics. Before that, I had very limited play. I love the sport, but in junior high I was cut from the team. Which is pretty heartbreaking. In my humble opinion in junior high, no one should be cut. But that didn’t stop me from kicking the ball around and playing when I could. And I’m so happy I did because I went on to be not a great soccer player, but a pretty good one. Lots of caps and a bunch of international play and 15 goals scored in my career. Thomas Bruch can be reached at 686-3262 or [email protected]. But slowly his act and appearance morphed. He took on a macabre theme, all black attire and jet-black hair and white face powder. And his magic turned dark, too. The trick that made him famous, in his 2010 stint competing on “America’s Got Talent,” not great. It was a pleasant visit as well as an enlightening one. After all, who knew that places that thrive at night also have something to offer during the day? Reminder: The Chamber maintains a cash-only policy, so have something besides a credit card in your wallet if you choose to stop down. Steve Tarter is Journal Star business editor. Tarter’s phone number is 686-3260, and his email address is [email protected]. Follow his blog, Minding Business, on pjstar.com and follow him on Twitter @SteveTarter Macklemore and Ryan Lewis set to perform at Bradley’s Renaissance Coliseum PEORIA — Grammy Award winning artist Macklemore and his sidekick, Ryan Lewis, will perform at the Renaissance Coliseum at Bradley University on Feb. 4. Tickets went on sale Wednesday morning for Bradley students only at the Coliseum ticket office. Tickets for students cost $11 through Nov. 3 and $16 after. The pit in front of the stage will be open only to current Bradley students. Tickets will go on sale to the public MACKLEMORE for $36 at 8:30 a.m. Oct. 21 online and at any Ticketmaster location. Bradley faculty and staff can purchase tickets beginning Oct. 19. Macklemore and Ryan Lewis won multiple Grammy Awards on their debut album, “The Heist,” most notably for the hit song “Thrift Shop.” Macklemore’s followup album is forthcoming and the single off that album, “Downtown,” has once again dominated pop charts and radio airwaves. The opening act for the show will be announced at a later date. Doors to the Coliseum will open at 7 p.m. Feb. 4 with the show starting at 8:30 p.m. Students will not be allowed entry to the show without a valid student ID. saw him cleaving into his throat with dental floss to retrieve a Lifesaver candy he had swallowed. The judges reacted in screams of fear and moans of disgust. “With the Lifesaver bit, I was trying to emulate Quentin Tarantino,” Sperry said. “I wanted the feeling of ‘this is really messed up but I’m still watching it.’” He’ll perform the Lifesaver trick at the Civic Center shows next week. He didn’t want to spoil the rest of his performance, but he mentioned a small tease of one trick. It involves audience participation, a quarter and him acting as a human piggybank. You can thank David Copperfield if you end up in the lobby. Thomas Bruch can be reached at 686-3262 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @ThomasBruch. Beethoven • Am I in a position to retire comfortably? • What are my options for my company 401(k) and other retirement plans? • Are my finances in order? • Who can I turn to help decipher the company packages and how it affects me? At Wells Fargo Advisors, we can assist you in addressing these questions and more. Call today to schedule a meeting 309.683.8950 October 24th - 7:30PM at Five Points Washington With piano soloist Michael Brown Coriolan Overture Piano Concerto No. 3 Symphony No. 7 Concert benefits: Peoria County ROE Adult Literacy - Upward Philip Unes Senior Vice President Investments 6810 N. Knoxville Ave. | Peoria, IL 61614 NOT FDIC Insured NO Bank Guarantee MAY Lose Value Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, Member SIPC, is a registered broker-dealer and a separate non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company. ©2012 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC. All rights reserved. PE-4515386_V2 514 Main St., Peoria (309) 674-5005 Hours: 7 a.m. to 4 a.m., Monday to Friday; 6 a.m. to 4 a.m., Saturday and Sunday. Ratings: ★★★★ is highest Food ★★★ Atmosphere ★★ Service ★★★★ Prices: Appetizers, $4.75; hamburgers, $5 to $5.50; fish sandwich, $5; chicken strips, $6; pork tenderloin, $6.50; grilled cheese, $4. Full bar available. Carry-out available; cash only. Q: I thought it was cool to see you were a soccer guy who competed on the Paralympic National Team. What was that experience like? Continued from Page C1 If your employment status is affected by the recent decision to reduce the work force, you face tough decisions! Investment and Insurance Products: Judge’s Chamber just lucky that mine is on the outside. ILLUSIONISTS CATERPILLAR EMPLOYEES Bryce Unruh Managing Director Investments Quick Guide $35 A DU LTS | $8 STU D E NTS & KI D S For tickets, call 309 444-8222, buy them at Kidder Music in Peoria, or go to our website. heartlandfestivalorchestra.org · 309 339-3943 CUE JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2015 C3 Del Toro’s ‘Crimson Peak’ casts a gothic spell ‘Crimson Peak’ ★★★ A REVIEW BY JAKE COYLE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The most pressing threat in Guillermo del Toro’s gothic horror “Crimson Peak” isn’t the ooze-filled cauldrons of dead souls in the basement of the old Victorian mansion, nor the plotting, black-clad sister (Jessica Chastain), who serves a bitterly poisonous tea. It’s the ever-lurking possibility that, at any moment, the lush, ornate tapestry of Del Toro’s film might swallow its performers whole. It would be a grand death. “Crimson Peak” is so lovingly wrapped in the stylish trappings of the genre that it’s one of the few movies you could say is worth it purely for the wallpaper. It stars Mia Wasikowska, Tom Hiddleston and Jessica Chastain — a fine trio of actors. But the film’s true above-the-title artists are more properly cinematographer Dan Laustsen, production designer Thomas Sanders and Starring: Mia Wasikowska, Tom Hiddleston and Jessica Chastain. Directed by: Guillermo del Toro. Running time: 1:58. Rated: R. Opens Friday at: Grand Prairie 18; Landmark and Sunnyland cinemas; AMC ShowPlace 14; Willow Knolls 14. Family guide: Bloody violence, some sexual content and brief strong language. Quick take: In the aftermath of a family tragedy, an aspiring author is torn between love for her childhood friend and the temptation of a mysterious outsider. Trying to escape the ghosts of her past, she is swept away to a house that breathes, bleeds … and remembers. costume designer Kate Hawley, who under the lordly command of Del Toro, summon an atmosphere gaga with all things gothic. “Crimson Peak” casts a spell that fails to quite hold, but it’s NEW IN THEATERS “BRIDGE OF SPIES”: Please see review on Page C4 “GOOSEBUMPS”: A teenager teams up with the daughter of young adult horror author R.L. Stine after the writer’s imaginary demons are set free on the town of Greendale, Md. “(T)ERROR”: (T)ERROR is the first documentary to place filmmakers on the ground during an active FBI counterterrorism sting operation. “WOODLAWN”: A gifted high school football player must learn to embrace his talent and his faith as he battles racial tensions on and off the field. NOW SHOWING BLACK MASS ★★★: The true story of Whitey Bulger, the brother of a state senator and the most infamous violent criminal in the history of South Boston, who became an FBI informant to take down a Mafia family invading his turf. Rated R. (Richard Roeper) 2:02 EVEREST ★★★: A climbing expedition on Mt. Everest is devastated by a severe snow storm. Rated PG-13. (Richard Roeper) 2:01 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA 2 ★★: Dracula and his friends try to bring out the monster in his half human, half vampire grandson in order to keep Mavis from leaving the hotel. Rated PG. (More Content Now) 1:29 THE INTERN ★★★½: 70-yearold widower Ben Whittaker has discovered that retirement isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Seizing an opportunity to get back in the game, he becomes a senior intern at an online fashion site, founded and run by Jules Ostin. Rated PG-13. (Richard Roeper) 2:01 THE MARTIAN ★★★½: Features Matt Damon giving one of his best performances as a botanist stranded on Mars and using all his ingenuity to establish communications and stay alive. Rated PG-13. (Richard Roeper) 2:21 MAZE RUNNER: THE SCORCH TRIALS ★★★: After having escaped the Maze, the Gladers now face a new set of challenges on the open roads of a desolate landscape filled with unimaginable obstacles. Rated PG-13. (New York Daily News) 2:12 MISSISSIPPI GRIND ★★★½: As gambling buddies on the road, Ben Mendelsohn and Ryan Reynolds look like they know what they’re doing in the poker room and at the blackjack table. Rated R. (Richard Roeper) 1:48 PAN ★★: Orphan Peter is spirited away to the magical world of Neverland, where he finds both fun and dangers, and ultimately discovers his destiny — to become the hero who will be forever known as Peter Pan. Rated PG. (More Content Now) 1:51 SICARIO ★★★★: An idealistic FBI agent is enlisted by an elected government task force to aid in the escalating war against drugs at the border area between the U.S. and Mexico. Rated R. (Richard Roeper) 2:01 SLEEPING WITH OTHER PEOPLE ★★★½: Jason Sudeikis and Alison Brie play attractive, noncommittal people who expend an awful lot of emotional energy on remaining friends even though it’s perfectly obvious they should be together. Rated R. (Richard Roeper) 1:35 THE VISIT ★½: A single mother finds that things in her family’s life go very wrong after her two young children visit their grandparents. Rated PG-13. (RIchard Roeper) 1:34 THE WALK ★★★: This solid fictionalized version of Philippe Petit’s illegal 1974 high-wire walk between the Twin Towers boasts breathtaking visuals and a charming lead performance by Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Rated PG. (Richard Roeper) 2:03 Rizzi’s Italian Restaurant 4613 N. Sheridan Rd Peoria (309) 689-0025 • Full Bar Join us Nov. 3 for Stick A Fork In Cancer. Portion of proceeds to American Cancer Society. PE-4516369 Serving Dinner daily starting at 4:30pm • Featuring Pasta, Chicken, Seafood, Pizza & More Giftcards Available for purchase on our website at rizzisrestaurant.com or at our location Locally Owned and Operated since 1995 PE-4513693 PE-4511804 unquestionably the work of a man who loves — I mean, really loves — movies. It opens with a flashback and a promise from Edith Cushing (Wasikowska) that “ghosts are real.” After the death of her mother, she (or at least a ghoulish ghostly of her) visits Edith with a frightful warning: “Beware of Crimson Peak.” It’s a message that curiously fails to impress. The setting is turn-of-the-century Buffalo, where Edith lives with her father Carter Cushing (an excellent Jim Beaver). She wants to be a novelist, but her manuscript (a ghost story) is condescendingly rejected, praised only for feminine “loops” of her penmanship. Advised to write a love story, she pleads that the ghosts are a metaphor for the past. Such is the tenor of Del Toro’s fable, which he wrote with Matthew Robins. You wouldn’t mistake it for Henry James or even for Hitchcock. The exquisite set design is more heightened than the emotions; the grotesques are too beautiful to be too deep. From England, Thomas Sharpe (the splendid Tom Hiddleston) comes to town with his mysterious sister Lucille (Chastain), in search of a grant for a contraption of his invention to mine the red clay beneath their home. Cushing, an established business man, quickly rejects Thomas, but Edith doesn’t. The Sharpes have clearly duplicitous motives, but Edith swoons for Thomas. Just as they’re departing Buffalo, Edith’s father is killed. The scene is a beauty: in the steam and golden light of a morning bathhouse, an unseen assailant sneaks up to Carter and crushes his scull over a sink, leaving blood and water flowing from the cracked porcelain. Edith and Thomas wed and the trio returns to the remote Sharpe family manor in England, Allerdale Hall, where the movie moves into its more sedate house-of-horrors second half. A hole in the roof pours light and autumn leaves down the center, red clay bubbles beneath the floor boards, ghosts lurk in the closets, the bath runs blood red and (horror of horrors) the kitchen could use granite counter tops. It’s a fixer upper. The movie settles into a “Notorious”-like plot where Edith is slowly poisoned while unearthing the Sharpe family secrets. The rich atmosphere of “Crimson Peak” never wanes, but the story does. Having summoned the gothic ghosts, Del Toro never fully unleashes them. The director’s dark fantasy masterpiece remains “Pan’s Labyrinth,” but his affection for gothic romance is infectious; he’s surely, hopefully destined to adapt Dickens. Even as his last film, the kaiju monster movie “Pacific Rim,” proved, there may be no better conjurer of color in movies right now. His dreams, and nightmares, are in technicolor. Follow AP film critic Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP CUE C4 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2015 JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. ‘Bridge of Spies’ a gripping character study A REVIEW BY RICHARD ROEPER In this image released by Disney, Tom Hanks appears in a scene from “Bridge of Spies.” Enter Tom Hanks, in full modern-day Jimmy Stewart mode, as James Donovan, a genial family man and successful insurance attorney who’s almost always the smartest man in the room and doesn’t mind if others in his presence perceive otherwise. Donovan seems an unlikely choice to defend Abel — but he was a prosecutor at Nuremberg, he’s a well-respected legal presence, and he’ll mount a capable defense, even though it will make him one of the most despised men in America and of course there’s zero chance of actually winning the case. The United States government and the great majority of Americans want Abel put to death — but Donovan argues passionately and successfully for an extended prison sentence, arguing Abel could be of great value in case an American soldier/spy is caught by the Soviets and there’s a chance of a prisoner swap. Which is exactly what happens. In a heart-thumping sequence that reminds us Spielberg is one of the godfathers of cool action sequences with cuttingedge effects, American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers (an excellent Austin Stowell) is blasted out of the skies by a Soviet fighter, ejecting just in time to see his plane explode as he parachutes to safety — and captivity. Now the U.S. government has another assignment for civilian attorney James Donovan. They’d like him to go to Berlin, which has recently been split by a concrete wall, and negotiate a trade. We shift from the rainsoaked film noir streets of New York to bleak, snow-blanketed Berlin, where Donovan goes deep into the rabbit hole in a series of increasingly convoluted and sometimes comically bizarre adventures as he attempts to secure a trade of Abel for Powers — along with an American student recently detained by the Germans. (The Coen brothers did an extensive polish on the screenplay, and their handiwork seems most evident in the Berlin scenes.) Nursing drinks while stating his case with various Soviet and German officials who aren’t even honest about their actual titles, fighting off a cold, Donovan keeps telling everyone he just wants to get this thing done so he can go home and crawl into his own bed. Such fine and measured work from Hanks, who is as good as anyone has ever been at playing men of great integrity and warm hearts who aren’t to be trifled with when the heat is on. Don’t mistake the smile and the friendly handshake for weakness. Starring: Tom Hanks, Mark Rylance, Austin Stowell, Alan Alda and Amy Ryan. Directed by: Steven Spielberg. Running time: 2:22. Rated: PG-13. Opens Friday at: Grand Prairie 18; Landmark and Sunnyland cinemas; AMC ShowPlace 14; Willow Knolls 14. Family guide: Some violence and brief strong language. Quick take: Steven Spielberg has taken the largely forgotten 1960 exchange of U.S. and Soviet spies and turned it into a gripping character study and thriller that feels a bit like a John Le Carre adaptation if Frank Capra were at the controls. Tom Hanks, in full modern-day Jimmy Stewart mode, stars as the genial U.S. negotiator. Beta Sigma Phi’s 37th Annual CRAFT SHOW Located at Galva High School PE-4513797 You could write brief descriptions of any 100 relatively significant chapters in American history, toss ’em all into one of those hand-cranked raffle cylinders, pluck out one entry, and I’ll bet Steven Spielberg could turn that event into an Oscar-bait motion picture experience. To wit: “Bridge of Spies.” Some 40 years into his career and still a master of his craft (a few camera moves and special effects moments in this film are simply dazzling), Spielberg has taken an important but largely forgotten and hardly action-packed slice of the Cold War and turned it into a gripping character study and thriller that feels a bit like a John Le Carre adaptation if Frank Capra were at the controls. “Bridge of Spies” is set mostly in the mid- and late 1950s, when the Cold War between the Americans and the Soviets was heating up — and the East Germans, filled with resentment toward the United States and loathing for the Russians, were hell-bent on finding their own place at the superpower table. On some days a global nuclear war seemed more likely than not. We open on the Brooklyn of 1957, where a seemingly meek man of late middle age quietly goes about his daily routine, which involves painting portraits and, oh yes, working as a mole for the Soviets. In a tightly choreographed and perfectly paced sequence set in the subway system, the man eludes a battery of serious FBI men in serious dark coats and hats — but only temporarily, as it turns out. Eventually they show up at his door, put him in cuffs and turn the place upside down in search of evidence. The man is one Rudolf Abel (played by the British theater actor Mark Rylance in a performance of great subtlety, dignity and droll humor). There’s little doubt Abel’s a Soviet spy, but he will be given a trial so America can show the world that everyone in the United States is entitled to a defense, even an illegal immigrant working to help bring the country to its knees. ‘Bridge of Spies’ ★★★★ Spielberg and his superb cinematographer Janusz Kaminski deliver some excellent visual callbacks, as when Donovan looks out the window of a train and sees Brooklyn kids climbing fences separating their backyards — and is reminded of the barbed wire-crowned Berlin Wall. The supporting cast, including Amy Ryan as Donovan’s wife and Scott Shepherd as a CIA operative who becomes Donovan’s unofficial partner in espionage, is first-rate. Hanks will be in the conversation for best actor, Rylance will almost certainly be nominated for best supporting actor, and when the titles of the five-plus films nominated for best picture are announced, it will be a surprise if “Bridge of Spies” doesn’t make the cut. October 17, 2015 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Galva, IL Admission $2 Food Stand .00 www.galvacraftshow.info I l l i n o i s C e n t r a l No Strollers - No Pets C o l l e g e An E v e n i ng w i th PatsyCline This performance Davis celebrates some On Nighe Only t ! featuring veteran Branson performer Camille of the greatest hits and stories behind the songs of this influential lady of country music. Friday, October 23 • 7:30 pm ICC Performing Arts Center Tickets: $25 general public, $10 students ArtsAtICC.com (309) 694-5136 American English will perform Beatles hits in Peoria PEORIA — Beatles tribute band American English will perform Jan. 15 at the Peoria Civic Center Theater. Tickets for the 8 p.m. show go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday starting at $28. Tickets can be purchased at the Civic Center Box Office or at Ticketmaster.com or by calling 1-800-745-3000. The band performs favorites such as “She Loves You,” “Twist and Shout,” “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” “Hey Jude,” “Let It Be” and many others. Audra McDonald An intimate evening of songs and storytelling You’re Invited... Saturday, October October 17 Doors Open at 5:45pm Ceremony at 6:30pm, followed by dinner & dancing Buffet dinner includes traditional Lebanese dishes and American foods - $40.00 per person Depending on which family you care to be related to, You may come in your fanciest Lebanese ensemble or tacky Redneck casual.. Presented in ‘Theatre in the Round’ style, THE LEBANESE REDNECK CK WEDDING is an original, interactive, improv comedy in the style of Tony ‘n Tina’s Wedding - a wedding you won’t want to miss! st Written by Andrew Driscoll and the Original Cast For more information, call the Itoo Club - 309.676.9725 Reservations can be made now by sending a check to the Itoo Hall: 4909 W. Farmington Road, Peoria, IL 61604 PE-4471887 SATURDAY OCTOBER 17 • 8PM Peoria Civic Center 309.671.1096 PE-4494302 CALL 618-883-2578 OR 618-232-1268 PE-4493536_V4 ON SITE TICKET $12 101 STATE STREET, PEORIA, IL 61602 www.peoriasymphony.org THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2015 C5 JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE LYNN JOHNSTON BABY BLUES RICK KIRKMAN & JERRY SCOTT BIG NATE LINCOLN PIERCE STONE SOUP JAN ELIOT PICKLES BRIAN CRANE PEARLS BEFORE SWINE STEPHAN PASTIS HI AND LOIS BRIAN & GREG WALKER BLONDIE DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL FRAZZ JEF MALLETT BEETLE BAILEY MORT, GREG & BRIAN WALKER GARFIELD JIM DAVIS CRANKSHAFT TOM BATIUK ZITS JERRY SCOTT & JIM BORGMAN JUDGE PARKER WILSON & MANLEY GET FUZZY DARBY CONLEY REX MORGAN WOODY WILSON & TERRY BEATTY FRANK & ERNEST BOB THAVES CLASSIC PEANUTS CHARLES SCHULZ BORN LOSER CHIP SANSOM DINETTE SET JULIE LARSON DILBERT SCOTT ADAMS NON SEQUITUR WILEY MILLER 3"/%0.,*/%40''"$5/&44&3*/#"33&55+"$,.*/(0 XIBUTOPXDPOTJEFSFEUIF C6 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2015 LEISURE&ADVICE/CUE JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. NEA BRIDGE CUE CALENDAR CROSSWORD By PHILLIP ALDER By THOMAS JOSEPH COMPILED BY MICKEY WIELAND OF THE JOURNAL STAR Items for the Cue calendar need to be submitted 10 days prior to publication. Send information to Mickey Wieland at [email protected] (preferred method) or by mail to the Journal Star, 1 News Plaza, Peoria, IL 61643. Riverfront Museum The Peoria Riverfront Museum, 222 SW Washington St., peoriariverfrontmu seum.org or call 686-7000. The Giant Screen Theater serves beer, wine and pizza. Giant Screen Theater: Through Oct. 22 — “The Martian” 3-D, RealD and 2D. Dome Planetarium: Oct. 17 — The Lives & Deaths of Stars, 6-7 p.m., free; Oct. 19 — Astronomy Night: Join the White House Star Party!, Donovan Park, 6 p.m., free. Daily: “Legends of the Night Sky: Perseus and Andromeda,” “Back to the Moon for Good,” “Stars Over Peoria,” “Uniview: Dynamic Planets.” Special Events: Oct. 17 — Wine & Art Night, 7-9 p.m. Civic Center The Peoria Civic Center is located in Downtown Peoria. Call 673-8900; for box office, call 673-3200; for tickets, call (800) 745-3000 or visit PeoriaCivicCenter.com. Oct. 16: Jeff Foxworthy & Larry the Cable Guy, 7:30 p.m., arena. Tickets: $49.50. Oct. 21-22: The Illusionist: Live From Broadway, 7:30 p.m., theater. Tickets: $40-$70. Oct. 24: Tween Stars Live, 2 p.m., theater. Tickets: $21-$62. Special events “20 Years of Ford with V8 Flat Head Engines,” display through October, Wheels O’ Time Museum, 1710 W. Wood- side Drive, Dunlap. The museum hours: noon-5 p.m. Wednesdays-Sundays. Admission: $6.50/adults; $3.50/ages 3-11. Visit www.wheelsotime.org. Historic Trolley Tours, sponsored by the Peoria Historical Society, Thursdays-Saturdays through Oct. 31. For times and ticket information, visit www.peoriahistoricalsociety.org or call 674-1921. Halloween events 27th Annual Witches Walk, a “not so scary” illuminated walk, 6-8 p.m. Oct. 15-17 and 22-24, Fon du Lac Farm Park, 305 Neumann Dr., East Peoria. Cost: $3/adults; $2.50/children ages 1-15. Call 694-2195. Wildlife Scary Park!, Oct. 16-18 and 23-25, a family friendly Halloween party, Wildlife Prairie Park, Hanna City. Features the Trainsylvanian Express through the woods, a walk down the Giant Trick or Treat Trail (don’t forget a bag for candy) and a ride on the Not So Scary hayrack ride. Hours: 5-9 p.m. Oct. 16-17 and Oct. 23-24 and 4-8 p.m. Oct. 18 and 25. Admission: $10/nonmembers; $8/members. Call 676-0998. Haunted Peoria area tours, based on historical documentation, sponsored by Central Illinois Paranormal Investigative Team: Springdale Cemetery: Oct. 17, 23 and 27; French-Native American Burial Ground, downtown: Oct. 16; Cole Hollow Trail, Pekin: Oct. 20; Chillicothe Cemetery: Oct. 24. Tours begin at 6 p.m. on weekdays and at 4 p.m. on Saturdays. Call 2826768 for reservations. concert, 2 p.m. Oct. 18, Northminster Presbyterian Church, 10720 N. Knoxville, Peoria. $10/advance; $12/at the door. Call 231-2471. Dueling Pianos, 6 p.m. Oct. 16, Kickapoo Creek Winery, 6605 N. Smith Road, Edwards. Cost: $40/person (includes dinner and dessert). Call 495-9463, Ext. 1 for reservations. Howlin’ on Water Dueling Pianos, 8 p.m. Oct. 16, the Broadway Lounge, Maxam building, 316 SW Washington St. Cost: $38/person for dinner and show; $10/person for the show only. Visit HowlinOnWater.com. Music in the McKenzie, featuring Pint & A Half, 2-4 p.m. Oct. 18, Peoria Public Library, North Branch McKenzie room. Free. Live at the Five Spot, Contemporary Art Center of Peoria, 305 SW Water St.: Oct. 16 — Bill Porter. Music 5:30-7:30 p.m. Admission: $8/CAC members; $12/ nonmembers. Call 674-6822. Limelight Eventplex, 8102 N. University: Oct. 21 — Mushroomhead, Mortiis, Unsaid Fate, Prey for Us, 8 p.m. (for 16 and over), tickets: $20-$25; Oct. 23 — Rodney Atkins, 8 p.m., tickets: $25$40; Oct. 24 — Here Come The Mummies, 8 p.m., tickets: $25 in advance. Visit limelighteventplex.com or call 693-1234. Dance Salsa at CAC: Dance lessons and open dancing, 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Oct. 16, Contemporary Art Center of Peoria, 305 SW Water St. Admission: $4/CAC members; $7/nonmembers. Call 674-6822. Music Central Illinois Jazz Society House Band, 6 p.m. and The Brazilionaires, 7:15 p.m. Oct. 18, Starting Gate Banquet Room in Landmark Recreation Center. Admission: $5/members; $7/nonmembers; Free/students. Call 692-5330 or visit www.cijs.org. “I Feel a Song Coming On!,” Pride of Peoria Barbershop Chorus 73rd annual Comedy Jukebox Comedy Club, 3527 W. Farmington Road: Oct. 15-17 — Josh Blue. Call 673-5853 or visit JukeboxComedy.com. Mason City Limits, 114 E. Chestnut St., Mason City: Oct. 16-17 — Vilmos. Call (217) 482-5233 or visit MCLimits.com. ANNIE’S MAILBOX Organ donation is gift that lives on for others SUDOKU PUZZLE Complete the grid so that every row, every column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. Tips for working the Sudoku puzzle can be found at pjstar.com TODAY’S ANSWERS ! DEAR ANNIE: Several years ago, you printed a poem about organ donation. I carried it until it ripped to shreds. I’m in end-stage renal failure and want people to be aware of the importance of organ donation. Please reprint it. — Not Giving Up DEAR NOT: Here it is, with our hopes for your recovery: “To Remember Me” by Robert Noel Test (19261994) DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES Give my heart to a person whose own heart has pain. Give my blood to the teenager who was pulled from the wreckage of his car, so that he might live to see his grandchildren play. Give my kidneys to one who depends on a machine to exist from week to week. Take my bones, every muscle, every fiber and nerve in my body and find a way to make a crippled child walk. Explore every corner of my brain. Take my cells, if necessary, and let them grow so that, someday, a speechless boy will shout at the crack of a bat and a deaf girl will hear the sound of rain against her windows. Burn what is left of me and scatter the ashes to the winds to help the flowers grow. If you must bury something, let it be my faults, my weaknesses and all my prejudice against my fellow man. Give my sins to the devil. Give my soul to God. If, by chance, you wish to remember me, do it with a kind deed or word to someone who needs you. If you do all I have asked, I will live forever. KATHY MITCHELL & MARCY SUGAR The day will come when my body will lie upon a white sheet neatly tucked under four corners of a mattress located in a hospital busily occupied with the living and the dying. At a certain moment a doctor will determine that my brain has ceased to function and that, for all intents and purposes, my life has stopped. When that happens, do not attempt to instill artificial life into my body by the use of a machine. And don’t call this my deathbed. Let it be called the Bed of Life, and let my body be taken from it to help others lead fuller lives. Give my sight to a man who has never seen a sunrise, a baby’s face or love in the eyes of a woman. At the bridge table, a welltimed pause might help you to make or break a contract, making you and your partner happy. In today’s deal, many players would go down at the table, but more would find the winning play on paper because they would pause at the right moment. What should South do in five hearts after West leads the diamond ace? Did West have a more effective lead? West used the Unusual No-trump to show at least 5-5 in the minors. Then East and South bid at the five-level, unsure who could make what. If the defense were accurate, five diamonds would go down one, losing two spades and one heart. Five hearts is in danger if West has the club ace. Then declarer might concede one spade and two clubs. Of course, if East has the club ace, no problem. But if West holds that card, what chance does South have? Declarer can get home if spades are 3-2 and hearts are 2-1, if he does not ruff at trick one, but instead discards a spade. Suppose West continues with a low diamond. South ruffs, cashes his heart king and spade ace, plays a spade to dummy’s king, ruffs a spade high, returns to dummy with a trump, and pitches his two clubs on the high spades. Five hearts bid and made with an overtrick. Afterward, West said that next time he would lead a low diamond at trick one. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Jazz musician FREDDY COLE is 84. Singer BARRY MCGUIRE is 80. Actress LINDA LAVIN is 78. Rock musician DON STEVENSON (Moby Grape) is 73. Actressdirector PENNY MARSHALL is 72. Baseball Hall of Famer JIM PALMER is 70. Singer-musician Annie’s Mailbox is written by KATHY MITCHELL and MARCY RICHARD CARPENTER is 69. SUGAR, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please Britain’s Duchess of York, SARAH email your questions to [email protected], or write to: FERGUSON, is 56. Chef EMERIL Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa LAGASSE is 56. Beach, CA 90254. ASTRO-GRAPH JUMBLE By DAVID L. HOYT and JEFF KNUREK TODAY’S BIRTHDAY: You shouldn’t hesitate to travel if it will help you take advantage of a lucrative opportunity. Business conferences, seminars or conventions will offer valuable contacts and increased prospects. Hard work, flexibility and determination will bring you success. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23): Love is on the rise. Participation in a philanthropic or charitable event will bring you recognition and respect from an influential individual. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22): Change is highlighted. Unanticipated alterations to your home or property will be beneficial in the long run. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21): Travel and communication delays can be expected. Resist the urge to make hasty decisions or unreasonable promises. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Finish projects, conclude contracts or finalize deals. Completing your current plans will show everyone that you mean business. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19): Advance preparation will prevent you from becoming overwhelmed by your responsibilities. Romance is highlighted. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20): Your reputation will grow if you make personal changes. Expand your profile and touch up your resume in order to give your confidence a boost. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Fun and entertainment will highlight your day. A close friend or relative will entice you to try something adventurous. Have a great time, but avoid taking unnecessary risks. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You must be clear about how much you are willing to do for others. Embarrassment or hurt feelings could result if those around you expect more than you can give. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Holding a grudge is pointless and stressful. You will cause more harm internally if you harbor ill will toward others. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Timely information will accompany a chance for a new beginning. Hesitation will lead to a missed opportunity. Be prepared to act quickly when the occasion calls for it. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your competitive spirit will give you an advantage over your rivals. Others will be impressed by your skills, enabling you to gain support and gather good advice. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You may feel generous, but overindulgence will cause serious problems when your bills arrive. Offer your time or suggestions, not money, when someone comes to you for assistance. FREE COUPON SEMINAR AT HY-VEE Presented by Journal Star coupon blogger Jolene Stecken Who: Anyone interested in saving money. What: How to save money on household expenses by using coupons. When: Thurs., Oct. 29, 2015 6:00 - 7:00pm Where: Hy-Vee Club Room Second Floor 4125 N. Sheridan Rd. Peoria, IL Why: SAVE MONEY! Questions: Call Phil at 686-3026 Limited Seating — Call Phil at 686-3026 or email [email protected] SPONSORED BY: AND THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2015 SECTION C PLENTY OF BITE RICHARD ROEPER: ‘Jurassic World’ is pure, dumb, wall-to-wall fun. This is ‘Jaws’ meets ‘Godzilla’ meets the ‘Jurassic Park’ movies. REVIEW, C3 Steamboat revs up summer POP GOES PEKIN ‘Bigger, better carnival,’ thematic performances highlight festival BY THOMAS BRUCH OF THE JOURNAL STAR CRAFT SODA TOUR MAKES STOP AT RIVERFRONT PARK T BY THOMAS BRUCH OF THE JOURNAL STAR he craft beer boom of recent years has opened the taste buds of many to bold brews produced around the country and the world. But Pekin will be hosting a different sort of craft festival this weekend that recalls a simpler pleasure — craft soda. The Pekin Insurance Soda Pop Tour will bring more than 80 varieties of craft soda to the Pekin Riverfront Park on Saturday, some of which are household names — Dad’s Root Beer — or other more obscure sodas heralding eclectic flavors like strawberry jalapeno, apple pie and hibiscus. “Most are Midwest bottlers, and a lot of them are mom and pops,” said Annette Begner, president of Plan Ahead Events, one of two groups coordinating the festival along with Jay Goldberg Events and Please see SODA, Page C2 Pekin Insurance Soda Pop Tour Festival ! When: 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday, June 13. ! Where: Pekin Riverfront Park. ! Cost: Admission is free. Samples cost 50 cents each and unlimited sampling passes are $20. For more information, visit www.sodapoptour.us/ pekin.html. PHOTO BY PLAN AHEAD EVENTS Dozens of bottled craft sodas, including the Cicero Beverage Co., are gathered on a table at last year’s Soda Pop Tour Festival in Dixon. FINE DINING - STEAKS - SEAFOOD - WINE | LIVE MUSIC - PIANO BAR SURF & TURF SPECIAL $20.95 FRESH SALMON $19.95 JIM’S BAKED CHICKEN Filet Mignon & 2 Cajun or Broiled Prawns All Dinners include Salad & Baked Potato DOWNTOWN • 110 SW. Jefferson - Peoria, IL 61602 $14.95 Not valid with any other offers. No substitutions. Must present coupon before ordering. Expires 7-31-2015 PE-4493998 FRI. & SAT. ONLY ENGLISH CUT PRIME RIB $19.95 RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED (309) 673-5300 PEORIA — The Steamboat Days Festival, the riverfront event surrounding the Steamboat Classic race, will take place for the 45th year from June 18-20. “In many ways it’s a kick off to the summer,” said Ted Sumner, co-chair of Steamboat Days with Peoria Area Community Events. “We see it as a stay-cation where the family can go down to the riverfront and have a good time.” Sumner said the live performances this year will be thematically driven, with a dance party Friday night featuring The Unhandsome Devils, Patrick N Swayze and the Hot Sauce Committee. Saturday night will be a “Country Night” with performances by Cadillac Jack, Joe Stamm Band and Ryan Ideus & the Feudin’ Hillbillys, while Thursday night’s entertainment will have free admission. All concerts will be held at the CEFCU Center Stage. On the other side of the Gateway building, a “bigger, better” carnival will be held all weekend, featuring a $20 wristband special for unlimited rides from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. A bags tournament will be held Saturday afternoon only this year, a change from the two tournaments last year. Sumner, in his third year as co-chairman of the event, said that the support for the footrace and the surrounding weekend activities by both participants and spectators each year makes Steamboat Days one of the best central Illinois rituals in the summertime. “It’s our 45th anniversary, and it’s a tradition we hope continues another 45 years,” Sumner said. Thomas Bruch can be reached at 686-3262 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @ThomasBruch. If you go ! What: Steamboat Days Festival. ! When: 4:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Thursday, June 18; 4:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Friday, June 19; 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Saturday, June 20. ! Where: Peoria riverfront and the CEFCU Center Stage. ! Cost: Admission is free all day Thursday and before 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday. $5 admission for 12 years old and up after 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday. $20 wristband passes for unlimited rides. For more information, visit www.peoriaevents.com. CUE C2 THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2015 JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. Hy-Vee Market Cafe checks out Quick Guide BY PHIL LUCIANO OF THE JOURNAL STAR PEORIA — As a restaurant, Hy-vee is a good grocery store. Hy-Vee Market Cafe won’t make you forget about Jim’s, or even Applebee’s. But you can find some decent grub. Plus, there’s a bar, which might be a good thing if you despise grocery shopping. Hy-Vee boasts more than 50 cafes, along with nine Market Grilles, the latter of which has a bigger menu. The Sheridan Village Hy-Vee long has sold Chinese dishes, pizza and salads for take-out or eat-in. But last month, the sit-down Cafe opened, with wait service and — says the sign at the entrance — no grocery carts permitted. Classy, no? The restaurant takes the place of the old eat-in area. Strewn with booths and tables, the room — best described as upscale cafeteria — is dotted with seven TVs, mostly tuned to sports during our early-dinner visit. Service was decent. Our young waiter couldn’t get our drink orders very quickly, as he was too young to serve alcohol. But my wife enjoyed her glass of Mark West pinot noir ($6), while I quite liked my draft ($4), which was deemed “local” and “red;” perhaps Hy-Vee can better tout the notion that at least two drafts are from the Peoria Brewing Co., including my Erik the Red Hy-Vee Market Cafe 4125 N. Sheridan Road, Peoria (Sheridan Village) 686-5920 Hours: Food served 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Ratings: ★★★★ is highest Food ★★ Atmosphere ★★1/2 Service ★★★ Prices: Appetizers, $8 to $9; salads, $9 to $13; flat breads, $8 and $9; sandwiches and burgers (with side), entrees $10 to $23; desserts, $5. Miscellaneous: Credit cards accepted; carryout available. Irish ale. Otherwise, though, the service was attentive and speedy. Online, the Hy-Vee menu is extensive. In Peoria, it’s shrunk down, yet still boasts a reasonable selection of six appetizers, five entrees, six burgers, eight sandwiches and five salads. From our experience, the apps are the place to focus. Maybe they’re done well because of Hy-Vee’s experience with Asian food. But the bacon jalapeno won tons ($8) offered a nice creamy bite, while the Asian trio ($9) involve a solid combo of “firecracker” shrimp (though it wasn’t too hot), crab rangoon and spring rolls. Plus, the food is presented well, arranged attractively and not just clomped onto a 5 NOW SHOWING NEW IN THEATERS ALOHA ★★★: A celebrated military contractor returns to the site of his greatest career triumphs and re-connects with a long-ago love while unexpectedly falling for the hard-charging Air Force watchdog assigned to him. Rated PG-13. (Richard Roeper) 1:45 AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON ★★★½: This giant superhero adventure is sometimes daffy, occasionally baffling, surprisingly touching and even romantic with one kinetic thrill after another. It earns a place of high ranking in the Marvel Universe. Rated PG13. (Richard Roeper) 2:22 ENTOURAGE ★★: Movie star Vincent Chase, together with his boys Eric, Turtle, and Johnny, are back — and back in business with super agent-turned-studio head Ari Gold on a risky project that will serve as Vince’s directorial debut. Rated R. (Richard Roeper) 1:44 HOME ★★: An alien on the run from his own people, lands on Earth and makes friends with the adventurous Tip, who is on a quest of her own. Rated PG. (Richard Roeper) 1:36 INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 ★★★: A prequel set before the haunting bers are often curiously dull. Rated PG-13. (Richard Roeper) 1:52 POLTERGEIST ★★: A family “JURASSIC WORLD”: See review whose suburban home is haunted Page C3 by evil forces must come together Also opening at Peoria Cinto rescue their youngest daughter emas 12 at Landmark is “100after the apparitions take her year-old Man.” After living a long captive. Rated PG-13. (Kansas and colorful life, Allan Karlsson City Star) 1:33 finds himself stuck in a nursing SAN ANDREAS ★★: In the afterhome. On his 100th birthday, he math of a massive earthquake leaps out a window and begins in California, a rescue-chopper an unexpected journey. pilot makes a dangerous journey across the state in order to of the Lambert family that reveals rescue his estranged daughter. Rated PG-13. (Ed Symkus) 1:54 how gifted psychic Elise Rainier SPY ★★★: A desk-bound CIA reluctantly agrees to use her ability to contact the dead in order to analyst volunteers to go underhelp a teenage girl. Rated PG-13. cover to infiltrate the world of a deadly arms dealer, and prevent (New York Daily News) 1:37 MAD MAX: FURY ROAD ★★★★: diabolical global disaster. Rated R. (Richard Roeper) 2:00 Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron TOMORROWLAND ★★: Bound make one of the best action by a shared destiny, a teen and duos ever in a stunningly effeca former boy-genius inventor tive post-apocalyptic daytime nightmare that contains a surpris- embark on a mission to unearth the secrets of a place that exists ing amount of depth. Rated R. in their collective memory. Rated (Richard Roeper) 2:00 PG. (Richard Roeper) 2:10 PITCH PERFECT 2 ★★: Sequel to 2012’s hit about a cappella singers has a few funny one-liners and occasional moments of zany inspiration, but the musical num- SODA the Riverfront Park setting and possibly engage those outside of Pekin. Dixon embraced the Soda Pop tour last year, and Begner said organizers have targeted smaller cities as an ideal destination. If the festival doesn’t go flat Saturday, Begner said there are big plans in the future for the tour. “We’re looking to expand and travel to all 50 states eventually,” Begner said. For now, the pop and fizz of craft soda will try to imitate the success of its craft beer cousin at a festival unlike any other in central Illinois. THINGS TO DO THIS WEEKEND 2 ITOO Thomas Bruch can be reached at 686-3262 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @ThomasBruch. 48th Annual SHISH-K-BOB Admission is free. Jukebox Comedy Club, 3527 W. Farmington Road, is featuring comedian Steve-O with shows Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. Steve-O is knows for his three years of MTV’s “Jackass” which led to four movies. In 2009, he made it through six weeks of “Dancing With The Stars.” In November of 2012 he became the host of truTV’s wild competition series “Killer Karaoke.” For reservations and tickets, call 673-5853 or visit JukeboxComedy.com. Enjoy a night of Mexican/ Hispanic music and food during Noches de Baile from 7: 30 to 9:30 p.m. Friday at the Glen 3 Serving 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. Adults $13, Children $6 Shish-Ka-Bob, Cabbage Rolls, Lebanese Salad, Pita Bread SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 2015 Noon-10:00pm FREE PARKING 309-676-9725 4909 W. Farmington Rd., Peoria 5 he miss t Don’t ome H e m the Welco nt on ns Eve m! a r a e 1 t Ve at 1 Stage CEFCU CEFCU Center Stage @ The Landing Peoria RiverFront Admission: $5 noon-4pm, $8 after 4pm PE-4467853 DINE-IN or Carryout Oak Amphitheatre. Music will be provided by Mariachi Campiranos. Admission is $2 for ages 13 and older and $1 for children 12 and younger. Tremont Turkey Festival will be Friday through Sunday in Tremont. Event includes food, trivia contest, live music, carnival, craft show, petting zoo and pancake and sausage breakfast. For information, go to www.turkeyfestival.com. 4 Sunday, June 28, 2015 w w w.itoohall.com Spirit of Peoria $5 OFF Featuring 6 regional jazz groups: Per person* Any Sightseeing or Moonlight Cruise SIGHTSEEING CRUISES: 2015 season only. Up to 4 people. Coupon required. Not valid with other offers. MOONLIGHT CRUISES: Expires 10-31-2015 PE-4492616 Entertainment. Begner said it’s the only traveling craft soda festival in the country. Of course, the Soda Pop Tour only visited one place prior to Pekin, the town of Dixon last summer. The tour will head to St. Charles later this summer, though, with a few other cities lining up to host. Part of its appeal is the self-contained festival that pops up alongside the soda samplings. An inflatable playground, a soda pop mascot, live entertainment, food vendors and the Coca Cola mobile museum round out the ancillary features of the festival, providing something for everyone. The real allure, at least from Begner’s perspective, will be the callback to people’s childhoods, where drinking a soda marked a special treat. “We’re trying to bring nostalgia back,” Begner said. “This is a multi-generational event that’s completely family friendly. There’s no alcohol, just good old-fashioned fun.” Admission to the festival is free with samples priced at 50 cents each and an unlimited sample pass for $20. If attendees are smitten with a certain flavor or brand, they may write down which one and purchase it in bottles at a pop-up general store before leaving. Almost all of the craft sodas contain natural sugars and flavors, ensuring the highest quality beverage. Besides the unique attraction of a craft soda festival, the tour will also double as an economic opportunity for the city of Pekin, which will receive a portion of the profits back. City of Pekin Tourism Coordinator Leigh Ann Brown said hosting the Soda Pop Tour was an easy decision that will maximize PHIL LUCIANO is a Journal Star columnist. He can be reached at [email protected], facebook.com/philluciano or 686-3155. Follow him on Twitter @LucianoPhil. SEE CALENDAR ON PAGE C4 The second annual River City Jazz Festival will be from noon to 10 p.m. Saturday at the CEFCU Center Stage at The Landing on the Peoria Riverfront. Entertainment lineup includes: Central Illinois Jazz Orchestra at noon, Laughing Horse Quartet at 1: 30 p.m., Craig Russo Latin Jazz Project at 3 p.m., David Hoffman and Friends at 4:30 p.m., Preston Jackson & Friends at 6 p.m. and JC and The Redemption at 8 p.m. Admission is $5 before 4 p.m. and $8 after 4 p.m. The German-American Society will sponsor Sommerfest, featuring German food, soccer, a car and motorcycle cruise-in, arts and crafts and entertainment, from noon to 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at Hickory Grove Park. Central Illinois Jazz Orchestra Laughing Horse Quartet Craig Russo Latin Jazz Project David Hoffman and Friends Preston Jackson & Friends JC and The Redemption May – October Wednesday, Friday – Sunday May – October Fridays Code: PJTV 2015 Visit our website for a complete schedule of all our cruises www.facebook.com/riverfrontevents www.spiritofpeoria.com | 309-637-8000 Sponsored by Chillicothe Historical Society PE-4493354 ZorroFest At Claud-Elen Days Superhero Parade PE-4468780_V2 Continued from Page C1 1 plate. We noticed a couple of interesting menu items, included a peanut butter burger (with or without bananas). But the entrees beckoned, and for the price we expected a solid meal. My wife opted for the grilled salmon ($15), billed as lightly seasoned yet seemed too bland for even the most unadventurous tastes. Ditto for the wild rice blend. For a side, she chose grilled asparagus, which was decent. I went with the ribeye ($23), a 12ounce cut billed as well marbled. Actually, though cooked appropriately to my medium-rare request, the steak had some rather chewy moments. The baked potato was all right, though my side of “gourmet mac-n-cheese” was rather mundane. There were several dessert offerings ($5). The orange-chocolate brownie was a bit dry, while the cheesecake rangoon tasted like crab rangoon without the crab, and not dessert-y at all. We like the idea of a restaurant at Hy-Vee, which we find to be a delight as a grocery. But the Market Cafe needs to ramp up to be on par with the rest of the business. Chillicothe, IL 11:00AM Parade • Noon - 3:00PM Fest Saturday, June 13 Great Gifts For Dad! Collectible Coins, Currency, & More Silver & Gold Coins-A Full Line Of Albums-Folders-Supplies Lineup of 10:00AM at First & Walnut The New U.S. Marshals Dollars Are Here Show up as an Adult or Kid Superhero & be in the Parade! Limited Li it d Q Quantities titi A Available-Hurry il bl H ***We Have 2015 Proof & Mint Sets*** Gift Certificates Available In Any Amount **We A **W Are B Buying! i !P Paying i TTop Prices*** P i *** *US And World Gold Coins *Pre-1928 US Currency *1964 And Earlier Silver US Coins * Silver Dollars We Need Your Coins & Currency WESTLAKE RARE COINS * The Store You’ve Known For 27 Years! * Open 10-5 Mon-Fri. 10-1 Sat. PE-4488586_V2 Honor Flight & Korean War Vets Face Painting, Drumline, Fencing Demo, Food & Music New Location! Mt. Hawley Court Shopping Center 7815 N. Knoxville Ave. Call (309)693-2541 PE-4481294 Celebrating Johnston McCulley Creator of Zorro & Chilli. Twp. HS graduate Call 309-253-1010 for more info CUE JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2015 C3 ‘Check your brain at the door’ ‘Jurassic World’ ★★★½ A REVIEW BY RICHARD ROEPER They never learn. The megalomaniacal billionaire wants to play God and create life. The brilliant scientist is susceptible to greed and blind ambition. The wisecracking geek at the computer keeps saying, “Something’s not right,” and “Wait a minute…” but is ineffectual. The rigid, numberscrunching administrator in charge doesn’t care about the human element in the profit equation. The representative of the military-industrial complex is interested only in creating the ultimate fighting machine. And nobody ever listens to the bearded, macho rogue in the J. Peterman leather vest — the guy who keeps warning them they’re making a BIG mistake by messing with the natural order of things. “Jurassic World” is pure, dumb, wall-to-wall fun. When they hand you your 3-D glasses, you can check your brain at the door and pick it up on your way out. About 80 percent of the movie is dedicated to the thundering action sequences, with the remaining time devoted to the usual Spielbergian sci-fi thriller tropes, from the siblings who bond because Mom and Dad might be splitting up to an icy adult who learns to love in time of crisis to the obligatory profit-driven villain who refuses to shut things down even as the body count piles up. (Remember the mayor in “Jaws”? It’s just a little fish problem! Let’s keep the beaches open.) This is “Jaws” meets “Godzilla” meets, well, the Starring: Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Irrfan Khan and Vincent D’Onofrio. Directed by: Colin Trevorrow. Running time: 2:04. Rated: PG-13. Opens Friday at: Grand Prairie 18; Landmark and Sunnyland cinemas; AMC ShowPlace 14; Willow Knolls 14. Family guide: Intense sequences of science-fiction violence and peril. Quick take: “Jurassic World” is pure, dumb, wall-to-wall fun. When they hand you your 3-D glasses, you can check your brain at the door and pick it up on your way out. This is “Jaws” meets “Godzilla” meets the “Jurassic Park” movies. Nick Robinson stars as Zach and Ty Simpkins stars as Gray in “Jurassic World.” (2015) “Jurassic Park” movies, and I love the way “Jurassic World” pays tribute to the groundbreaking original. (A small example: A Jurassic World staffer has just scored a vintage “Jurassic Park” T-shirt on eBay for $150. The ones in mint condition go for $300.) Set on the same island near Costa Rica that was home to Jurassic Park, Jurassic World is a monstrous, sprawling tourist destination for more than 20,000 visitors every day. The children can ride docile Triceratops. You can roam the lush grounds in a rotating gyro device that allows you to almost become one with a pack of Stegosauruses. There’s an enormous aquatic attraction featuring a huge Mosasaurus that nibbles on a full shark like it’s a cheese goldfish snack. Everywhere you look in the aviary, there’s a flying Pteranodon. And yet we’re told the people are bored. As the no-nonsense executive named Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard) puts it, for today’s generation, a living, breathing dinosaur is no more exciting than an elephant. What to do, what to do. How about creating a whole new, super-scary species of dinosaur, containing DNA strands of dozens of creatures? What could possibly go right? Fresh off his “Guardians of the Galaxy” triumph, a chiseled Chris Pratt plays Owen, a former Navy man who’s now something of a Velociraptor Whisperer. No kidding — using just a little clicker device, a stern voice and the promise of treats in the form of mice, Owen has a special bond with the Raptors, most notably the one he calls Blue, who communicates with Owen almost as if they’re in a Pixar movie. The moment Owen hears about the 50-foot “Indominus Rex,” and how ol’ Rexy ate his only sibling when he was but a lad, he tells Claire and everyone else they’ve made a big, big, big mistake. Think anyone listens? Meanwhile, sulking teenager Zach (Nick Robinson) and his annoyingly precocious little brother Gray (Ty Simpkins) have escaped from Aunt Claire’s assistant and are separated from the pack, so to speak, at just the wrong moment. Indominus Rex is on the loose and he’s hunting for sport! “Jurassic World” earns every inch of its PG-13 rating for some bone-crunching violence, numerous scenes of dinosaurs munching on humans and blood spraying here and there. There’s one fairly sick and wickedly funny scene in which a character is plucked from the ground by a Pteranodon and then dropped in mid-air, only to land in the clutches of ANOTHER Pteranodon, Cirque du Soleil-style, and that’s not the end of her dilemma. Director Colin Trevorrow and the team of screenwriters have some fun turning summer thriller clichés sideways, producing some major laughs as we catch our breath from the action. Howard is wonderful as Claire, who goes from uptight bureaucrat to bad-ass action hero, and Vincent D’Onofrio has fun hamming it up as Hoskins, the military strategist who actually thinks it would be a good idea for the U.S. military to use trained Velociraptors as weapons. I’m a big Chris Pratt fan, but he’s so focused on playing the action hero with a smirk on his face and a hankering for the girl who can’t resist his charms, Owen ends up being kind of a stiff. Also, it’s hard not to look a little goofy when you’re pretending to be squaring off against a bunch of Raptors who of course won’t really be in the scene until post-production. That said, the special effects are indeed pretty special. Rare is the occasion when it doesn’t feel as if humans and dinosaurs are sharing the same space. (It does happen once or twice.) It’s great to hear the classic John Williams theme in a movie theater again. How can your heart not soar when the music swells and the camera swoops over Jurassic World before all the chaos ensues? You happily strap on the seat belt and let the silly greatness of it all wash over you. After all, it’s almost summer. Chris Pratt, the leading man BY LINDSEY BAHR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS UNIVERSAL CITY, CALIF. — On a recent afternoon on a Universal soundstage, Chris Pratt was regaling a group of journalists with a story about elk hunting. Suddenly, a gust of air blew through the room, toppling a giant fake plant onto a similarly giant speaker before both careened toward one unlucky reporter. Everyone gasped but stayed in their seats. Everyone, except Pratt, who sprang from his chair with a gravely serious expression, ready to help however he could. There wasn’t much that needed doing in this case. The shrubspeaker combination missed the reporter. But there was no missing the instinct. The perennial goofball turned leading man wasn’t merely a hero on screen. Apparently, he has the right stuff in reality, too. “That’s who he is. He takes responsibility for the well-being of those around him,” said Pratt’s “Jurassic World” co-star Bryce Dallas Howard. On set, things were no different. “He gets funnier and more charming as things get more difficult. It comes from a place of genuinely wanting to make it fun Bryce Dallas Howard in “Jurassic World.” for everyone else,” said director Colin Trevorrow. Even after crashing his motorcycle on the Jurassic set, Pratt insisted on reassuring the cast and crew the show would go on. “That one really jolted me,” he recalled in an interview. Off camera, the bike locked up when he used the brakes in some mud. He was thrown 20 feet and had to dive roll over a prop gun strapped to his back. “I was immediately swarmed by everyone,” he said. “When you’re on a movie and that much money is on the line, should your star get hurt... I’m like, ‘Listen dudes, you’ve got to back the (expletive) off for a second. Am I fine? How could I possibly know that? Give me a day and I’ll tell you. It seems OK right now.’” Howard, through her own career and by proxy of lineage (her dad is Ron Howard), has been around the biggest names in the business for her entire life, and dislikes the overused and undervalued phrase “movie star.” She prefers terms like “recognizable” and “well-known” and believes that there have only been maybe 15 true movie stars in the history of cinema. Pratt, however, makes the cut. A few years ago, things looked very different for Pratt. He had a steady gig as the affable Andy Dwyer on NBC’s “Parks and Recreation” and would pop up in movies here and there, but usually as a goofy sidekick. Then everything changed in 2014. With leading roles in both “The Lego Movie” and the littleknown, high-stakes Marvel property “Guardians of the Galaxy,” the year was almost a test. Could he carry a film? Would audiences respond? The answer was an unequivocal yes. “Guardians” became the third highest earning movie of the year, and “The Lego Movie” was the fifth. Both are getting sequels. Now, Pratt has another trial looming: “Jurassic World,” the fourth installment in the “Jurassic Park” series that Steven Spielberg launched in 1993, out Friday. Pratt plays Owen Grady, a military man turned Velociraptor trainer at an amusement park that devolves into dino chaos. If his ‘Guardians’ character, Peter Quill, was Han Solo, Owen Grady is Indiana Jones — a little more serious, a little less rakish and definitely not silly. As he delves into higher profile projects, Pratt is only concerned about making movies that don’t just “aim for the middle.” He wants audiences to truly feel like profits aren’t the sole, or most important, objective. Also, even in these leading roles, he doesn’t Chris Pratt stars as Owen in Universal Pictures’ “Jurassic World.” give himself credit for a film’s success. Fame and stardom can be ephemeral, too, and Pratt likes to keep things light and sincere. He recently posted a humorous “apology” on his Facebook page “for whatever it is I end up saying during the forthcoming ‘Jurassic World’ press tour.” He was keenly aware of the various “gates” and “scandals” mined out of recent “Avengers” interviews and others. “It was a fun way for me to poke fun at the PC police, but also, truly to pre-emptively apologize in the likelihood that I would say something inappropriate,” he said. He also stole his Owen costume from set, telling Howard that he’d like to wear it to hospitals to visit kids in character. There are the usual downsides of increased fame, but Pratt, who’s married to actress Anna Faris, knew the score going in. “I don’t much like the elements that pertain to my private life and my personal space being diminished, but with that there’s a trade. I’m now on a short list to have access to amazing filmmakers and material,” he said. “I’m just hoping I never get caught complaining about it.” C4 THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2015 LEISURE&ADVICE CUE CALENDAR $3044803% #Z5)0."4+04&1) JOURNAL STAR, PEORIA, ILL. COMPILED BY MICKEY WIELAND OF THE JOURNAL STAR Items for the Cue calendar need to be submitted 10 days prior to publication. Send information to Mickey Wieland at [email protected] (preferred method) or by mail to the Journal Star, 1 News Plaza, Peoria, IL 61643. Peoria, 305 SW Water St.: June 12 — Marbin. Music 5:30-7:30 p.m. Admission: $8/CAC members; $12/ nonmembers. Call 674-6822. Limelight Eventplex, 8102 N. University: June 13 — Jon Pardi, 8 p.m., tickets $12-$15; June 16 — Rich Robinson, 7 p.m., tickets $20-$25. Visit limelighteventplex.com or call 693-1234. Special events Riverfront Museum The Peoria Riverfront Museum, 222 SW Washington St., peoriariverfrontmuseum.org or call 686-7000. The Giant Screen Theater serves beer, wine and pizza. Giant Screen Theater: June 11 — “Jurassic World;” June 18 — NASA Astronaut Q&A. Educational films: “D-Day Normandy 1944 3-D,” National Geographic’s “Mysteries of the Unseen World 3-D.” Dome Planetarium: Daily: One World One Sky, TimeSpace, Stars Over Peoria, Uniview: The Solar System, Black Holes. Civic Center The Peoria Civic Center is located in Downtown Peoria. Call 673-8900; for box office, call 6733200; for tickets, call (800) 745-3000 or visit PeoriaCivicCenter.com. June 18: Velocity Summer Glow Tour, 8 p.m., Exhibit Hall B. Tickets: $20/at the door. June 27: River City Fiber Fest, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Exhibit Hall D & Ballroom. Tickets: $5/door. Music Music Variety Show, featuring Jukebox Saturday Night Band, 7-9 p.m. June 12, Fondulac Park District Administration Building, 201 Veterans Drive, East Peoria. Admission: $8/person; $15/couple. Live at the Five Spot, Contemporary Art Center of “Cars with Stories From the Past,” display through June, Wheels O’ Time Museum, 1710 W. Woodside Drive, Dunlap. The museum hours: noon-5 p.m. WednesdaysSundays. Admission: $6.50/adults; $3.50/ages 3-11. Visit www.wheelsotime.org. RiverFront Market, 8 a.m.-noon Saturdays through September, River Station parking lot between Martini’s and New Amsterdam. Music: June 13 — Jim Markum Dixieland Band. Festivals River City Jazz Festival, noon-10 p.m. June 13, CEFCU Center Stage at The Landing. Admission: $5 before 4 p.m., $8 after 4 p.m. Entertainment lineup includes: Central Illinois Jazz Orchestra at noon, Laughing Horse Quartet at 1:30 p.m., Craig Russo Latin Jazz Project at 3 p.m., David Hoffman and Friends at 4:30 p.m., Preston Jackson & Friends at 6 p.m. and JC and The Redemption at 8 p.m. Comedy Jukebox Comedy Club, 3527 W. Farmington Road: June 11-13 — Steve-O; June 18-20 — Ryan Singer. Call 673-5853 or visit JukeboxComedy.com. Dance Square dances: Bachelors ‘n’ Bachelorettes: 79:30 p.m. June 11, caller Curt Braffet, Creve Coeur Community Center, 586 Groveland Ave., Creve Coeur. Call 697-4133. Night life Bogie’s Bar & Grill, 3000 N. Sterling Ave.: June 12 — Plead the 5th; June 17 — Billy Washburn. Thursdays — open mic. Castaway’s Bar & Grill, 1707 N. Fourth St., Chillicothe: Tuesdays — trivia. Castle Theater, 209 E. Washington St., Bloomington: June 13 — Sam Bush; June 17 — Saving Abel; June 18 — The Steel Wheels. Christy’s Place, 1221 Peoria St., Washington: June 13 — Gary is in Trouble Band. Fridays — karaoke. East Peoria American Legion, 100 Legion St., East Peoria: June 13 — Timeless, 7 p.m. Friends Tap, 200 Derby St., Pekin: June 13 — Cosmic Dice, 8 p.m.-midnight. Kuchie’s Corner Tap, 4980 Edgewater Drive, Groveland: Fridays — karaoke with Captain Steve & Cathy, 8 p.m.-midnight. Kuchie’s on the Water, 579 Wesley Road, Creve Coeur: Wednesdays — team trivia, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Martinis on Water, 212 SW Water St.: June 12 — Vinyl Tap; June 13 — Fun DMC. Music: 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Oliver’s Pizza & Pub, 1231 E. Samuel Ave., Peoria Heights: Mondays — team trivia, 7:30 p.m.; Saturdays — karaoke, 10 p.m.-2 a.m. Oliver’s Pizza & Pub North, 3300 W. Willow Knolls Drive: Thursdays — team trivia, 7:30 p.m.; Fridays — karaoke, 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. Rock’s Bar & Restaurant, 21 Blackjack Blvd., East Peoria: Thursdays — karaoke, 9 p.m.-midnight; Friday — live music, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Sky Harbor, 1321 N. Park Road, West Peoria: Wednesdays and Saturdays — Bob Bishop. Music: 7 p.m. Call 674-5532. SoundBar at Limelight, 8102 N. University: Wednesdays — open stage, 7 p.m. ANNIE’S MAILBOX Throw the ex a curve and chummy up to her Complete the grid so that every row, every column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. Tips for working the Sudoku puzzle can be found at pjstar.com TODAY’S ANSWERS ! 46%0,616;;-& DEAR ANNIE: I am confused about how to handle my husband’s ex-girlfriend, who shows up at his family funerals and stays three hours at the visitation hanging with my husband and reminiscing about the past. They discuss things out loud with no respect for me. This woman is married, but never comes to these gatherings with her husband. And my husband still does her taxes, even though I told him he shouldn’t. He’s opening the door to trouble. I do trust my husband, but not her. She definitely is still attracted to him, and it shows. Is her behavior normal, or should I tell her at the next funeral to pay her respects and leave? — Not Jealous, Just Hurt DEAR NOT: Please don’t let your insecurities cause you to overreact. If you trust your husband, it doesn’t matter what his ex-girlfriend does. And how often does the family have funerals that you need to worry about this? We agree that she is being inappropriately flirtatious, but it is only a big deal if your husband responds in a similar fashion. We suggest you chummy up to this ex-girlfriend at these events. It will totally baffle her, greatly impress your husband and make her less of a threat to you. DEAR ANNIE: You printed a letter from “Expecting Mom in the Midwest,” who asked for a response when rude people ask, “Was it planned?” You suggested, “Why do you need to know?” I think a good answer would be, “Of course! God planned it!” I love your column. — Bossier City, La. DEAR BOSSIER CITY: Your response was by far the most popular one we received. We appreciate all who sent in their personal preferences. Here are a few samples: NEA BRIDGE FROM PAT: Your response was masterful. Another retort (not original to me) would be: “If people ask you, tell them you don’t know.” And a gentler response: “I’m hurt by your question.” EL PASO: In my opinion, a better answer to this question is: “Well, I guess that’s really between my husband and me. Don’t you agree?” R.: I would simply say, “Yes, it was planned, but if we plan another, should we inform you first?” There seem to be more ignorant and stupid people in today’s world, and they have no filters between their brains and mouths. P.: When asked, “Was this pregnancy planned,” I would say, “I give up. Was it?” I have used this more times than I can say, and it always works. MOTHER OF TWINS: I would simply ask, “Were you?” TYLER, TEXAS: Someone could reply, “It was more planned than the question you just asked!” SALISBURY, PA.: I’ve found this response works: “Why in the world would you ask such a personal question? It’s rude, and you’re normally not a rude person. Are you feeling OK?” Whenever you end with a question, the other person feels compelled to answer. So throw it back in their court, and watch ‘em squirm. They deserve a little squirming. DEAR ANNIE: This is in response to “Fed Up,” who had problems finding clothing in her large, very tall size. She should look for a tailor or seamstress who can make her clothes to order. Or, she could learn to sew and make her own. That’s what I do, and there is an infinite variety of patterns, fabrics and colors. Knowing how to sew would also allow her to alter any clothes she finds in retail stores. — P. KATHY MITCHELL & MARCY SUGAR %"*-:$3:1502605&4 Annie’s Mailbox is written by KATHY MITCHELL and MARCY SUGAR, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. ASTRO-GRAPH +6.#-&#Z%"7*%-)0:5BOE+&'',/63&, TODAY’S BIRTHDAY: Comparing yourself to others is a waste of time and energy. You have abilities, ideas and talents that you need to develop and master. Highlight what you do have to offer and others will take note. Self-confidence comes from doing what you do best. GEMINI (May 21June 20): You will face an unpleasant consequence if people feel that you have been misleading. Before you convince others to join your mission, check your facts and leave no room for error. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Think before you speak. Your heightened emotions will cause you to overreact. There is no need to be defensive if no one is threatening you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your charming ways and humorous mood will have people flocking to your side. Accept as many social invitations as you can handle. A change of fortune is imminent. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Before you sign up for a loan or make a major purchase, you should do a realistic assessment of your financial status. Consult a banking or investment adviser, if necessary, in order to clarify your position. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23): You may be overwhelmed by the demands being put on you. Don’t spread yourself too thin. It’s perfectly fine to say no. Take care of your needs first and don’t feel guilty. SCORPIO (Oct. 24Nov. 22): Surround yourself with positive, upbeat people. Good moods are contagious, and you will feel your stress falling away once you loosen up. An intriguing partnership is on the horizon. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21): Be self-aware. If your instincts tell you something is not right, listen to them. Scam artists are very convincing, and if you fall for a sales pitch, you will have regrets. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You will alienate the people you live with if you try to force your opinions on them. Take a step back and let matters settle down before you spoil a close relationship. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19): Love, harmony and romance are highlighted. Plan an intimate liaison with a special someone, or get out and meet some- EUGENIA LAST one new if you are single. Communication will lead to affection and commitment. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20): Introduce yourself to the person you have been admiring from a distance. You are likely to find a lot of common ground once you compare notes. A long-lasting partnership is apparent. ARIES (March 21-April 19): You are likely to feel confined and to be easily upset if you stay indoors today. Use your energy to complete outdoor chores or to engage in some physical activity. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): A recent quarrel with someone will stress you out. Open up the lines of communication, declare your feelings and admit your shortcomings. Clear your conscience and ease your mind. By PHILLIP ALDER Thomas Fuller, an English scholar and preacher who died in 1661, said, “All things are difficult before they are easy.” The key play in today’s deal is very difficult to find, and even after seeing it once, many players would miss it the next time it flew by, a decade or three later! South is in five hearts. What should he do after West leads the spade king? The auction went badly for North. He had hoped to be able to respond two diamonds and to rebid four hearts to describe his hand. But East made a Law of Total Tricks raise to four spades — in a competitive auction, bid to the 10-trick level with a 10-card fit. North considered doubling that, but eventually plowed on to five hearts. (Note that four spades can be made.) Suppose South wins the first trick with dummy’s spade ace, draws trumps ending in his hand, and runs his diamond queen. What happens next? Here, East takes the trick and, if in midseason form, shifts to the club 10. Then the defenders take one diamond and two clubs to defeat the contract. Declarer must establish dummy’s diamond suit without letting East on lead for that nasty club switch. South must let West take the first trick. Suppose West leads another spade. Declarer discards a diamond from his hand, plays a heart to his ace, leads the diamond queen to dummy’s ace, ruffs a diamond high, plays a heart to dummy’s jack, ruffs another diamond, leads a heart to the king, and cashes dummy’s three diamond winners. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actor GENE WILDER is 82. Rock singer DONNIE VAN ZANT is 63. Pro Football Hall of Famer JOE MONTANA is 59. Actor HUGH LAURIE is 56. TV personality MEHMET OZ, M.D., is 55. Actor PETER DINKLAGE is 46. Actor SHIA LABEOUF is 29.