MOYER S GREENHOUSE - nyx.uky.edunyx.uky.edu/dips/xt763x83jx1p/data/18_70190_LI05022012B6.pdf ·...

1
• DUI Classes/Assessments • Family in Transition Classes • Assessments • Counseling • Addiction Services • Drug Testing • Prevention Services • After-Care Services • Youth Interventions • Ther-a-Play • Court Support Services • Outpatient Support Services • Faith Based Services • Community/Work Place Development and Support Call for more details. Community Services, LLC our SERVICES include: a new CHOICE for 901 Hwy 68, Ste 1000 Maysville, KY 41056 606-584-7055 See Specifics about the deal of the week at Scan with your Smart Phone QR reader app. THIS WEEK’S DEAL May 2 through May 8 Affordable Carpet Cleaning 606-756-2171 • 606-301-1250 $ 99 Tile & Grout Steam Cleaning FOR ONLY $ 49 Sign Up Today! www.maysville-online.com www.maysville-online.com H o m e s t e a d P r o d u c e & Greenhouse H o m e s t e a d P r o d u c e & Greenhouse Saturday, May 5, 2012 5146 Old Sardis Pike • 606-763-9376 Turn right off US 68 on 2514, then right on Old Sardis Pike & 2 miles on left Monday thru Saturday 8am -8pm; Closed Sunday Kick Off Spring Event 1 DAY ONLY SALE 3" Wave Pot & CalibraChoa Pot $1.00 Each Beautiful selection of Flowering Baskets, Planters & Perennials 10am-1:30pm Welcome UK Ag Extension REP on site to answer your questions. See us for your flower needs. Lunch 11am-3pm Large Planters . . $15 & up Flats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15 Hanging Baskets. . . . . . . . $15 & up Ferns. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12 Wave Petunias per flat $20 Mulch . . . . . per scoop $21 Asst. Vegetable Plants flat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $20 each plant . . . . . . . . . . 4/$2 Flowers flat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15 tray . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.69 37 Years Experience! We have a greenhouse exploding with planters or bring in your own and we’ll fill it with your favorite flowers and have it ready when you want it. W e r e E x p l o d i n g W it h C olo r! MOYERS GREENHOUSE 3077 Moyer Rd., Maysville • 883-3234 (Turn on Moyer’s Rd. off AA Past Tolle Monuments about 1/2 mile on right) 150 Foster St., Flemingsburg, KY • 606-845-0407 • OPEN EVERYDAY! BOWLING CENTER AND LEGENDS RESTAURANT Mother’s Day BUFFET Sun., May 13, 2012, Noon-3PM Call U Can Eat 3 Delicious Meats, 5 Sides, Salad Bar with Fresh Fruit, Rolls, Variety of Homemade Desserts Price includes beverage and gift for every mother while supplies last. Like us on Facebook to receive special discounts and promotions Summer League Now Forming MONDAY - 9 pin no tap TUESDAY - Sport Shot with PBA Patterns THURSDAY - Youth/Adult Have a Ball FRIDAY - Church League 12 week leagues starting week of 5/14/12 @ 7PM. Check us out on Facebook for Summer bowling specials. $ 13 95 Adults +tax Kids +tax $ 7 95 MARK KENNEDY Associated Press NEW YORK | There was something for virtually everyone to smile about on Broadway on Tuesday after 30 of 37 shows this season got at least one Tony Award nomination. The folks at “Once” had the most reason to celebrate later at their working bar on stage. The musical based on the low-budget 2006 film about an unlikely romance between a Czech flower seller and an Irish street musician in Dublin earned a leading 11 nominations, including nods for best musical, for both its lead actors, its book, lighting, sound, choreography and set, which offers the audi- ence real drinks before the show in a replica pub. Its director, John Tif- fany, was watching a play in Glasgow, Scotland, when his phone began buzzing “like crazy” with word of the show’s success. He sat through the play but learned about the Tony haul after glancing at texts. “’Once’ constantly surprises me. I think it’s the power of the music and the storytelling that people connect with,” said John Tiffany, who also was nominated for best director of a musical. Two other musicals — “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess” and “Nice Work If You Can Get It” — each got 10 nominations. Unlike last year’s “The Book of Mor- mon,” no monster single hit dominated the nomina- tions. Disney had a good day. “Peter and the Starcatch- er,” a play about the origins of Peter Pan co-produced by Disney Theatrical Productions earned nine nominations, while its “Newsies” got eight nods. The fall revival of Stephen Sondheim’s “Follies” got eight nominations, set- ting up a face-off in the best revival category with “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess,” which Sondheim had criticized. Later this summer, “Once,” ‘’Nice Work If You Can Get It,” and “Newsies” will compete for the title of best new musical with a surprise entry — “Leap of Faith,” which was rav- aged by critics. “Ghost the Musical,” an import from London with songs by Dave Stewart and Glen Ballard, failed to get nominated in the best musical category. The Tony Awards will be broadcast on CBS from the Beacon Theatre on June 10. Neil Patrick Harris, the star of “How I Met Your Moth- er,” will be the host. Broadway’s most expen- sive show, the $75 million “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” got only two nominations, for best sce- nic design and costume. The former punch-line is now a top-earning hit and a spokesman shrugged off the snub. “Even without a nomi- nation for best musical, we can assure you that the audiences this week will love the show just as much as they did last week,” Rick Miramontez said. The best new play cat- egory includes “Clybourne Park” by Bruce Norris, “Other Desert Cities” by Jon Robin Baitz, “Peter and the Starcatcher” by Rick Elice, and David Ives’ “Venus in Fur.” Plays that didn’t make the cut in- cluded Katori Hall’s “The Mountaintop,” Nicky Sil- ver’s “The Lyons,” David Auburn’s “The Columnist” and Theresa Rebeck’s “Seminar.” With no nomi- nations for “Seminar,” producers said they would end performances after Sunday. In the musical revival category, “Follies” and “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess” will compete against two Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice works: “Je- sus Christ Superstar” and “Evita.” “Once,” with songs by Marketa Irglova and Glen Hansard, was originally a low-budget movie made for about $150,000. The film earned $20 million, thanks in part to an origi- nal score that included the sublime, 2007 Oscar-win- ning song, “Falling Slowly.” The musical is a study in how to beautifully adapt a movie to the stage. “Once” earned its stars, Steve Kazee and Cristin Milioti, best actor nomina- tions. It also earned nods for best scenic design, best book of a musical and Elizabeth A. Davis got a nomination for an actress in a featured role. The best leading actor in a play Tony will pit James Corden from the British import “One Man, Two Guvnors,” Philip Seymour Hoffman from Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Sales- man,” James Earl Jones from “Gore Vidal’s The Best Man,” Frank Langella from “Man and Boy” and John Lithgow of “The Col- umnist.” “I expect to go out with the gang tonight, which I don’t do very often because this play is so damned ex- hausting,” Lithgow said, laughing. “And I intend to buy all the drinks. That’s pretty unusual, too. I am a Scotsman, after all.” Joe DiPietro earned a Tony nomination for writ- ing the book to “Nice Work If You Can Get It,” which stars Matthew Broderick and Kelli O’Hara, who also got a nomination as a lead- ing actress in a musical. The frothy musical smartly integrates classic Gersh- win songs such as “Sweet and Lowdown,” ‘’Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off,” ‘’S’Wonderful,” ‘’Someone to Watch Over Me,” ‘’They All Laughed” and “Fasci- nating Rhythm.” The musical is the first since DiPietro won two Tonys for writing the still- running “Memphis,” but he’s not jaded. “The Tonys are always a big deal,” he said. “I wrote for a long time and no one seemed to care and then I suddenly started getting produced. When I won my Tonys, it was childhood dream time coming true.” “Other Desert Cities,” a play by Baitz that moved to Broadway after critical acclaim at Lincoln Center Theater, earned five nomi- nations, including best play. “My psychology is such that I can’t jump up and down. I suppose that makes me Jewish and of the theater,” Baitz joked after the announcement. Baitz’s play, about a dysfunctional, politically divided family wrestling with a deep secret in their past, also earned Stockard Channing and Judith Light acting nominations. “It feels extraordinary. I feel thrilled, I feel blessed, I feel honored,” said Light, the former “Who’s the Boss?” star who last year was nominated for her per- formance in “Lombardi.” ‘’I was away from the the- ater for a long time. When I came back, I came back slowly and I had to really work my way back in and not expect anything.” Light will compete in the featured role category against Linda Emond, who won raves for her role in “Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman.” Emond, who managed to keep her yoga class appointment despite the fuss, was gracious, pleased that her show pro- duced nominations for co- stars Andrew Garfield and Hoffman, as well as direc- tor Mike Nichols. “I am only more aware on a day like this that this is not something I do alone. This is not something that feels like I, in particular, am being noted for,” she said. “I go out on that stage and there are many people backstage and during the show who help me through the play.” The battle in the female leading actress play cat- egory will be fierce, with competitors including Nina Arianda of “Venus in Fur,” Tracie Bennett of “End of the Rainbow,” Linda Lavin of “The Lyons,” Cynthia Nixon in “Wit” and Chan- ning. Lavin, the Golden Globe- and Tony Award-winning actress who starred in the long-running TV sit-com “Alice,” was literally in the air when she learned of her nomination. She was fly- ing back from her home in Wilmington, N.C., after seeing a play at her 50-seat Red Barn Studio Theatre. “I don’t think I’ve hit the ground yet,” she said. “I’m sitting in my apartment, having a bowl of soup. It’s been quite a whirlwind morning. I just hope I don’t die from it. I’m feeling very, very heightened right now.” In “The Lyons,” Lavin plays mother of a family grappling with the im- pending death of its patri- arch. The actress said she wished the playwright had been nominated for writ- ing about a woman who is “funny and furious and deeply sad — all at the same moment. I’ve always liked to play those notes all at once.” AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle and AP National Writer Jocelyn Noveck con- tributed to this report. Tony nominations spread out but ‘Once’ leads NOMINATIONS INCLUDE OVER 30 SHOWS BUT LOW-TECH ‘ONCE’ LEADS WITH 11 NODS ASSOCIATED PRESS In this theater image released by Boneau/Bryan-Brown, Steve Kazee, left, and Cristin Milioti are shown in a scene from “Once,” in New York. The production was nominated for a Tony Award for best musical, Tuesday. B6 | WEDNESDAY, 05.2.2012 THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT B6 | ENTERTAINMENT WEDNESDAY, 05.2.2012 | THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT

Transcript of MOYER S GREENHOUSE - nyx.uky.edunyx.uky.edu/dips/xt763x83jx1p/data/18_70190_LI05022012B6.pdf ·...

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B6 | WEDNESDAY, 05.2.2012 THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT

• DUI Classes/Assessments• Family in Transition Classes • Assessments • Counseling • Addiction Services • Drug Testing • Prevention Services • After-Care Services • Youth Interventions • Ther-a-Play • Court Support Services• Outpatient Support Services• Faith Based Services• Community/Work Place Development and Support

Call for more details.

Community Services, LLC

our SERVICES include:

a new CHOICE for

901 Hwy 68, Ste 1000 Maysville, KY 41056606-584-7055

See Specifics about the deal of the week at

Scan with your Smart Phone QR reader app.

THIS WEEK’S DEAL May 2 through May 8

Affordable Carpet Cleaning606-756-2171 • 606-301-1250

$99Tile & Grout

Steam CleaningFORONLY

$49

Sign Up Today!www.maysville-online.com

www.maysville-online.com

Homestead Produce& GreenhouseHomestead Produce& Greenhouse

Saturday, May 5, 2012

5146 Old Sardis Pike • 606-763-9376Turn right off US 68 on 2514, then right on Old Sardis Pike & 2 miles on left

Monday thru Saturday 8am -8pm; Closed Sunday

Kick Off Spring Event

1 DAY ONLY SALE3" Wave Pot &

CalibraChoa Pot $1.00 Each

Beautiful selection of Flowering

Baskets, Planters & Perennials

10am-1:30pm Welcome UK Ag Extension REP on site to answer your questions.

See us for your flower needs.Lunch 11am-3pm

Large Planters . . $15 & up

Flats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15

Hanging Baskets. . . . . . . . $15 & up

Ferns. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12

Wave Petunias per flat $20

Mulch . . . . . per scoop $21

Asst. Vegetable Plantsflat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $20each plant . . . . . . . . . . 4/$2

Flowersflat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15tray. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.69

37 YearsExperience!

We have a greenhouse exploding with planters or bring in your own and we’ll

fill it with your favorite flowers and have it ready when you want it.

We’re Exploding With Color!

MOYER’S GREENHOUSE3077 Moyer Rd., Maysville • 883-3234

(Turn on Moyer’s Rd. off AA Past Tolle Monuments about 1/2 mile on right)

150 Foster St., Flemingsburg, KY • 606-845-0407 • OPEN EVERYDAY!

BOWLING CENTER AND LEGENDS RESTAURANT

Mother’s Day BUFFETSun., May 13, 2012, Noon-3PM Call U Can Eat

3 Delicious Meats, 5 Sides, Salad Bar with Fresh Fruit, Rolls, Variety of Homemade DessertsPrice includes beverage and gift for every mother while supplies last.

Like us on Facebook to receive special discounts and promotions

Summer League Now FormingMONDAY - 9 pin no tapTUESDAY - Sport Shot with PBA PatternsTHURSDAY - Youth/Adult Have a Ball FRIDAY - Church League12 week leagues starting week of 5/14/12 @ 7PM.Check us out on Facebook for Summer bowling specials.

$1395Adults +taxKids +tax$795

MARK KENNEDYAssociated Press

NEW YORK | There was something for virtually everyone to smile about on Broadway on Tuesday after 30 of 37 shows this season got at least one Tony Award nomination. The folks at “Once” had the most reason to celebrate later at their working bar on stage.

The musical based on the low-budget 2006 film about an unlikely romance between a Czech flower seller and an Irish street musician in Dublin earned a leading 11 nominations, including nods for best musical, for both its lead actors, its book, lighting, sound, choreography and set, which offers the audi-ence real drinks before the show in a replica pub.

Its director, John Tif-fany, was watching a play in Glasgow, Scotland, when his phone began buzzing “like crazy” with word of the show’s success. He sat through the play but learned about the Tony haul after glancing at texts.

“’Once’ constantly surprises me. I think it’s the power of the music and the storytelling that people connect with,” said John Tiffany, who also was nominated for best director of a musical.

Two other musicals — “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess” and “Nice Work If You Can Get It” — each got 10 nominations. Unlike last year’s “The Book of Mor-mon,” no monster single

hit dominated the nomina-tions.

Disney had a good day. “Peter and the Starcatch-er,” a play about the origins of Peter Pan co-produced by Disney Theatrical Productions earned nine nominations, while its “Newsies” got eight nods. The fall revival of Stephen Sondheim’s “Follies” got eight nominations, set-ting up a face-off in the best revival category with “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess,” which Sondheim had criticized.

Later this summer, “Once,” ‘’Nice Work If You Can Get It,” and “Newsies” will compete for the title of best new musical with a surprise entry — “Leap of Faith,” which was rav-aged by critics. “Ghost the Musical,” an import from London with songs by Dave Stewart and Glen Ballard, failed to get nominated in the best musical category.

The Tony Awards will be broadcast on CBS from the Beacon Theatre on June 10. Neil Patrick Harris, the star of “How I Met Your Moth-er,” will be the host.

Broadway’s most expen-sive show, the $75 million “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” got only two nominations, for best sce-nic design and costume. The former punch-line is now a top-earning hit and a spokesman shrugged off the snub.

“Even without a nomi-nation for best musical, we can assure you that the audiences this week will

love the show just as much as they did last week,” Rick Miramontez said.

The best new play cat-egory includes “Clybourne Park” by Bruce Norris, “Other Desert Cities” by Jon Robin Baitz, “Peter and the Starcatcher” by Rick Elice, and David Ives’ “Venus in Fur.” Plays that didn’t make the cut in-cluded Katori Hall’s “The Mountaintop,” Nicky Sil-ver’s “The Lyons,” David Auburn’s “The Columnist” and Theresa Rebeck’s “Seminar.” With no nomi-nations for “Seminar,” producers said they would end performances after Sunday.

In the musical revival category, “Follies” and “The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess” will compete against two Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice works: “Je-sus Christ Superstar” and “Evita.”

“Once,” with songs by Marketa Irglova and Glen Hansard, was originally a low-budget movie made for about $150,000. The film earned $20 million, thanks in part to an origi-nal score that included the

sublime, 2007 Oscar-win-ning song, “Falling Slowly.” The musical is a study in how to beautifully adapt a movie to the stage.

“Once” earned its stars, Steve Kazee and Cristin Milioti, best actor nomina-tions. It also earned nods for best scenic design, best book of a musical and Elizabeth A. Davis got a nomination for an actress in a featured role.

The best leading actor in a play Tony will pit James Corden from the British import “One Man, Two Guvnors,” Philip Seymour Hoffman from Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Sales-man,” James Earl Jones from “Gore Vidal’s The Best Man,” Frank Langella from “Man and Boy” and John Lithgow of “The Col-umnist.”

“I expect to go out with the gang tonight, which I don’t do very often because this play is so damned ex-hausting,” Lithgow said, laughing. “And I intend to buy all the drinks. That’s pretty unusual, too. I am a Scotsman, after all.”

Joe DiPietro earned a Tony nomination for writ-

ing the book to “Nice Work If You Can Get It,” which stars Matthew Broderick and Kelli O’Hara, who also got a nomination as a lead-ing actress in a musical. The frothy musical smartly integrates classic Gersh-win songs such as “Sweet and Lowdown,” ‘’Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off,” ‘’S’Wonderful,” ‘’Someone to Watch Over Me,” ‘’They All Laughed” and “Fasci-nating Rhythm.”

The musical is the first since DiPietro won two Tonys for writing the still-running “Memphis,” but he’s not jaded.

“The Tonys are always a big deal,” he said. “I wrote for a long time and no one seemed to care and then I suddenly started getting produced. When I won my Tonys, it was childhood dream time coming true.”

“Other Desert Cities,” a play by Baitz that moved to Broadway after critical acclaim at Lincoln Center Theater, earned five nomi-nations, including best play.

“My psychology is such that I can’t jump up and down. I suppose that makes me Jewish and of the theater,” Baitz joked after the announcement.

Baitz’s play, about a dysfunctional, politically divided family wrestling with a deep secret in their past, also earned Stockard Channing and Judith Light acting nominations.

“It feels extraordinary. I feel thrilled, I feel blessed, I feel honored,” said Light, the former “Who’s the Boss?” star who last year was nominated for her per-formance in “Lombardi.” ‘’I was away from the the-ater for a long time. When I came back, I came back slowly and I had to really work my way back in and not expect anything.”

Light will compete in the featured role category against Linda Emond, who won raves for her role in “Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman.” Emond, who

managed to keep her yoga class appointment despite the fuss, was gracious, pleased that her show pro-duced nominations for co-stars Andrew Garfield and Hoffman, as well as direc-tor Mike Nichols.

“I am only more aware on a day like this that this is not something I do alone. This is not something that feels like I, in particular, am being noted for,” she said. “I go out on that stage and there are many people backstage and during the show who help me through the play.”

The battle in the female leading actress play cat-egory will be fierce, with competitors including Nina Arianda of “Venus in Fur,” Tracie Bennett of “End of the Rainbow,” Linda Lavin of “The Lyons,” Cynthia Nixon in “Wit” and Chan-ning.

Lavin, the Golden Globe- and Tony Award-winning actress who starred in the long-running TV sit-com “Alice,” was literally in the air when she learned of her nomination. She was fly-ing back from her home in Wilmington, N.C., after seeing a play at her 50-seat Red Barn Studio Theatre.

“I don’t think I’ve hit the ground yet,” she said. “I’m sitting in my apartment, having a bowl of soup. It’s been quite a whirlwind morning. I just hope I don’t die from it. I’m feeling very, very heightened right now.”

In “The Lyons,” Lavin plays mother of a family grappling with the im-pending death of its patri-arch. The actress said she wished the playwright had been nominated for writ-ing about a woman who is “funny and furious and deeply sad — all at the same moment. I’ve always liked to play those notes all at once.”

AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle and AP National Writer Jocelyn Noveck con-tributed to this report.

Tony nominations spread out but ‘Once’ leadsNOMINATIONS INCLUDE OVER 30 SHOWS BUT LOW-TECH ‘ONCE’ LEADS WITH 11 NODS

ASSOCIATED PRESSIn this theater image released by Boneau/Bryan-Brown, Steve Kazee, left, and Cristin Milioti are shown in a scene from “Once,” in New York. The production was nominated for a Tony Award for best musical, Tuesday.

B6 | WEDNESDAY, 05.2.2012 THE LEDGER INDEPENDENTB6 | ENTERTAINMENT WEDNESDAY, 05.2.2012 | THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT